Super Hi International Holding Past Earnings Performance
Past criteria checks 1/6
Super Hi International Holding has been growing earnings at an average annual rate of 46.2%, while the Hospitality industry saw earnings growing at 31.6% annually. Revenues have been growing at an average rate of 15% per year. Super Hi International Holding's return on equity is 5.1%, and it has net margins of 2.4%.
Key information
46.2%
Earnings growth rate
46.2%
EPS growth rate
Hospitality Industry Growth | 19.5% |
Revenue growth rate | 15.0% |
Return on equity | 5.1% |
Net Margin | 2.4% |
Last Earnings Update | 30 Jun 2024 |
Recent past performance updates
Revenue & Expenses Breakdown
How Super Hi International Holding makes and spends money. Based on latest reported earnings, on an LTM basis.
Earnings and Revenue History
Date | Revenue | Earnings | G+A Expenses | R&D Expenses |
---|---|---|---|---|
30 Jun 24 | 735 | 18 | 37 | 0 |
31 Mar 24 | 712 | 16 | 36 | 0 |
31 Dec 23 | 688 | 26 | 35 | 0 |
30 Sep 23 | 663 | 22 | 32 | 0 |
30 Jun 23 | 639 | 18 | 30 | 0 |
31 Mar 23 | 602 | -8 | 27 | 0 |
31 Dec 22 | 561 | -41 | 26 | 0 |
30 Sep 22 | 492 | -98 | 23 | 0 |
30 Jun 22 | 423 | -155 | 20 | 0 |
31 Mar 22 | 368 | -153 | 18 | 0 |
31 Dec 21 | 312 | -151 | 15 | 0 |
31 Dec 20 | 221 | -54 | 12 | 0 |
31 Dec 19 | 233 | -33 | 12 | 0 |
Quality Earnings: HDL has a large one-off gain of $8.1M impacting its last 12 months of financial results to 30th June, 2024.
Growing Profit Margin: HDL's current net profit margins (2.4%) are lower than last year (2.8%).
Free Cash Flow vs Earnings Analysis
Past Earnings Growth Analysis
Earnings Trend: HDL has become profitable over the past 5 years, growing earnings by 46.2% per year.
Accelerating Growth: HDL's has had negative earnings growth over the past year, so it can't be compared to its 5-year average.
Earnings vs Industry: HDL had negative earnings growth (-2.7%) over the past year, making it difficult to compare to the Hospitality industry average (14%).
Return on Equity
High ROE: HDL's Return on Equity (5.1%) is considered low.