OREANDA-NEWS. October 3, 2008. PIK (LSE: PIK), one of Russia’s leading residential developers, today announced its interim financial results for the first six months of 2008, based upon consolidated management accounts, reviewed by KPMG.


Financial highlights
• Revenues increased by 63% to USD859m (1H07: USD525m);
• Gross profit rose by 101% to USD320m (1H07: USD159m);
• EBITDA recorded was up by 49% to USD200m, (1H07: USD134m)
• Net income up by 34% to USD93m (1H07: USD69m)
• Completed and approved residential units up by 32% to 418 thousand square meters (1H07: 316 thousand square meters)
• Presold residential units were up by 51.3% to 5,904 (1H07: 3,902 units). Blended average unit cost up 30.2% to USD 170,275.
• Total cash collections from customers more than doubled from USD 0,6bn to USD 1,26bn, with collections from sale of apartments (i.e core residential activities) up 97% to USD 1bn (H1 2007: USD 0.5bn). Additionally, an agreement was reached with wholesale customers to provide apartments in Moscow Region for the total amount over USD 1,0bn.
• Land bank additions showed a 39% increase and reached approximately 19,7m square meters of net sellable area as per management accounts (January 01 2008: 14.2 MM square meters)
• Good strategic progress made during the period
- new Group structure put in place to manage geographic expansion
- acquisition and modernization of manufacturing assets to support growth outside Moscow
- land banking in key target cities in Russia’s regions to build a strong platform for future growth
- entry into St Petersburg, Krasnodar and other regional cities through land banking
- intention to enter Kazakhstan and Ukraine

Kirill Pisarev, CEO of PIK comments:

“We are pleased with the Group’s performance in the first half and in particular the growth in cash collections, which doubled against the same period last year. The cash generative nature of our business sets us apart from many developers and will enable us to continue with project execution during this difficult period for the Russian banking system. We have already secured substantial pre-sales which shall crystallize in revenue recognition in 2008-2009”

CHAIRMAN’S AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE’S STATEMENT
The first half of 2008 was another good trading period for PIK Group. Our financial performance was strong, driven by a 51.3% rise in the number of apartments sold in the period. The price, size, quality, location and availability of our apartment buildings continue to attract new customers from Russia’s growing middle classes, the majority of whom are first–time home buyers.
The fundamentals that drive our business are economic growth and a chronic supplyside shortage in the residential housing sector. Over the last four years, an average annual real GDP growth rate of 7.3% has supported average annual growth of 13.8% in residential real estate construction. Real GDP growth in Russia is estimated at over 7% for 2008. Although some inflationary pressures are now being felt in the economy, the overall backdrop for the Group was benign in the first half, with apartment affordability and mortgage availability metrics stable.

Buying a new apartment remains the number one priority for millions of ordinary Russians. However housing shortages remain a big problem in Russia and its population of 143 million..Two-thirds of the national residential stock is in need of replacement. PIK, which is well-diversified across Russia with a presence in over 25 cities, has continued to benefit from this imbalance, with high levels of pre-sales recorded at developments in Moscow, Moscow Region and the Regions. PIK is a cash generative business, with USD1.3bn generated during the period of which approximately USD 1.0bn came from pre sales of apartments. These cash flows have supported our investment in the Group’s regional land bank at attractive prices. Land
acquisitions have been a priority for the Group in the first half and we now have a development pipeline stretching out for approximately ten years. The pipeline now includes strategically important cities in Russia, such as Krasnodar, St. Petersburg that match our socioeconomic and demographic criteria.

In the second half of the year the Group will be focused on execution. The development of our portfolio will be supported by our strong cash flows and we will also seek joint venture partners for some of our larger projects, to follow the transaction we closed in December 2007 when we sold 25% of our Mytischi mass market residential development to the real estate investment arm of the Government of Singapore (‘GIC’) for USD 233m. We were pleased to reach a D1bn plus agreement to provide apartments to wholesale customers for whom replacing obsolete housing is an urgent priority and believe that a significant proportion of revenue recognitions from the transaction may fall in the second half of the year.

PIK has adopted conservative IFRS accounting principles. These stipulate revenue recognition when buildings have been sold, completed and accepted. Historically, there is a high degree of seasonality in the business, with the majority of acceptances generally in the second half of the year. This seasonal pattern is reflected in the reported results for the period under review.

Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) for the reported period was USD 200m, consisting of the following components:

• USD 93m net profit (1H07: USD 69m);
• USD 23m depreciation and amortization (1H07: USD 13m);
• USD 27m net interest expense (1H07: USD 31m);
• USD 55m income tax expenses (1H07: USD 23m);
• USD 2m forex exchange gain (1H07: forex loss of USD 2m);
Total assets increased from USD5bn as of 31 December 2007 to USD 6bn as of 30 June 2008. This was mainly driven by land banking and increasing construction activity. Compared to 31 December 2007 net debt increased by USD603m to USD1320m, with the cash and equivalents position of USD267m, while total debt was up by USD175m and totalled USD1586m. The Group has USD1326m in short term debt. Following PIK’s acquisition programme in the first half of the year, in the second half we will focus as planned on development execution and the reduction of debt from internally generated cash flows.

Key Corporate Highlights

In the first half, PIK was focused on growing completions while at the same time increasing the Group’s land bank. Housing completions were up by 32%, the majority of which came from the Moscow region area.

In May the Group reported the results of CBRE’s valuation of the development portfolio, dated 01 January 2008. CBRE valued the portfolio, then comprising 14.2m square meters of net sellable space, at D12.3bn, a 40% increase on 01 January 2007. In September PIK announced that it had acquired a further 5.6m square meters of land in the first half, taking the Group’s total net sellable area at the 30 June 2008 to 19.7m square meters. CBRE have valued the land acquired during this period, 90% of which is located in Russia’s regions, at D1.66bn. PIK has entered a number of important new cities via these acquisitions, which include sites such as Izhevsk, Krasnodar, Rostov-on- Don, St Petersburg and Yaroslavl. For the first time since inception, the Group started considering the enlargement of real estate operations outside the Russian Federation opening representative offices in the Ukraine and Kazakhstan.

These land acquisitions are central to PIK’s strategy of expanding outside Moscow to build a strong platform for future growth. Also in the first half the Board’s began to implement a new structure designed to maximise the benefits of PIK’s vertically integrated model for the next phase of its growth and minimise the execution risk attached to operational expansion. The main change to the Group’s structure has seen the division of PIK Region into new regional development companies to overseas project locally. These companies will be responsible for preparing financial models for potential new projects and their execution once they have been approved. By 2015, management expects the Group to have approximately 20 diversified, regional development companies in place with a presence in 4-6 regional cities.

In addition, another company, PIK Realty was set up to assume the role of selling and marketing of the Group’s residential real estate across Russia. Since the half year ended in July 2008 we have announced the launch of our first regional housing production plant in the city of Obninsk (Kaluga Region) with an annual capacity of 80,000 square meters of housing. In line with its established strategy, PIK plans to modernize existing production plants in Russia’s regions in order to provide sustainable execution capacity. Currently, PIK is in the process of introducing the modernization of another three precast facilities – Sergeev Pasad (Moscow Region), Novocherkassk (Rostov Region) and Niznhy Novgorod.

The usage of in-house production facilities will enable the Group to provide sufficient control over the development process and mitigate risks arising from subcontracting to third parties.

Strategy

During the first half of the year management’s strategic focus has been on fulfilling a key IPO promise, namely to expand the land bank for future growth. Looking ahead to the second half and into 2009, PIK will be focused on execution and the reduction of debt from cash flows. We have built a high quality residential land bank into the regions and our challenge now is to continue delivering high quality apartments in new territories to meet the undoubted market need.

Russian Residential Market Update

Improving housing for ordinary Russians is a political priority for the government. There remain chronic shortages of residential housing and a large obsolete housing stock in the country. While Russia has recently felt the effects of the effects of the global credit crisis, the Russian economy is well capitalised and continues to grow.. While smaller developers may face difficulty from a short-term tightening of credit, PIK is a well capitalised business with strong cash flows that has continued to grow revenues throughout this challenging period in the financial markets. Apartments remain affordable in Russia and we continue to foresee good levels of demand for the mass market housing PIK supplies to the market.

Outlook
PIK’s vertically integrated business model was built to give the business solid foundations across business cycles. The first half of the year has shown continued revenue growth and margin stability in our business and we are comfortable with current market forecasts for the full year.

PIK’s apartments remain affordable for ordinary Russians and around 80% of our sales are made to customers who do not require mortgage financing form credit institutions. Our business is also driven by the domestic political agenda to replace the existing obsolete housing stock. While we will not be complacent about the crisis in financial markets and its potential effects, we believe that the fundamental strengths in the Russian economy and the need for new housing will continue to drive growth in our business going forward as strong fundamentals of the real estate industry remain in place.