Lucky Star owner Oceana reports profit increase for its full year

Loading player...
Neville Brink - Chief Executive Officer talks about JSE-listed global fishing Company Oceana says a spike in consumer demand for more pocket-friendly protein has supported the 17% increase in headline earnings per share (Heps) from continuing operations to 626 cents, up from 536.2 cents in 2021.

In a Sens release on Monday – reporting on the group’s 2022 performance for the period ended 30 September – Oceana said that as food prices continue to rise, it expects the demand for such proteins to continue supporting the company’s recovery.

Oceana owns various tinned fish products such as canned pilchards and canned tuna, among others, selling them mainly under the Lucky Star brand.

“Consumer demand for affordable protein and the relative value that Lucky Star provides compared to competing proteins ensured a strong recovery in sales in the second half, after stock constraints hampered the first-half performance,” the group said.

“Sales volumes in the second half increased by 8%, notwithstanding an effective 8% price increase.”

“Fish, particularly canned fish, is an affordable, healthy source of protein for many South African families as the Kasi Brands survey confirmed when it found Lucky Star tinned fish to be the top township brand. The demand was always there, and the second-half sales volumes improved when we were able to replenish our stocks,” CEO Neville Brink said in a statement.

“This as well as global demand for fishmeal and fish oil and the Daybrook performance contributed to a set of results we’re very pleased with, particularly given the constrained global and local economies,” Brink added.
6 Dec 2022 1PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Global fashion, local impact and lessons from Valentino’s business legacy

The fashion world is marking the passing of Italian designer Valentino Garavani, the founder of the Valentino fashion house and one of the architects of modern luxury. Over decades, his work became closely associated with global fashion capitals and with retailers and luxury groups that helped take haute couture into…
20 Jan 3PM 22 min

Unpacking 2026 global soft power index

South Africa has dropped two places in the 2026 Global Soft Power Index, now coming in at 43rd overall. Nzinga Qunta and Jeremy Sampson, chairman, Brand Finance Africa, take a closer look at what this ranking means for South Africa, how we stack up against regional peers, and what needs…
20 Jan 3PM 17 min

IMF forecasts resilient 2026 growth driven by AI amid easing

The International Monetary Fund again edged its 2026 global growth forecast higher on Monday as businesses and economies adapt to U.S. tariffs that have eased in recent months and a continued AI investment boom that has fueled asset wealth and expectations of productivity gains. Andre Cilliers, Currency Strategist at Treasury…
20 Jan 3PM 9 min