Translatorʼs Explanatory Note: the following document is a free translation of the report of the above-mentioned Company. In the event of any discrepancy in interpreting the terminology in Polish version is binding.
Table of contents
Selected standalone financial data
Letter from the President of the Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A.
Description of the business of Arctic Paper
Factors affecting the development of the Company
Statement on the application of the Corporate Governance Rules
Information compliant with the requirements of Swedish regulations concerning corporate governance
Information by the Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A. on selection of the audit firm
Statements of the Management Board
Standalone financial statements
Accounting principles (policies) and additional explanatory notes
2.
Identification of the consolidated financial statements
3.
Composition of the Company’s Management Board
4.
Approval of the financial statements
6.
Material values based on professional judgement and estimates
7.
Basis of preparation of the financial statements
8.
Changes to the applied accounting principles
9.
New standards and interpretations that have been published and are not yet effective
10.
Significant accounting principles (policies)
12.
Other revenues and expenses
15.
Dividend paid and proposed
17.
Trade and other receivables
19.
Share capital and reserve capital/other reserves
20.
Purchase of interests in subsidiary entities
21.
Interest-bearing loans and borrowings
25.
Information on related entities
27.
Financial risk management objectives and policies
32.
Events after the balance sheet date
|
|
Period |
Period |
Period |
Period |
|
|
PLN '000 |
PLN '000 |
EUR '000 |
EUR '000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sales revenues |
|
39 469 |
83 083 |
8 879 |
19 327 |
Operating profit (loss) |
|
12 646 |
46 955 |
2 845 |
10 923 |
Gross profit (loss) |
|
3 419 |
33 340 |
769 |
7 756 |
Net profit (loss) from continuing operations |
|
3 387 |
33 035 |
762 |
7 685 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit (loss) for the financial year |
|
3 387 |
33 035 |
762 |
7 685 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net cash flows from operating activities |
|
97 949 |
124 516 |
22 036 |
28 965 |
Net cash flows from investing activities |
- |
(488) |
- |
(113) |
|
Net cash flows from financing activities |
(89 741) |
(111 693) |
(20 189) |
(25 982) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Change in cash and cash equivalents |
8 208 |
12 334 |
1 847 |
2 869 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted average number of ordinary shares |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
|
Diluted weighted average number of ordinary shares |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
|
EPS (in PLN/EUR) |
0,05 |
0,48 |
0,01 |
0,11 |
|
Diluted EPS (in PLN/EUR) |
0,05 |
0,48 |
0,01 |
0,11 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mean PLN/EUR exchange rate* |
|
|
4,4449 |
4,2988 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As at |
As at |
As at |
As at |
|
|
PLN '000 |
PLN '000 |
EUR '000 |
EUR '000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total assets |
882 117 |
926 486 |
191 150 |
217 562 |
|
Long-term liabilities |
31 049 |
57 326 |
6 728 |
13 462 |
|
Short-term liabilities |
280 472 |
301 081 |
60 777 |
70 701 |
|
Equity |
570 595 |
568 078 |
123 644 |
133 399 |
|
Share capital |
69 288 |
69 288 |
15 014 |
16 270 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of ordinary shares |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
|
Diluted number of ordinary shares |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
69 287 783 |
|
Book value per share (in PLN/EUR) |
8,24 |
8,20 |
1,78 |
1,93 |
|
Diluted book value per share (in PLN/EUR) |
8,24 |
8,20 |
1,78 |
1,93 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Declared or paid dividend (in PLN/EUR) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
Declared or paid dividend per share (in PLN/EUR) |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PLN/EUR exchange rate at the end of the period** |
|
|
4,6148 |
4,2585 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* - Profit and loss and cash flow statement items have been translated at the mean arithmetic exchange rates published by the National Bank of Poland, prevailing in the period that the presented data refers to.
** - Balance sheet items have been translated at the mean arithmetic exchange rates published by the National Bank of Poland, prevailing on the balance sheet date.
Dear Sirs,
2020 was undoubtedly one of the most turbulent years in history and presented the Arctic Paper Group with new challenges.
After an excellent business start to the year and a record-breaking first quarter, the situation has changed radically. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the global economy and also on the operations of the Arctic Paper Group. The restrictions and countermeasures introduced by the governments of individual countries changed the functioning of economies, hindered the flow of goods and had a negative impact on many industries, including the demand for the Group's products. The decrease in demand for the paper we produce by about 1/3 in the second quarter (compared to the first quarter) forced significant organizational changes in the operations of our factories. The priority was to ensure safe conditions for our employees. The implemented procedures and activities, combined with the mobilization of the team, brought the intended results, thanks to which we avoided production downtime caused by high absenteeism of employees. We have also maintained the continuity of supplies of raw materials and supplies of paper and pulp to our customers. Thanks to the commitment and creativity of the sales team, we took advantage of the improvement in the market situation and gradually increased sales and production in the second half of last year.
The year 2020 – as the year of the COVID-19 pandemic – changed the functioning of many industries, including ours. However, we quickly adapted to the new situation – we organised our work differently, we communicate differently, probably all companies have redefined the way they operate. Probably all these changes will stay with us for longer, they will affect us and the economy in the coming years. You have to rethink business models, logistic chains and work organization. The conclusions we draw from this will better prepare us for the next challenges.
I would like to thank the entire team of the Arctic Paper Group for their hard work in 2020. Despite the pandemic, thanks to your commitment, enthusiasm and initiative, we have once again achieved excellent business and operational results. We are entering the next year richer with new experiences and motivated to continue.
Sincerely yours,
Michał Jarczyński
President of the Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A.
Arctic Paper S.A. is a holding company set up in April 2008. As a result of capital restructuring carried out in 2008, the Paper Mills Arctic Paper Kostrzyn (Poland) and Arctic Paper Munkedals (Sweden), Distribution Companies and Sales Offices have become the properties of Arctic Paper S.A. Previously they were owned by Trebruk AB (formerly Arctic Paper AB), the parent company of the Issuer. In addition, under the expansion, the Group acquired the Paper Mill Arctic Paper Mochenwangen (Germany) in December 2008 and the Paper Mill Grycksbo (Sweden) in March 2010.
In 2012 and 2013 Arctic Paper S.A. acquired shares in Rottneros AB, a company listed at NASDAQ in Stockholm, Sweden, holding 100% shares in two Pulp Companies, Procurement Office and a company manufacturing food packaging.
Since 23 October 2009, Arctic Paper S.A. has been listed on the primary market of the Warsaw Stock Exchange and since 20 December 2012 in the NASDAQ stock exchange in Stockholm.
The main statutory activity of the Company is the activity of a holding company, consisting in managing of entities belonging to the controlled Capital Group. The operations are conducted through Paper Mills and Pulp Mills as well as Sales Offices and Procurement Office. The description of the Arctic Paper Capital Group was provided in the Management Board’s Report from operations of the Arctic Paper S.A. Capital Group, published in the consolidated annual report for the year ended on 31 December 2020.
The Company is entered in the register of entrepreneurs of the National Court Register maintained by the District Court in Poznań – Nowe Miasto i Wilda, 8th Commercial Division of the National Court Register, under KRS number 0000306944. The Parent Entity holds statistical number REGON 080262255. The Company has a foreign branch in Göteborg, Sweden.
The core business of Arctic Paper S.A. covers holding activities.
As at 31 December 2020, Arctic Paper S.A. held investments in the following subsidiary companies:
—Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. – Paper Mill in Kostrzyn nad Odrą (Poland);
—Arctic Paper Munkedals AB – Paper Mill in Munkedal (Sweden);
—Arctic Paper Sverige AB – a sales office operating in Sweden;
—Arctic Paper Norge AS – a sales office operating in Norway;
—Arctic Paper Danmark A/S – a sales office operating in Denmark;
—Arctic Paper UK Limited – a sales office in the United Kingdom;
—Arctic Paper Baltic States SIA – a sales office covering the Baltic States;
—Arctic Paper Benelux S.A. – a sales office covering the Benelux countries;
—Arctic Paper Schweiz AG – a sales office in Switzerland;
—Arctic Paper Italia srl – a sales office in Italy;
—Arctic Paper France SAS – a sales office in France;
—Arctic Paper Espana SL – a sales office in Spain;
—Arctic Paper Papierhandels GmbH – a sales office in Austria;
—Arctic Paper Deutschland GmbH – a sales office in Germany;
—Arctic Paper Polska Sp. z o.o. – a sales office in Poland;
—Arctic Paper East Sp. z o.o. – a sales office in Ukraine;
—Arctic Paper Investment GmbH – a holding company established to acquire shares in the Paper Mill in Mochenwangen;
—Arctic Paper Investment AB – a holding company established for the purpose of acquisition of Grycksbo Paper Holding AB;
—Rottneros AB – a holding company with shares in the Paper Mills of Rottneros Bruk AB and Rottneros Vallvik AB, in the procurement office and in the company manufacturing food packaging;
—Arctic Paper Finance AB – a holding company involved in attracting financing.
Information on percentage holdings in each subsidiary company is provided in the Company’s financial statements (note 5).
On 1 January 2020, the Group, through Rottneros AB, took control of Nykvist Skogs AB, which is described in detail in Note 20 to the consolidated financial statements.
In 2020, there were no changes to the capital structure of the Group.
As a holding company, Arctic Paper S.A. receives dividend, interest on loans granted and revenues for the management services it provides for related entities operating within the Arctic Paper Capital Group.
Until 2019, the Company also provided brokerage services in the purchase of pulp for companies from the Group.
In connection with restructuring activities in the Arctic Paper Group, at the beginning of 2016 a centralised logistics department started to operate within the structures of Arctic Paper S.A. The logistics department provides services in planning and coordinating transport to the Paper Mills in Kostrzyn, Grycksbo and Munkedals.
The assortment of products manufactured at the Paper Mills of the Arctic Paper Group was described in the consolidated annual report for 2020.
In 2020, there were no material changes to the core management principles.
Nemus Holding AB, a company under Swedish law (a company owned indirectly by Mr Thomas Onstad), is the majority shareholder of Arctic Paper S.A., holding (as at 31 December 2020) 40,381,449 shares of our Company, which constitutes 58.28% of its share capital and corresponds to 58.28% of the total number of votes at Annual General Meetings. Thus Nemus Holding AB is the Parent Entity of the Issuer.
Additionally, Mr Thomas Onstad, an indirect shareholder of Nemus Holding AB, holds directly 6,223,658 shares representing 8.98% of the total number of shares in the Company, and via another entity – 600,000 shares accounting for 0.87% of the total number of shares of the Issuer. Mr Thomas Onstad’s total direct and indirect holding in the capital of Arctic Paper S.A. as at 31 December 2020 was 68.13% and has not changed until the date hereof.
|
|
|
|
|
as at 16.03.2021 |
Shareholder |
Number of shares |
Share in the share capital |
Number of votes |
Share in the total number of votes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thomas Onstad |
47 205 107 |
68,13% |
47 205 107 |
68,13% |
|
- indirectly via |
40 981 449 |
59,15% |
40 981 449 |
59,15% |
|
|
Nemus Holding AB |
40 381 449 |
58,28% |
40 381 449 |
58,28% |
|
other entity |
600 000 |
0,87% |
600 000 |
0,87% |
- directly |
|
6 223 658 |
8,98% |
6 223 658 |
8,98% |
Other |
22 082 676 |
31,87% |
22 082 676 |
31,87% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Treasury shares |
- |
0,00% |
- |
0,00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
The data in the above table is provided as of the date of approval hereof, The structure of shareholding has not changed from the balance sheet date and as of the publication date of the quarterly report for Q3 2020.
The Company provides no services directly to external entities. The Company’s financial condition and its ability to distribute dividend is primarily affected by the market environment in which the Paper and Pulp Mills controlled by the Company operate.
Information on the core products offered by the Group with details of their value and quantities and the share of each product in total sales of the Group as well as information on markets with a split into domestic and foreign markets and information on procurement sources of materials for production and services, are all provided in the consolidated annual report.
In 2020, the Management Board approved its new strategy for the Group’s paper business “A Future in Paper – Strategic Agenda 2022” which aims at developing the business and improving the profitability of the segment. The new strategy consists in obtaining higher EBIT profitability in a sustainable way at 10% latest by 2022; the strategy is founded on six initiatives:
—Business development by focusing on selected profitable segments and markets, including specialist products and premium products, in Eastern Europe and in new markets.
—New innovative products and weights, developed in close cooperation with customers.
—Development of strong brands for the premium segment in order to increase revenues per one tonne of paper.
—Optimisation of all processes in order to reduce costs.
—Reinforcement of the efficiency culture among employees, based on clear and measurable objectives.
—Sustainable activities based on products that may be recycled and on renewable materials.
In 2020, the sales structure by main sources of the Company’s revenues was as follows:
PLN ‘000 |
2020 |
share % |
2019 |
share % |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Services |
20 495 |
52% |
28 976 |
35% |
|
Dividend |
15 287 |
39% |
49 188 |
59% |
|
Interest income on loans |
3 687 |
9% |
4 918 |
6% |
|
Total |
39 469 |
100% |
83 083 |
100% |
The Company provides management services to companies pursuant to agreements signed with those entities.
PLN ‘000 |
2020 |
share % |
2019 |
share % |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. |
23 966 |
61% |
14 142 |
17% |
|
Rottneros AB |
- |
0% |
43 760 |
53% |
|
Arctic Paper Munkedals AB |
3 387 |
9% |
8 932 |
11% |
|
Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB |
11 354 |
29% |
10 803 |
13% |
|
Other |
762 |
2% |
5 445 |
7% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
39 469 |
100% |
83 083 |
100% |
The demand for the Group’s products is subject to slight variations throughout the year. Reduced demand for paper occurs each year during summer holidays and around Christmas when some printing houses, in particular in Western Europe are closed. Changes in the demand for paper are not material versus the demand for paper in other periods of the year. Changes in the demand for paper affect largely changes in demand for pulp.
The Company has no direct expenses on research and development.
The Arctic Paper Group conducts primarily development works aimed at enhancing and modernising production processes and improving the quality of products on offer and the expanding the assortment thereof. In the period covered with this report, the Paper Mills carried out development works to improve production processes, in particular to shorten the idle time of paper machines as well as works aimed at improving the paper quality and extending the assortment and to improve paper quality properties.
New product development was an important aspect of the development works in 2020.
The description of the impact of environmental regulations on the operations of the Paper and Pulp Mills controlled by the Company is provided in the consolidated annual report.
PLN ‘000 |
2020 |
2019 |
Change % 2020/2019 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sales revenues |
39 469 |
83 083 |
(52,5) |
|
of which: |
|
|
|
|
Revenues from sales of services |
20 495 |
28 976 |
(29,27) |
|
Interest income on loans |
3 687 |
4 918 |
(25,04) |
|
Dividend income |
15 287 |
49 188 |
(68,92) |
|
Profit on sales |
35 139 |
77 571 |
(54,7) |
|
% of sales revenues |
89,03 |
93,37 |
(4,3) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Selling and distribution costs |
- |
(3 134) |
(100,0) |
|
Administrative expenses |
(24 292) |
(28 153) |
(13,7) |
|
Other operating income |
783 |
5 533 |
(85,9) |
|
Other operating expenses |
1 016 |
(4 862) |
(120,9) |
|
EBIT |
12 646 |
46 955 |
(73,1) |
|
% of sales revenues |
32,04 |
56,52 |
(24,5) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
EBITDA |
13 121 |
47 430 |
(72,3) |
|
% of sales revenues |
33,25 |
57,09 |
(23,8) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Financial income |
4 893 |
4 366 |
12,1 |
|
Financial expenses |
(14 120) |
(17 980) |
(21,5) |
|
Gross profit |
3 419 |
33 340 |
(89,7) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income tax |
(32) |
(305) |
(89,6) |
|
Net profit |
3 387 |
33 035 |
(89,7) |
|
% of sales revenues |
8,58 |
39,76 |
(31,2) p.p. |
The main statutory activity of the Company is the activity of a holding company, consisting in managing of entities belonging to the controlled Capital Group. The operations of the Group are conducted through Paper Mills and Pulp Mills as well as Sales Offices and Procurement Office. In 2020, the standalone sales revenues amounted to PLN 39,469 thousand and included: dividend income (PLN 15,287 thousand), services provided to Group companies (PLN 20,495 thousand) and interest income on loans (PLN 3,687 thousand). In 2019 the Company’s standalone revenues amounted to PLN 83,083 thousand and included: dividend income (PLN 49,188 thousand), services provided to Group companies (PLN 28,976 thousand) and interest income on loans (PLN 4,918 thousand).
In 2020 and in 2019, the Company did not render services to the Pulp Mills of the Rottneros Group.
Costs of sales cover internal costs of providing logistics services and interest on loans granted to the Company by its related entities (PLN 4,329 thousand). (PLN ‘000)
In 2020, the administrative expenses amounted to PLN 24,292 thousand. They cover costs of the administration of the Company operation, costs of services provided to the companies in the Group and all costs incurred by the Company for the purposes of pursuing holding company activities. The above costs include a group of costs that are related solely to statutory activities and cover, inter alia: audit costs of financial statements, functioning costs of the Supervisory Board, costs of periodic owners’ inspections in the Company, etc.
In 2020, the company did not recognize selling costs, which in previous years were entirely related to the costs of agency in the purchase of pulp for Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A.
Other operating income amounted to PLN 783 thousand in 2020, which means a decrease compared to the corresponding period of the previous year, which was mainly due to the reversal in 2019 of impairment allowances on non-current assets – receivables in Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH in the amount of PLN 5,083 thousand.
At the same time there was a decrease of other operating expenses that reached the level of PLN 1,016 thousand (in 2019 it was PLN 4,862 thousand, The decrease of other operating expenses was due primarily to the lower value of impairment allowances to assets in 2020.
In 2020, the financial income amounted to PLN 4,893 thousand and was by PLN 527 thousand lower than generated in the equivalent period last year. At the same time, there was a decrease of financial expenses from PLN 17,980 thousand in 2019 to PLN 14,120 thousand.
The changes to financial income and expenses result mainly from FX differences which are disclosed as a net amount – as the difference between FX profit and loss which is presented as financial income in case of net FX profit or as financial expenses in case of FX losses. In 2020, the company showed a surplus of positive FX differences in financial income, while in 2019 the company showed a surplus of negative FX differences in financial costs, while
EBITDA in 2020 was PLN 13.121 thousand, while in the equivalent period in 2019 it was PLN 47,430 thousand.
EBIT in 2020 amounted to PLN 12.646 thousand as compared to PLN 46.955 thousand in the previous year.
The net profit in 2020 amounted to PLN 3.387 thousand as compared to the net profit of PLN 33,035 thousand in 2019.
PLN ‘000 |
2020 |
2019 |
Change % 2020/2019 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Profit on sales |
35 139 |
77 571 |
(54,7) |
|
% of sales revenues |
89,03 |
93,37 |
(4,3) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
EBITDA |
13 121 |
47 430 |
(72,3) |
|
% of sales revenues |
33,25 |
57,09 |
(23,8) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
EBIT |
12 646 |
46 955 |
(73,1) |
|
% of sales revenues |
32,04 |
56,52 |
(24,5) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net profit |
3 387 |
33 035 |
(89,7) |
|
% of sales revenues |
8,58 |
39,76 |
(31,2) p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Return on equity / ROE (%) |
0,6 |
5,8 |
(5,2) p.p. |
|
Return on assets / ROA (%) |
0,4 |
3,6 |
(3,2) p.p. |
*EBITDA – Operating profit from continuing operations plus depreciation and amortisation and impairment allowances
* Return on equity, return on equity, ROE – net profit (loss) to equity
* Return on assets, return on assets, ROA – the ratio of net profit (loss) to total assets
In 2020, return on equity was 0.6 % while in 2019 it was 5.8 %. Return on assets dropped from 3.6 % in 2019 to 0.4 % in 2020.
PLN ‘000 |
2020-12-31 |
2019-12-31 |
Change |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fixed assets |
701 798 |
724 693 |
(22 895) |
|
Receivables |
29 308 |
70 155 |
(40 847) |
|
Other current assets |
110 864 |
99 700 |
11 164 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
40 148 |
31 939 |
8 208 |
|
Total assets |
882 117 |
926 486 |
(44 370) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Equity |
570 594 |
568 078 |
2 516 |
|
Short-term liabilities |
280 472 |
301 081 |
(20 609) |
|
interest-bearing debt |
252 112 |
252 320 |
|
|
Long-term liabilities |
31 049 |
57 326 |
(26 277) |
|
interest-bearing debt |
28 093 |
54 549 |
|
|
Total equity and liabilities |
882 117 |
926 486 |
(44 369) |
As at 31 December 2020 total assets amounted to PLN 882.117 thousand as compared to PLN 926,486 thousand at the end of 2019.
At the end of December 2020 fixed assets accounted for about 79.6% of total assets and their share in total assets increased versus December 2019 (78.2%).
As at the end of December 2020, current assets amounted to PLN 180,319 thousand as compared to PLN 201,794 thousand at the end of 2019.
At the end of December 2020, the equity amounted to PLN 570.594 thousand as compared to PLN 568,078 thousand at the end of 2019.
The growth of equity was primarily due to the net profit generated in 2020.
As at the end of December 2020, short-term liabilities amounted to PLN 280,472 thousand (31.9 % of balance sheet total) as compared to PLN 301,081 thousand as at the end of 2019 (32.5 % of balance sheet total).
A significant decrease in the value of short-term liabilities results from the fact that as at 31 December 2019, the company presented a significant part of liabilities as short-term due to the failure to meet the banking covenants under the loan agreement.
The significant drop of short-term liabilities is primarily due to repayment of loan instalments.
As at the end of December 2020, long-term liabilities amounted to PLN 31,049 thousand (3.5 % of balance sheet total) as compared to PLN 57,326 thousand as at the end of 2019 (6.2 % of balance sheet total).
|
2020 |
2019 |
Change % 2020/2019 |
|
|
|
|
Debt to equity ratio (%) |
54,6 |
63,1 |
(8,5) p.p. |
Equity to fixed assets ratio (%) |
81,3 |
78,4 |
2,9 p.p. |
Interest-bearing debt-to-equity ratio (%) |
49,1 |
54,0 |
(4,9) p.p. |
* Equity debt ratio (%) – total liabilities to equity ratio
* Equity to fixed assets ratio – equity to non-current assets ratio
* Equity debt to interest-bearing debt – the ratio of interest-bearing debt and other financial liabilities to equity
As at the end of December 2020, the debt to equity ratio was 54.8% and was lower by 8.3 p.p.s versus the end of December 2019.
The equity to asset ratio increased from 78.4% as at the end of 2019 to 81.3% as at the end of December 2020. The equity debt ratio with interest-bearing debt at the e
nd of 2020 was 49.3 uo 4.7 p.p.
|
|
2020 |
2019 |
Change |
|
|
|
|
|
Current ratio |
0.64x |
0.67x |
(0.0) |
|
Quick ratio |
0.64x |
0.67x |
(0.0) |
|
Acid test ratio |
0.14x |
0.11x |
0.0 |
* Current ratio – Ratio of current assets to short-term liabilities
* Quick ratio – Ratio of current assets minus inventory and short-term accruals and deferred income to short-term liabilities
* Cash solvency ratio – the ratio of the sum of cash assets and other cash assets to short-term liabilities
The current ratio and the quick ratio at the end of December 2020 amounted to 0.64x and were by 0.03x lower than at the end of December 2019. The cash ratio increased versus December 2019 and was 0.14x at the end of 2020.
PLN ‘000 |
2020 |
2019 |
Change % 2020/2019 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from operating activities |
97 949 |
124 516 |
(21,3) |
|
of which: |
|
|
|
|
Gross profit |
3 419 |
33 340 |
(89,7) |
|
Depreciation/amortisation |
1 021 |
1 119 |
(8,8) |
|
Changes to working capital |
21 424 |
(27 746) |
(177,2) |
|
Net interest and dividends |
7 450 |
8 600 |
(13,4) |
|
Increase / decrease of loans granted to subsidiaries |
61 913 |
107 089 |
(42,2) |
|
Other adjustments |
2 722 |
2 112 |
28,9 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing activities |
- |
(488) |
(100,0) |
|
Cash flows from financing activities |
(89 741) |
(111 693) |
(19,7) |
|
Total cash flows |
8 208 |
12 334 |
(33,4) |
In 2020, net cash flow from operating activities amounted to PLN 97.949 thousand as compared to PLN 124,516 thousand in 2019. In 2020, the decrease in trade receivables and the change in cash pooling had the greatest impact on the positive cash flows from operating activities.
In 2020, there were no cash flows from investing activities.
In 2020 cash flows from financing activities amounted to PLN -89.741 thousand as compared to PLN -111,693 thousand in 2019. In 2020, cash flows from financing activities were related to the repayment of a group loan and a partial repayment of bank loans.
The operations of the Company are indirectly affected by factors that have direct impact on the business of the Group’s operational units – Paper Mills and the factors include:
—
macroeconomic and other economic factors;
—demand growth for products based on natural fibres,
—reduced demand for certain paper types,
—fluctuations of paper prices,
—pulp price fluctuations for Paper Mills, timber for Pulp Mills and energy prices,
—FX rates fluctuation.
The impact of the factors on the Group’s business was described in detail in the consolidated annual report for 2020.
In the period under the report there were no unusual events and/or other factors affecting Arctic Paper S.A.
In connection with the Covid-19 coronavirus epidemic, the Management Board estimated its potential impact on the Group's operations, a more detailed description is provided in note 7.2.
Extending the Revolving Loan
On 27 October 2020 and again on 12 January and 11 February 2021, the Lenders (BNP Paribas Bank Polska SA, Santander Bank Polska SA) extended the availability of the Renewable Loan to the Company. The loan availability was extended until 31 March 2021 under the conditions adopted so far.
The Revolving Loan was granted to the Company for the total amount of EUR 19,800,000 and PLN 20,000,000 and was provided primarily to refinance the Company’s intragroup liabilities or to finance intragroup loans.
The availability of the Revolving Loan has been extended as the Company is working on the possibilities of simplifying the current structure of the Group's debt and further optimizing the conditions and reducing the costs of its servicing.
Commencement of negotiations for the conclusion of a Financing Agreement
On 5 February 2021, the Management Board of the Company began negotiating a new loan agreement with selected banks in order to obtain funds for:
(i)refinancing the existing financial debt of the Company and its subsidiaries;
(ii)financing transaction costs (including costs, commissions and fees related to refinancing the existing financial debt);
(iii)financing the current operations of the corporate capital group of the Company.
Based on the preliminary financing offers received from banks, the Company anticipates the following main conditions for New Financing:
1. total amount of financing: the equivalent of PLN 300,000,000 (three hundred million zlotys);
2. currency: PLN and EUR;
3. loans: a term loan in the total amount of PLN 150,000,000 (one hundred and fifty million zlotys) divided into two equal tranches in PLN and EUR and a revolving loan in the total amount of the EUR equivalent of PLN 150,000,000 (one hundred and fifty million zlotys);
4.financing period: 5 years for a term loan and 3 years for a revolving loan with the possibility of extending it for an additional 2 years (provided that the agreed extension conditions are met);
5. loan repayment terms: repayment of the term loan in equal half-yearly instalments starting from November 2021 and repayment of the revolving loan on the final repayment date;
6. interest rate: variable based on the WIBOR base rate in the case of financing in PLN and the EURIBOR base rate in the case of financing in EUR and a variable margin, the level of which will depend on the level of the net debt to EBITDA ratio; and
7. collateral: the collateral package will include collaterals customarily established in this type of transactions, such as: a registered pledge and a financial pledge on shares of Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A., pledges on shares of Swedish companies Arctic Paper Munkedals AB and Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, statements of submission enforcement by the Company and Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA, registered pledges and financial pledges on the bank accounts of the Company and Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA, pledges on bank accounts of Arctic Paper Munkedals AB and Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, mortgages on the real estate of the Company and Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA, mortgages on the properties of Arctic Paper Munkedals AB and Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, a registered pledge on the assets of Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA and an assignment agreement to secure rights under property insurance policies.
The above-mentioned parameters of New Financing are preliminary and may be changed by negotiation with banks. Additionally, New Financing negotiations with banks may or may not result in a new loan agreement. The company will provide information on the completion of negotiations and their result in a separate current report.
Complete early redemption of the Bonds issued by Arctic Paper S.A.
On 8 February 2021, the Company's Management Board adopted a resolution on the early redemption of all Series A Bonds (marked with ISIN code: PLARTPR00038), the issue of which the Company reported in current report No. 24/2016 of 30 September 2016.
The early redemption of the Bonds, was carried out on 1 March 2021. On the Early Redemption Date, the Company redeemed 100,000 (in words: one hundred thousand) Bonds with a total nominal value of PLN 58,500,000 (in words: fifty-eight million five hundred zlotys). The consideration per Bond amounted to PLN 585, plus accrued interest and a premium, calculated in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Bond issue. The redeemed Bonds were cancelled.
Information on market trends and in factors affecting the Company’s financial results over the next year is provided in the consolidated annual report. Below is a description of risk factors that directly affect the Company’s business, other risk factors affecting the Company via its subsidiary companies, are described in detail in the consolidated annual report.
The sequence in which the risk factors are presented below does not reflect the likelihood of occurrence, extent or materiality of the risks.
The Company operates in a legal environment characterised with a high level of uncertainty. The regulations affecting our business have been frequently amended and there are no consistent interpretations which generates a risk of violating the existing regulations and the resultant consequences even if such breach was unintentional.
The global economic situation is affected by the effects of the recent financial crisis, in particular the continued loss of trust on the part of consumers and entrepreneurs, concerns related to the availability and increasing costs of loans, decrease in consumer and investment spending, volatility and strength of capital markets. We anticipate that the difficult global economic conditions may result in an overall decreased of demand and average prices of high quality paper which in turn may adversely affect the dividends received from subsidiary companies.
The Company’s revenues, expenses and results are exposed to the FX risk, in particular of PLN to EUR, SEK and other currencies since the Company has been paid dividend partly in EUR and in SEK. Thus FX rate fluctuations may have an adverse effect on the results, financial conditions and prospects of the Group.
The Company is exposed to interest rate risk in view of the existing interest-bearing debt. The risk is due to fluctuations of the reference interest rates WIBOR for debt in PLN. Unfavourable changes of interest rates may adversely affect the results, financial condition and prospects of the Company.
The objectives and methods of financial risk management in the Company along with hedging methods of major transactions are detailed in note 30 to the standalone financial statements.
The sequence in which the risk factors are presented below does not reflect the likelihood of occurrence, extent or materiality of the risks.
The achievement of strategic objectives by the Company is subject to the know-how and experience of the professional management staff and the ability to hire and retain qualified specialists. The Company may not be able to retain its management staff and other key specialists or to attract new specialists. If the Company is not able to attract and retain management staff and personnel, this may adversely affect its business, operational results and financial condition.
In connection with the loan agreements signed on 9 September 2016 with a consortium of banks (European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Santander Bank S.A. and BGŻ BNP Paribas S.A.) and the bond issue agreement, the Company has interest payable under the agreements.
Failure by the Company to comply with its obligations, including the agreed levels of financial ratios (covenants) resulting from the agreements, will result in default under those agreements. Events of default may in particular result in demand for repayment of our debt, banks taking control over important assets like Paper Mills or Pulp Mills and loss of other assets which serve as collateral, deterioration of creditworthiness and lost access to external funding which will be converted into lost liquidity and which in turn may materially adversely affect our business and development prospects and our stock prices.
The Issuer is a holding company and therefore its capacity to pay dividend is subject to the level of potential disbursements from its subsidiary companies involved in operational activity, and the level of cash balances. Certain subsidiaries of the Group involved in operational activity may be subject to certain restrictions concerning disbursements to the Issuer. No certainty exists that such restrictions will have no material impact on the business, results on operations and capacity of the Company to distribute dividend.
In connection with the term and revolving loan agreements signed on 9 September 2016, the agreements related to the bond issue pursuant to which on 30 September 2016 the Company issued bonds and the intercreditor agreement (described in more detail in note 32.2 “Obtaining of new financing” in the Annual Report for 2016), the possibility of the Company to pay dividend is subject to satisfying certain financial ratios by the Group in two periods preceding such distribution (as the term is defined in the term and revolving loan agreements) and no occurrence of any events of default (as defined in the term and revolving loan agreements).
The Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A. did not publish projections of financial results for 2021 and has not published and does not intend to publish projections of financial results for 2021.
Dividend is paid based on the net profit disclosed in the standalone annual financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A. after covering losses carried forward from the previous years.
In accordance with provisions of the Code of Commercial Companies, the Parent Entity is obliged to establish reserve capital to cover potential losses. At least 8% of the profit for the financial year disclosed in the standalone financial statements of the Parent Entity should be transferred to the category of capital until the capital has reached the amount of at least one third of the share capital of the Parent Entity. The use of reserve capital and reserve funds is determined by the General Meeting; however, a part of reserve capital equal to one third of the share capital can be used solely to cover the losses disclosed in the standalone financial statements of the Parent Entity and cannot be distributed to other purposes.
As on the date hereof, the Company had no preferred shares.
The possibility of disbursement of potential dividend by the Company to its shareholders depends on the level of payments received from its subsidiaries. The risk associated with the Company’s ability to disburse dividend was described in the part “Risk factors” of the annual report for 2020.
In connection with the contracts for term and revolving loans signed on 9 September 2016, contracts related to the issue of bonds, under which the Company issued bonds on 30 September 2016, and an agreement between creditors, the Company's ability to pay dividends depends on the Group's fulfilment of specific financial ratios over a period of two preceding the payment of the relevant periods (as defined in the term and revolving loan agreement) and the absence of an event of default (as defined in the term and revolving loan agreement).
The Company’s General Meeting, held on 31 August 2020, approved a resolution to allocate the full net profit for the financial year of 2019 to the Company’s reserves.
As at 31 December 2020, the Parent Entity’s Supervisory Board was composed of:
—Per Lundeen – Chairman of the Supervisory Board appointed on 22 September 2016 (appointed to the Supervisory Board on 14 September 2016);
—Roger Mattsson – Deputy Chairman of the Supervisory Board appointed on 22 September 2016 (appointed as a Member of the Supervisory Board on 16 September 2014);
—Thomas Onstad – Member of the Supervisory Board appointed on 22 October 2008;
—Mariusz Grendowicz – Member of the Supervisory Board appointed on 28 June 2012 (independent member);
—Dorota Raben – Member of the Supervisory Board appointed on 28 May 2019 (independent member).
Until the date hereof, there were no changes to the composition of the Supervisory Board of the Parent Entity.
As at 31 December 2020, the Parent Entity’s Management Board was composed of:
—Michał Jarczyński – President of the Management Board appointed on 10 December 2019, effective in 1 February 2019;
—Göran Eklund – Member of the Management Board appointed on 30 August 2017.
Until the date hereof, there were no other changes in the composition of the Management Board of the Parent Entity.
In 2020, there were no changes to the Company’s share capital.
In 2020 and 2019 the Company did not acquire any treasury stock.
The table below presents information on the total amount of remuneration and other benefits paid or payable to members of the Management Board and of the Supervisory Board of the Parent Entity in the period from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2020 (data in PLN).
Managing and supervising persons |
|
Remuneration (base salary and overheads) |
Retirement plan |
Other |
Total |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Management Board |
|
|
|
|
|
Michał Jarczyński |
|
696 000 |
|
315 702 |
1 011 702 |
Göran Eklund |
|
816 035 |
333 760 |
253 700 |
1 403 495 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Supervisory Board |
|
|
|
|
|
Per Lundeen |
|
300 000 |
|
|
300 000 |
Roger Mattsson |
|
210 000 |
|
|
210 000 |
Thomas Onstad |
|
150 794 |
|
|
150 794 |
Mariusz Grendowicz |
|
181 906 |
|
|
181 906 |
Dorota Raben |
|
155 223 |
|
|
155 223 |
As at 31 December 2020, and as at the approval date of this annual report, Members of the Management Board are entitled to compensation in case of their resignation or dismissal from their respective positions with no valid reason or when they are dismissed or their employment is terminated as a result of a merger of the Issuer by take-over. The amount of such compensation will correspond to their remuneration for 6 to 24 months.
Managing and supervising persons |
|
|
Number of shares |
Number of shares |
Number of shares |
Change |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Management Board |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Michał Jarczyński |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
Göran Eklund |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Supervisory Board |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
|
Per Lundeen |
|
|
34 760 |
34 760 |
34 760 |
- |
Thomas Onstad |
|
|
6 223 658 |
6 223 658 |
6 223 658 |
- |
Roger Mattsson |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
Mariusz Grendowicz |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
Dorota Raben |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As of the date hereof, the Company held sufficient funds and creditworthiness to ensure financial liquidity of Arctic Paper S.A.
In 2020, the Company did not place any deposits.
Information regarding financial instruments on:
a) risk: price changes, credit risk, significant cash flow disruptions and loss of financial liquidity to which the Group is exposed, and
b) the objectives and methods of financial risk management adopted by the entity, including methods of securing significant types of planned transactions for which hedge accounting is applied,
are presented in the consolidated financial statements in Notes 27 and 28
In connection with the term and revolving loan agreements, agreements relating to the bond issue and the intercreditor agreement (described in more detail in the note “Obtaining new financing” of the Annual Report for 2016) signed on 9 September 2016, on 3 October 2016 the Company signed agreements and statements pursuant to which collateral to the above debt and other claims would be established in favour of Bank BNP Paribas S.A., acting as the Collateral Agent, that is
1. under Polish law – Collateral Documents establishing the following Collateral:
—financial and registered pledges on all shares and interests registered in Poland, owned by the Company and the Guarantors, in companies in the Company Group (with the exception of Rottneros AB, Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH and Arctic Paper Investment GmbH), except the shares in the Company;
—mortgages on all properties located in Poland and owned by the Company and the Guarantors;
—registered pledges on all material rights and movable assets owned by the Company and the Guarantors, constituting an organised part of enterprise, located in Poland (with the exception of the assets listed in the Loan Agreement);
—assignment of (existing and future) insurance policies covering the assets of the Company and the Guarantors (with the exception of insurance policies listed in the Loan Agreement);
—declaration by the Company and the Guarantors on voluntary submission to enforcement, in the form of a notary deed;
—financial pledges and registered pledges on the bank accounts of the Company and the Guarantors, registered in Poland;
—powers of attorney to Polish bank accounts of the Company and the Guarantors, registered in Poland;
—subordination of the debt held by intragroup lenders (specified in the Intercreditor Agreement).
2. under Swedish law – Collateral Documents establishing the following Collateral:
—pledges on all shares and interests registered in Poland, owned by the Company and the Guarantors, in Group companies, with the exception of the shares in the Company, as well as pledged on the shares in Rottneros (with the exception of the free package of shares in Rottneros);
—mortgages on all properties located in Sweden and owned by the Company and the Guarantors as long as such collateral covers solely the existing mortgage deeds;
—corporate mortgage loans granted by the Guarantors registered in Sweden as long as such collateral covers solely the existing mortgage deeds;
—assignment of (existing and future) insurance policies covering the assets of the Company and the Guarantors (with the exception of insurance policies listed in the Loan Agreement);
—pledges on Swedish bank accounts of the Company and the Guarantors as long as such collateral is without prejudice to free management of funds deposited on bank accounts until an event of default specified in the Loan Agreement.
In the period covered with this report, Arctic Paper S.A. and its subsidiary companies did not grant or receive any guarantee to loans or borrowings, and did not grant – totally to one entity or a subsidiary of such entity – guarantees with the total value exceeding equivalent of 10% of the Company’s equity.
Information on off-balance sheet items is provided in the Company’s standalone financial statements for 2020 in note 24.
Arctic Paper S.A. plans no material investments to be made in 2020. Material investments are carried out by the Issuer’s subsidiary entities, in particular the Paper Mills as described in the Consolidated Annual Report.
During the period under report, Arctic Paper S.A. and its subsidiaries were not a party to any proceedings pending before a court, arbitration or public administrative authority, the individual or joint value of which would equal or exceed 10% of the Company’s equity.
During the period under report, Arctic Paper S.A. and its subsidiaries did not execute any material transactions with related entities on non-market terms and conditions.
The Issuer is not aware of any agreements that may in the future generate changes to the proportions of shareholdings by the existing shareholders and bond holders.
On 20 January 2021, the Company entered into a contract with KPMG Audyt Spółka z ograniczoną odpowiedzialnością sp.k. for audit of the Company’s financial statements and consolidated financial statements of the Group for the year ended on 31 December 2020 and ending on 31 December 2021. The contract was concluded for the time required to perform the above services.
Other information on the entity authorised to audit the financial statements is provided in note 29 to the standalone financial statements for 2020.
Information on the headcount is provided in note 30 to the standalone financial statements for 2020.
Apart from this report the Company publishes a separate report on non-financial information for the Arctic Paper Capital Group.
On 1 January 2016, the new set of corporate governance rules became effective under the name of “Best Practice of GPW Listed Companies 2016”, attached to Resolution No. 26/1413/2015 of the Supervisory Board of the Warsaw Stock Exchange of 13 October 2015.
The text of the “Best Practice of GPW Listed Companies 2016” is available at:
https://www.gpw.pl/pub/GPW/files/PDF/GPW_1015_17_DOBRE_PRAKTYKI_v2.pdf
Pursuant to Article 29.3 of the Warsaw Stock Exchange Rules, the Management Board of ARCTIC PAPER S.A. on 19 January 2021 published an EBI report concerning the exclusion of certain rules of the Best Practice.
Arctic Paper S.A. was striving at applying corporate governance rules as set forth in the document “Best Practice of GPW Listed Companies”. In 2020, Arctic Paper S.A. did not apply the following rules:
Recommendation I.R.2
“Where a company pursues sponsorship, charity or other similar activities, it should publish information about the relevant policy in its annual report from operations.”
Explanation: The Company is not involved in any sponsorship, charity or similar activities.
Principle No. 1.Z.1.10
“A company operates a corporate website and publishes on it, in a legible form and in a separate section, in addition to information required under the legislation: financial projections, if the Company has decided to publish them – published at least in the last 5 years, including information about the degree of their implementation”
Explanation: According to a decision by the Management Board, the Company does not publish projections.
Principle No. I.Z.1.15:
“A company operates a corporate website and publishes on it, in a legible form and in a separate section, in addition to information required under the legislation: information about the Company’s diversity policy applicable to the company’s governing bodies and key managers; the description should cover the following elements of the diversity policy as: gender, education, age, professional experience, and specify the goals of the diversity policy and its implementation in the reporting period; where the Company has not drafted and implemented a diversity policy, it should publish the explanation of its decision on its website”
Explanation:
The Company has not drafted a diversity policy; however, the Issuer’s Management Board has been striving to employ competent, creative people, holding appropriate qualifications, professional experience and education, compliant with the Company’s needs.
Principle No. 1.Z.1.16
“A company operates a corporate website and publishes on it, in a legible form and in a separate section, in addition to information required under the legislation: information about the planned transmission of a general meeting, not later than 7 days before the date of the general meeting”.
Explanation:
The Company does not plan to broadcast its General Meetings.
Principle I.Z.1.20
“A company should operate a corporate website and publish on it, in a legible form and in a separate section, in addition to information required under the applicable laws: a recorded transmission of a general meeting, in audio or video form”.
Explanation:
Publication of the entire recording from a general meeting, in audio or video form, might infringe interests of shareholders. Information on the approved resolutions is published by the Company in the form of current reports. When this solution becomes more popular in the market, the Company will consider implementing it.
Recommendation III.R.1
“The company’s structure includes separate units responsible for the performance of tasks in individual systems or functions, unless the separation of such units is not justified by the size or type of the Company’s activity”.
Explanation:
The recommendation is not followed due to the size of the Company. The Management Board is responsible for controlling the Company’s operations, including controlling its internal operational processes along with risk management processes.
Principle No. III.Z.2
“Subject to Principle No. III.Z.3, persons responsible for risk management, internal audit and compliance
report directly to the president or other member of the management board and are allowed to report directly to the supervisory board or the audit committee”.
Explanation:
The Company has not established dedicated units to be involved in risk management, internal audit and compliance. However, the Company states that managers of each division of the Company report directly to the relevant members of the Management Board. The external entities that provide consultancy services, including legal consulting and performing audits, have regular and direct contact with the Company’s Management Board.
Principle No. III.Z.3.
“The independence rules defined in generally accepted international standards of the professional internal audit practice apply to the person heading the internal audit function and other persons responsible for such tasks”.
Explanation:
The Company has no dedicated internal audit unit and there is no identified position of a person heading the function. An audit committee operates within the Supervisory Board. Minimum two members of the Supervisory Board meet the independence criteria as specified in the Company’s Articles of Association and in the Regulations of the Supervisory Board. Additionally, persons performing audits and statutory auditors are independent of the Company.
Principle No. III.Z.4.
“The person responsible for internal audit (if the function is separated
in the Company) and the management board report to the supervisory board at least once per year with their assessment of the efficiency of the systems and functions referred to in Principle No. III.Z.1 and submit a relevant report”.
Explanation:
An Audit Committee operates within the Supervisory Board. Members of the Supervisory Board are elected by the General Meeting.
Recommendation IV.R.2
“If justified by the structure of shareholders or expectations of shareholders notified to the Company, and if the Company is in a position to provide the technical infrastructure necessary for a general meeting to proceed efficiently using electronic communication means, the Company should enable its shareholders to participate in a general meeting using such means, in particular through:
1) real-life broadcast of the general meeting,
2) two-way communication in real time, under which the shareholders may speak at the General Meeting of Shareholders, while not present at the place where the General Meeting of Shareholders is held,
3) exercise, either in person or through a proxy, the right to vote at the General Shareholders Meeting”.
Explanation:
Considering the need of multiple technical and organisational operations and the related
costs and risks, the Company has not decided for the time being to hold electronic general meetings. With a gradual popularisation of the technical solution and ensuring appropriate security, the Company will re-consider implementing the recommendation.
Principle No. IV.Z.2.
“If there is justification due to the shareholding structure, the company ensures the public broadcast of the General Shareholders Meeting in real time”.
Explanation:
Considering the need to carry out a number of technical and organisational activities, and the related costs and risks, the Company has decided not to organise electronic general meetings. With a gradual popularisation of the technical solution and ensuring appropriate security, the Company will re-consider implementing the recommendation.
Principle No. VI.Z.2
To tie the remuneration of members of the management board and key managers to the Company’s long-term business and financial goals, the period between the allocation of options or other instruments linked to the Company’s shares under the incentive scheme and their exercisability should be no less than two years.
Explanation:
Variable Remuneration for the Members of the Management Board may be determined under the Annual Incentive Programme.
. A decision on inclusion of a Member of the Management Board in the Annual Incentive Programme shall be taken by the Supervisory Board by way of resolution.
Principle No. VI.Z.4.
In this report from operations, the Company should report on the remuneration policy including at least the following:
—general information on remuneration system adopted by the Company,
—information on conditions and amount of remuneration granted to each member of the Management Board, split into fixed and variable components, specifying key parameters used to determine variable components of remuneration and rules for the payment of retirement allowance and other payments related to termination of the employment contract, commission or other legal relationship of similar nature – separately for the Company and each entity belonging to the Capital Group,
—information about non-financial remuneration components due to each management board member and key manager,
—significant amendments of the remuneration policy in the last financial year or information about their absence,
—assessment of the functioning of the remuneration policy from the viewpoint of implementation of its objectives, in particular long-term growth of value for shareholders and sustainability of the Company.
Explanation:
The Supervisory Board prepares an annual remuneration report presenting a comprehensive
review of remuneration, including all benefits, regardless of their form, received by individual Members of the Management Board and Supervisory Board or due to individual members of the Management Board and Supervisory Board in the last financial year, in accordance with the Remuneration Policy.
The Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A. is responsible for the internal control system in the Company and in the Group and for its efficiency in the development process of consolidated financial statements and interim reports, prepared and published in compliance with the rules of the Regulation of the Minister of Finance on current and periodical disclosure by issuers of securities and conditions to recognise as equivalent the information that is required by the law in Non-Member States of 29 March 2018. The Company’s financial division headed by the Chief Financial Officer is responsible for the preparation of the Group’s consolidated financial statements and interim reports. The Company prepares its financial statements and periodic reports on the basis of the procedures of making and publishing periodic reports and consolidated reports, in force at Arctic Paper S.A. The financial data underlying the Group’s consolidated financial statements comes from monthly reporting packages and extended quarterly packages sent to the Issuer by Group member companies. After closing of the books for each calendar month, top management of the Group member companies analyse the financial results of the companies versus their budgets and the results generated in the previous reporting period.
The Group performs an annual review of its strategy and development prospects. The budgeting process is supported by medium- and top-level management of the Group member companies. The budget drafted for the next year is accepted by the Company’s Management Board and approved by the Supervisory Board. During the year, the Company’s Management Board compares the generated financial results to the adopted budget.
The Company’s Management Board systematically assesses the quality of internal control and risk management systems with reference to the preparation process of consolidated financial statements. On the basis of such review, the Company’s Management Board found that as at 31 December 2020 there were no weaknesses that could materially affect the effectiveness of internal control with respect to financial reporting.
Information on the shareholders that directly or indirectly hold large packages of shares is presented in the table below – the table presents the situation as of the publication date of the annual report.
|
|
|
|
as at 16.03.2021 |
|
Shareholder |
Number of shares |
Share in the share capital |
Number of votes |
Share in the total number of votes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thomas Onstad |
47 205 107 |
68,13% |
47 205 107 |
68,13% |
|
- indirectly via |
40 981 449 |
59,15% |
40 981 449 |
59,15% |
|
|
Nemus Holding AB |
40 381 449 |
58,28% |
40 381 449 |
58,28% |
|
other entity |
600 000 |
0,87% |
600 000 |
0,87% |
directly |
|
6 223 658 |
8,98% |
6 223 658 |
8,98% |
Other |
22 082 676 |
31,87% |
22 082 676 |
31,87% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Treasury shares |
- |
0,00% |
- |
0,00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
69 287 783 |
100,00% |
There are no securities in the Company with special control rights – in particular, no shares in the Company are privileged.
The Company’s Articles of Association do not provide for any restrictions concerning transfer of title to the Issuer’s securities. Such restrictions are specified in law, including in Chapter 4 of the Act on Public Offering and on Conditions Governing the Introduction of Financial Instruments to Organised Trading and on Public Companies of 29 July 2005, Article 11 and Article 19 and Section VI of the Act on Trading in Financial Instruments of 29 July 2005, the Act on Competition and Consumer Protection of 16 February 2007 and the Council Regulation (EC) No. 139/2004 on the control of concentrations between undertakings of 20 January 2004.
Additional restrictions related to purchases and sales of the Issuer’s securities by persons in managerial functions and their closely related persons are set forth in Regulation (EU) No. 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council on market abuse (market abuse regulation) and repealing Directive 2003/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council and Commission Directives 2003/124/EC, 2003/125/EC and 2004/72/EC (“MAR”).
Each share in Arctic Paper S.A. authorises to one vote at General Meetings. The Company’s Articles of Association provide for no restrictions as to the exercising of voting rights of shares in Arctic Paper S.A., such as any restrictions on voting rights, such as limitations of the voting rights of holders of a given percentage or number of votes, deadlines for exercising voting rights, or systems whereby, with the Company’s cooperation, the financial rights attaching to securities are separated from the holding of securities.
A ban on voting rights by shareholders may result from Article 89 of the Act of on Offering and Marketing of Financial Instruments to Organised Trading Systems and on Public Companies of 29 July 2005 if such shareholder breaches the regulations provided in Chapter 4 of the Act on Offering. According to Article 6 § 1 of the Code of Commercial Companies, if the Parent Entity fails to notify its capital subsidiary company of the occurrence of a domination relationship within two weeks of the occurrence thereof, the voting rights will be suspended with respect to the shares held by the Parent Entity representing more than 33% of the subsidiary’s share capital.
Amendments to the Company’s Articles of Association fall within the sole competences of the General Meeting.
Unless the Code of Commercial Companies or the Articles of Association of the Company provide otherwise, resolutions of the General Meeting require an absolute majority of votes;
The rules of procedure of the General Meeting and its core competences result straight from applicable laws and are partly incorporated in the Company’s Articles of Association.
The Company’s Articles of Association are available at:
https://www.arcticpaper.com/Global/IR%20Documents/Cororate%20Documents/Arctic_Paper_Statut_tekst_jednolity_aktualny_2019_PL.pdf
General Meetings are held in accordance with the following basic rules:
—General Meetings are held in the Company’s offices or in Warsaw;
—General Meetings may be ordinary or extraordinary;
—Ordinary General Meetings shall be held within six months after the end of the financial year;
—General Meetings are opened by the Chairperson of the Supervisory Board or a person designated by him/her which is followed by election of the Chairperson of the General Meeting;
—Voting shall be open unless a Shareholder demands a secret ballot or a secret ballot is required by the provisions of the Code of Commercial Companies;
—Unless the Code of Commercial Companies or the Articles of Association of the Company provide otherwise, resolutions of the General Meeting require an absolute majority of votes;
—In compliance with the Company’s Articles of Association, the following matters fall within the exclusive competences of the General Meeting:
›review and approval of the Management Board’s report from operations of the Company and financial statements of the Company for the previous financial year;
›granting a vote of approval to members of the Management Board and members of the Supervisory Board for the performance of their duties;
›decisions concerning distribution of profit or coverage of losses;
›changes to the business objects of the Company;
›changes to the Articles of Association of the Company;
›increase or decrease in the Company’s share capital;
›merger of the Company with another company or other companies, split of the Company or transformation of the Company;
›dissolution and liquidation of the Company;
›issues of convertible bonds or pre-emption bonds and issues of subscription warrants;
›purchase and sale of properties;
›sale and lease of the entire enterprise or an organised part thereof or establishment of limited rights in rem thereon;
›all other issues for which these Articles of Association or the Code of Commercial Companies require a resolution of the General Meeting.
General Meetings may approve resolutions in the attendance of minimum one half of the Company’s share capital.
General Meetings approve resolutions with an absolute majority of votes unless the Articles of Association or applicable regulations require a qualified majority.
The shareholders’ rights and the way to enforce them result explicitly from law that has been partly incorporated in the Company’s Articles of Association.
—The Management Board is composed of one to five members, including President of the Management Board;
—The Management Board is appointed and dismissed by the Supervisory Board for a joint term of office;
—The term of office of members of the Management Board is 3 (three) years;
—When the Management Board is composed of more than one person, the Supervisory Board – upon a proposal by the President – may appoint up to three Deputy Presidents from among members of the Management Board. Deputy Presidents may be dismissed subject to a resolution of the Supervisory Board;
—A member of the Management Board may be dismissed by the Supervisory Board at any time;
—A member of the Management Board may be dismissed or suspended in their duties at any time by the General Meeting.
—
The Management Board directs the affairs of the Company and represents the Company;
—If the Management Board is composed of more than one person, declarations of intent on the Company’s behalf shall be made by the President of the Management Board individually or two Members of the Management Board acting jointly or a Member of the Management Board acting jointly with a Proxy;
—The Management Board is obliged to exercise their duties with due diligence and comply with law, the Company’s Articles of Association, approved regulations and resolutions of the Company’s bodies; decisions shall be taken in line with reasonable economic risk with a view to the interests of the Company and its shareholders;
—The Management Board is obliged to manage the assets and business of the Company and perform its duties subject to due diligence required in business operations and subject to strict compliance with applicable laws, provisions of the Articles of Association and internal regulations as well as resolutions approved by the General Meeting and the Supervisory Board;
—The Company’s Management Board shall not be entitled to take decisions on share issues and redemption.
—Each member of the Management Board shall be liable for any damage inflicted upon the Company as a result of their actions or omissions breaching the provisions of law or the Company’s Articles of Association;
—The responsibilities of the Management Board include – in compliance with the Code of Commercial Companies – all affairs of the Company not reserved to the General Meeting of the Supervisory Board;
—Guided with the interests of the Company, the Management Board defines the strategy and core objectives of the Company’s business;
—The Management Board shall comply with the regulations relating to confidential information within the meaning of the Act on Trading and to comply with all the duties resulting therefrom.
Otherwise, the individual members of the Management Board shall be responsible for their running of the affairs of the Company as resulting from the internal delegation of duties and functions approved by a decision of the Management Board.
The Management Board may approve resolutions at meetings or outside meetings in writing or with the use of direct means of remote telecommunications. The Management Board approves resolutions with a majority of votes cast. Resolutions shall be valid if minimum one half of members of the Management Board are present at the meeting. In case of equal number of votes, the President of the Management Board shall have the casting vote.
The detailed mode of operation of the Management Board is set forth in the Regulations of the Management Board with its updated version available at:
http://www.arcticpaper.com/Global/IR%20Documents/Cororate%20Documents/Regulamin%20Zarzadu%20AP%20SA.pdf
The Management Board of the Company as at the publication hereof was composed as follows:
—Michał Jarczyński – President of the Management Board appointed on 1 February 2019;
—Göran Eklund – Member of the Management Board appointed on 30 August 2017.
—The Supervisory Board is composed of 5 (five) to 7 (seven) members elected by the General Meeting for a joint three-year term of office. A member of the Supervisory Board may be dismissed at any time;
—The Supervisory Board is composed of the Chairperson, Deputy Chairpersons and other members. The Chairperson of the Supervisory Board and Deputy Chairperson are elected by the Supervisory Board from among its members at the first meeting and – if so required – during the term of office in by-elections;
—Since the General Meeting approved resolutions on the first public issue of shares and having them listed, two members of the Supervisory Board have to be independent;
—When an independent member of the Supervisory Board is nominated, resolutions on the following matters require consent of minimum one independent member of the Supervisory Board:
›any benefits to be provided by the Company and any entity related to the Company for members of the Management Board;
›consent to the Company or its subsidiary entity to enter into a material agreement with a member of the Supervisory Board or the Management Board and with their related entities, other than agreements concluded in the normal course of the Company’s business subject to normal terms and conditions applied by the Company;
›election of auditor to perform audits of the Company’s financial statements;
—For the avoidance of doubt, it is assumed that loss of the independent status by a member of the Supervisory Board and failure to appoint an independent member of the Supervisory Board shall not invalidate the decisions approved by the Supervisory Board. Loss by an Independent Member of their independent status during the performance of their function of a member of the Supervisory Board shall not affect the validity or expiry of their mandate;
—In case of expiry of the mandate of a Member of the Supervisory Board before the term of office, the other Members of the Supervisory Board shall be entitled to co-opt a new Member of the Supervisory Board is such vacated position by way of a resolution approved with an absolute majority of the other Members of the Supervisory Board. The mandate of such co-opted Member of the Supervisory Board shall expire if the first Ordinary General Meeting to be held after such Member has been co-opted, fails to approve such Member. At any time, only two persons elected as Members of the Supervisory Board in the co-option procedure and who were not approved as candidates by the Ordinary General Meeting, may act as Members of the Supervisory Board. Expiry of the mandate of a co-opted Member of the Supervisory Board as a result of failure to approve such candidate by the Ordinary General Meeting may not be treated as finding any resolution approved with the participation of such Member as invalid or ineffective.
—Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson of the Supervisory Board:
›maintain contact with the Company’s Management Board;
›manage the operations of the Supervisory Board;
›represent the Supervisory Board in external contacts and in contacts with the other bodies of the Company, including in contacts with members of the Company’s Management Board;
›approve the presentation of initiatives and proposals submitted for meetings of the Supervisory Board;
›take other actions as specified in the Company’s Regulations and Articles of Association;
›Members of the Supervisory Board should not resign from their function during the term of office if that could prevent the operation of the Supervisory Board, in particular prevent timely approval of major resolutions;
›Members of the Supervisory Board shall be loyal to the Company. Should a conflict of interests arise, members of the Supervisory Board shall report it to other members of the Supervisory Board and refrain from participating in discussions and from voting on the issue to which the conflict of interests is related;
›Members of the Supervisory Board shall comply with law, the Company’s Articles of Association and Regulations of the Supervisory Board.
—
The Supervisory Board performs overall supervision over the business of the Company in all areas of its operation;
—The Supervisory Board approves resolutions, issues recommendations and opinions and submits proposals to the General Meeting;
—The Supervisory Board may not issue binding instructions to the Management Board concerning the management of the Company’s affairs;
—Disputes between the Supervisory Board and the Management Board shall be resolved by the General Meeting;
—In order to exercise their rights, the Supervisory Board may review the business of the Company in any respect, request the presentation of any documents, reports and clarification from the Management Board and issue opinions on issues related to the Company and submit proposals and initiatives to the Management Board;
—Apart from other issues specified in law or in the Company’s Articles of Association, the competences of the Supervisory Board include, inter alia:
›review of the financial statements of the Company;
›review of the Management Board’s report from operations of the Company and proposals of the Management Board concerning profit distribution and coverage of losses;
›submission to the General Meeting of an annual report from results of the above reviews;
›appointment and dismissal of members of the Management Board, including the President and Deputy Presidents, and setting the remuneration of members of the Management Board;
›appointment of the auditor of the Company;
›suspension of Members of the Management Board in their functions for valid reasons;
›approval of annual financial plans for the capital group of which the Company and its subsidiary companies are members;
›approving terms and conditions of bond issues by the Company (other than convertible bonds or bonds with priority rights, referred to in Article 393.5 of the Code of Commercial Companies) and issues of other debt securities, provision of consent to contract financial liabilities or taking actions resulting in contracting any financial liabilities, such as borrowings, loans, overdraft facilities, conclusion of factoring, forfaiting, lease contracts and other generating liabilities in excess of PLN 10,000,000;
›approving the principles and amounts of remuneration of members of the Management Board and other persons in key management functions in the Company as well as approval of any incentive programme, including incentive programmes for members of the Management Board, persons in key management functions in the Company or any persons cooperating with or related to the Company, including incentive programmes for employees of the Company;
—Annually the Supervisory Board submits to the General Meeting a brief assessment of the Company’s condition ensuring that it is made available to all shareholders at a time that they are able to review it before the Ordinary General Meeting;
—The Supervisory Board concludes contracts with members of the Management Board on behalf of the Company and represents the Company in disputes with members of the Management Board. The Supervisory Board may authorise by way of a resolution one or more of its members to perform such legal actions.
The Supervisory Board may approve resolutions in writing or with the use of direct means of remote telecommunications. Resolutions approved as specified above shall be valid if all members of the Supervisory Board were notified of the content of the draft resolution. The approval date of the resolution approved as above shall be equivalent to the date of signing by the last member of the Supervisory Board;
Resolutions of the Supervisory Board may be approved when all members have been notified by registered letter, fax or e-mail message, sent minimum 15 days in advance and the meeting is attended by a majority of members of the Supervisory Board. Resolutions may be approved without formal convening a meeting when all members of the Supervisory Board agreed to vote on the specific issue or to the content of the resolution to be approved;
Resolutions of the Supervisory Board require a simple majority of votes; in case of equal votes, the Chairperson of the Supervisory Board shall have the casting vote.
The detailed mode of operation of the Supervisory Board is set forth in the Regulations of the Supervisory Board with its updated version available at:
http://www.arcticpaper.com/Global/IR%20Documents/Dokumenty%20korporacyjne/1_11_2016_appendix%20PL_AP%20SA%20-%20Regulamin%20Rady%20Nadzorczej_fin.pdf
The Supervisory Board of the Company as at the publication hereof was composed as follows:
—Per Lundeen – Chairman of the Supervisory Board appointed on 14 September 2016;
—Roger Mattsson – Deputy Chairman of the Supervisory Board appointed on 16 September 2014;
—Thomas Onstad – Member of the Supervisory Board appointed on 22 October 2008;
—Mariusz Grendowicz – Member of the Supervisory Board appointed on 28 June 2012 (independent member);
—Dorota Raben – Member of the Supervisory Board appointed on 28 May 2019 (independent member).
In 2020, the Supervisory Board held meetings on: 20 February, 2 April, 16 April, 30 April, 14 May, 28 May, 17 June, 18 August, 10 November, 17 December 2020.
—The Audit Committee is composed of minimum three members of the Supervisory Board, including the Chairperson of the Committee, elected by the Supervisory Board from among its members in compliance with the Articles of Association and Regulations of the Supervisory Board. Minimum one member of the Audit Committee shall hold qualifications and experience in the sphere of accounting and finances;
—Members of the Audit Committee shall be appointed for three-year terms of office, however no longer than the term of office of the Supervisory Board;
—The Chairperson of the Audit Committee, elected with a majority of votes from among its members, shall be an independent member;
—The Audit Committee operates on the basis of the Act on Statutory Auditors, Best Practice of GPW Listed Companies, Regulations of the Supervisory Board and the Regulations of the Audit Committee;
—The Audit Committee performs advisory and consulting functions, operates as a collective body within the Company’s Supervisory Board;
—The Audit Committee carries out its tasks by providing the Supervisory Board with its proposals, opinions and reports on its scope in the form of resolutions;
—At least one member of the audit committee shall have knowledge and skills in terms of accounting or auditing financial statements. The Supervisory Board is of the opinion that the requirement of competences in the sphere accounting and financial audit is recognised as satisfied if a member of the Audit Committee has a significant experience in financial management in commercial partnerships, internal audit or audit of financial statements, and additionally:
›has the title of a certified auditor or equivalent international certificate, or
›has an academic degree in the field of accounting or financial audit, or
›has long-term experience as a financial director in public companies or in working in an audit committee of such companies;
—Members of the Audit Committee shall have knowledge and skills relating to the industry in which the Issuer operates. This condition is recognised as satisfied if at least one member of the Audit Committee has knowledge and skills relating to that industry or individual members within specific scopes have knowledge and skills relating to the scope of that industry. The Supervisory Board is of the opinion that the requirement of competences relating to the industry is recognised as satisfied if a member of the Audit Committee has information on the characteristics of the sector, that allows him to obtain a complete picture of the sector’s complexity or has knowledge on part of the chain of activities carried out by the Company.
—
The basic task of the Audit Committee is advisory to the Supervisory Board on issues of proper implementation and control of the financial reporting processes in the Company, effectiveness of the internal control and risk management systems and cooperation with statutory auditors;
—The tasks of the Audit Committee resulting from supervising the Company’s financial reporting process, ensuring the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control systems and monitoring of internal audit operations, include in particular:
›control if the financial information provided by the Company is correct, including the accuracy and consistency of the accounting principles applied in the Company and its Capital Group as well as the consolidation principles of financial statements;
›assessment minimum once a year of the internal control and management systems in the Company and its Capital Group in order to ensure adequate recognition and management of the Company;
›ensuring the effective functioning of internal control, in particular by providing recommendations to the Supervisory Board with respect to:
›strategic and operational internal audit plans and material changes to such plans;
›internal audit policies, strategy and procedures, developed in compliance with the approved internal audit standards;
›audits of specific areas of the Company’s operations;
—The tasks of the Audit Committee resulting from monitoring the independence of the statutory auditor and the entity authorised to audit financial statements, include in particular:
›issue of recommendations to the Supervisory Board relating to the election, appointment and re-appointment and dismissal of the entity acting as the statutory auditor;
›control of independence and impartiality of the statutory auditor, in particular with a view to replacing the statutory auditor, the level of its remuneration and other relationships with the Company;
›verification of the effectiveness of the works performed by the statutory auditor;
›review of reasons of resignation by the statutory auditor;
—The Audit Committee may resort to advisory services and assistance by external legal, accounting or other advisers if it finds it necessary to perform its duties;
—The Audit Committee is obliged to file annual reports from its operations to the Supervisory Board by 30 September in each calendar year.
Meetings of the Audit Committee shall be held minimum twice a year.
In 2020, the Audit Committee held 2 meetings on: 19 March and 22 October.
As at 19 July 2019, the Audit Committee was composed of:
—Mariusz Grendowicz – a member meeting the independence criteria. Mr Mariusz Grendowicz being a member of the Supervisory Board for over five years, including being a member of the Audit Committee, has experience and qualifications relating to the scope of the industry in which the Company operates.
—Roger Mattsson – due to his long-term experience as the financial controller at the Arctic Paper Group and over three years in the Audit Committee, Mr Roger Mattsson meets the requirement of knowledge and know-how of the Company’s business as required of members of the Audit Committee. Additionally, he has knowledge and skills in the sphere of accounting or auditing financial statements;
—Dorota Raben – a member meeting the independence criteria.
The detailed mode of operation of the Audit Committee is set forth in the Regulations of the Audit Committee.
—
According to the regulations applicable to the Company, the Company’s Supervisory Board shall select – by way of a resolution and acting under a recommendation of the Audit Committee – the auditor authorised to carry out the audit;
—The selection is made taking into account the principles of impartiality and independence of the audit firm and the analysis of the audit firm’s work carried out in the Company which falls beyond the scope of the audit of financial statements, in order to avoid any conflict of interest (observance of impartiality and independence).
—A request for proposals concerning the selection of an audit firm for statutory audit of the Company’s financial statements is developed by the Audit Committee in cooperation with the Company’s Chief Financial Officer;
—After analysing the submitted offers, the Audit Committee shall develop a recommendation with conclusions from the selection procedure to be approved by the Audit Committee and shall submit a recommendation on the selection of the audit firm to the Supervisory Board within such time that will support a resolution on audit firm selection;
—The Supervisory Board shall select the audit firm on the basis of the submitted offers and after becoming acquainted with the Audit Committee’s opinion and recommendation;
—If the Supervisory Board’s decision differs from the recommendation of the Audit Committee, the Supervisory Board shall justify the reasons for its failure to comply with the Audit Committee’s recommendation and shall submit such justification to the body approving the financial statements.
—The Company’s Management Board shall enter into a contract with the selected audit firm for the audit of financial statements of the Company.
—The first contract is concluded for minimum 2 years and it may be extended for another two or three years. The duration of the cooperation shall be counted from the first financial year covered by the audit contract, in which the authorised auditor was appointed for the first time to carry out the consecutive statutory audits of the Company.
—After expiry of the maximum period of the cooperation, the authorised auditor or, where applicable, any member of its network, may not undertake a statutory audit of the Company’s financial statements for further 4 years.
—The key statutory auditor may not perform a statutory audit in the Company for a period longer than 5 years. The key statutory auditor may conduct a statutory audit again after the expiry of 3 years.
—The maximum period of uninterrupted performance of statutory audits by the same audit firm or an audit firm related to that audit firm or any member of the network operating in the European Union of which the audit firms are members, may not exceed 5 years.
—The Audit Committee of Arctic Paper S.A. shall be responsible for the policy covering the provision of permitted services other than audit services by the audit firm performing the audit, by entities related to the audit firm and by a member of the audit firm’s network;
—The Audit Committee of Arctic Paper S.A. controls and monitors the independence of the auditor and the audit firm, in particular if the audit firm provides other services than audit of statutory financial statements to Arctic Paper S.A.
—The Audit Committee of Arctic Paper S.A., when so requested by a competent body or person, approves the provision of permitted services by the auditor that are not an audit of Arctic Paper S.A.
—The prohibited services do not include:
›carrying out due diligence procedures for economic and financial condition,
›issue of letters of support,
›attestation services related to pro forma financial information, forecast of results, or estimation of results, contained in the issue prospectus of the audited entity;
›review of historic financial information for projects referred to in the Commission Regulation (EC) No 809/2004 of 29 April 2004 implementing Directive 2003/71/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards information contained in prospectuses as well as the format, incorporation by reference and publication of such prospectuses and dissemination of advertisement;
›verifying consolidation packages;
›confirming the fulfilment of terms and conditions of concluded loan agreements on the basis of the analysis of financial information from the financial statements audited by the audit firm;
›attestation services related to reporting on corporate governance, risk management, and corporate social responsibility;
›services consisting in assessing the conformity of information disclosed by financial institutions and investment firms with requirements for disclosure of information on capital adequacy and variable remuneration components;
›certifying financial statements or other financial information intended for supervisory authorities, supervisory board or other supervisory body of the Company or owners, which falls beyond the scope of statutory audit and helps these bodies to fulfil their statutory obligations.
—Provision of the above services is possible solely to the extent not related to the entity’s tax policies after a review by the Audit Committee of hazards and mitigants of the audit firm’s independence as referred to in Article 69-73 of the Act on Certified Auditors, Audit Firms and Public Supervision.
On 23 October 2019, the Supervisory Board of Arctic Paper S.A., by way of resolution, selected audit firm KPMG Audyt Spółka z ograniczoną odpowiedzialnością sp.k. to audit the Company's financial statements for the financial years 2020-2022.
The Supervisory Board selected the audit firm on the basis of a recommendation by the Audit Committee. The recommendation of the Audit Committee was issued as a result of the selection procedure in compliance with the “Policy and selection procedure of the audit firm to perform statutory and voluntary audit of consolidated and stand-alone financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A. with its registered office in Poznań”.
KPMG Audyt Spółka z ograniczoną odpowiedzialnością sp.k., entities related to the audit firm and members of its audit firm network, in the period covered by the audit did not provide any permitted services to the issuer that are not a statutory audit. The audit firm and members of its team performing the audit comply with the requirements to make an impartial and independent report from the audit of the annual consolidated and standalone financial statements of the Arctic Paper Group and of the Company in compliance with the applicable regulations, professional standards and the rules of professional ethics. The recommendation of the Audit Committee was free of third party impact and was developed on the basis of the “Policy and selection procedure of the audit firm to perform statutory and voluntary audit of consolidated and stand-alone financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A.”
—
The Remuneration Committee is composed of minimum two members of the Supervisory Board, including the Chairperson of the Committee, elected by the Supervisory Board from among its members in compliance with the Articles of Association and Regulations of the Supervisory Board.
—Members of the Remuneration Committee shall be appointed for three-year terms of office, however no longer than the term of office of the Supervisory Board;
—The Chairperson of the Remuneration Committee shall be elected with a majority of votes of its members;
—The Remuneration Committee operates pursuant to the Regulations of the Supervisory Board and the Regulations of the Remuneration Committee;
—The Remuneration Committee performs advisory and consulting functions, operates as a collective body within the Company’s Supervisory Board;
—The Remuneration Committee carries out its tasks by providing the Supervisory Board with its proposals, opinions and reports in the form of resolutions.
—The basic task of the Remuneration Committee is advisory support to the Supervisory Board on issues related to remuneration policy, bonus policy and other issues related to the remuneration of the employees, members of the Company’s authorities and the authorities of Capital Group companies;
—The tasks of the Remuneration Committee resulting from supervision over the Company’s remuneration policy and ensuring the effective functioning of the Company’s remuneration policy, is to provide recommendations to the Supervisory Board in particular with respect to:
—approval and changes to the remuneration principles of members of the Company’s bodies;
—the amount of total remuneration to members of the Company’s Management Board;
—legal disputes between the Company and Members of the Management Board with respect to the tasks of the Committee;
—proposing remuneration and approving additional benefits to individual members of the Company’s bodies, in particular under management option plans (convertible into shares of the Company);
—strategy of the Company’s remuneration and bonus policies and HR policies;
—The Remuneration Committee may resort to advisory services and assistance by external legal or other advisers if it finds it necessary to perform its duties;
—The Remuneration Committee is obliged to file annual reports from its operations to the Supervisory Board by 30 September in each calendar year.
—On 31 August 2020, the General Meeting of the Company, bearing in mind Art. 90d.1 in connection with Art. 90c.2.1 of the Act of 29 July 2005 on Public Offering, Conditions Governing the Introduction of Financial Instruments to Organised Trading, and Public Companies (i.e. Journal of Laws of 2019, item 623 as amended amended) adopted the "Remuneration Policy for Members of the Management Board and Members of the Supervisory Board of Arctic Paper SA". Under the above-mentioned Acts of public companies, including the Company, were obliged to adopt, by resolution, the Remuneration Policy of Management Board and Supervisory Board Members, which is the rules for determining the remuneration of Members of the Management Board and Supervisory Board, by the General Meeting of Shareholders, and to publish a remuneration report. The Company shall pay remuneration to the Members of the Management Board and the Supervisory Board solely in compliance with the adopted Policy. The policy prepared by the Company was drawn up in accordance with the principles set out in the above-mentioned Act and refers to the required elements related to remuneration and other terms of employment for Members of the Management Board and Members of the Supervisory Board. The policy received an opinion from the Remuneration Committee operating at the Supervisory Board, as well as by the Supervisory Board.
—The Remuneration Committee held meetings on 15 January, 23 January, 19 February and 13 March 2020.
—Since 9 February 2017 the Remuneration Committee has been operating in the following composition:
—Per Lundeen
—Thomas Onstad
—Roger Mattsson
—The detailed mode of operation of the Remuneration Committee is set forth in the Regulations of the Remuneration Committee.
—
The Risk Committee is composed of minimum three members of the Supervisory Board, including the Chairperson of the Committee, elected by the Supervisory Board from among its members. Minimum one member of the Risk Committee shall be independent and hold qualifications and experience in the sphere of finances;
—Members of the Risk Committee shall be appointed for three-year terms of office, however no longer than the term of office of the Supervisory Board;
—The Chairperson of the Risk Committee shall be elected with a majority of votes of its members;
—The Risk Committee operates on the basis of commonly accepted corporate risk management models (e.g. COSO-ERM);
—The Risk Committee performs advisory and consulting functions, operates as a collective body within the Company’s Supervisory Board;
—The Risk Committee carries out its tasks by providing the Supervisory Board with its proposals, opinions and reports in the form of resolutions;
—The basic task of the Risk Committee is advisory support to the Supervisory Board on issues related to the proper identification, assessment and control of potential risks, i.e. opportunities and threats to realization of the Company’s strategic goals, with particular consideration for financial risk, related to both external factors (such as volatility of exchange rates, interest rates, general international economic condition) and internal factors (such as cash flows, liquidity management, variation of budget and financial forecasts);
—The tasks of the Risk Committee resulting from the supervision over the risk management process, include in particular:
›Supervision over correct identification, analysis and assigning priority to types of risk inherent in the operational strategy and business pursued;
›Confirmation to the identified risk appetite of the Company;
›Verification if actions used to mitigate risk are planned and implemented so that the risk is mitigated to a level acceptable by the Company;
›Monitoring verifying correct risk assessment by the Management Board and the effectiveness of control tools;
›Supervision over correct notification of stakeholders on the risks, risk strategies and control tools.
—The Risk Committee may resort to advisory services and assistance by external advisers if it finds it necessary to perform its duties;
Since 22 September 2016 the Risk Committee has been operating in the following composition:
—Per Lundeen
—Mariusz Grendowicz
—Roger Mattsson
Arctic Paper S.A. is a company registered in Poland which stock has been admitted to trading at the Warsaw Stock Exchange and at NASDAQ in Stockholm. The Company’s primary market is in Warsaw with a parallel market in Stockholm. Companies not registered in Sweden which shares have been admitted to trading at NASDAQ in Stockholm are obliged to comply with:
—the corporate governance rules in force in the country of their registration or
—the corporate governance rules in force in the country where they have their primary trading market, or
—the Swedish corporate governance code (hereinafter the “Swedish Code”).
Arctic Paper S.A. follows the principles set forth in the “Best Practice of GPW Listed Companies 2016” (hereinafter the “Best Practice”) that may be applied by companies listed at the Warsaw Stock Exchange and not the Swedish Code. As a result, the conduct of Arctic Paper S.A. is different from the one set forth in the Swedish Code in the following material aspects.
The core documents related to General Meetings of Shareholders, such as notices, reports and approved resolutions, are made in Polish and in English instead of Swedish.
The Polish corporate governance model provides for a two-tier system of the Company’s bodies which is composed of the Management Board being the executive body appointed by the Management Board which in turns supervises the Company’s operations and is appointed by the General Meeting of Shareholders. Auditors are selected by the Supervisory Board.
Neither the Best practice, nor any other Polish regulations require the establishment of a commission in the Company to elect candidates and therefore such commission does not exist among the bodies of the Company. Each shareholder may propose candidates to the Supervisory Board. Appropriate information on candidates proposed to the Supervisory Board is published on the Company’s website with appropriate advance so that all shareholders could take an informed decision when voting on the resolution appointing a new member of the Supervisory Board.
In compliance with the two-tier system of the Company’s bodies, the tasks usually performed by the management of Swedish-registered companies are performed by the Management Board or the Supervisory Board of companies subject to Polish law.
In accordance with the Polish applicable regulations, members of the Management Board, including its General Director who is the President of the Management Board, may not get involved in competitive activities outside the Company. Pursuing of other business outside the Company is not regulated either in the Best Practice or other Polish regulations; however, certain restrictions are usually incorporated in individual employment contracts.
.
The composition of the Supervisory Board should reflect the independence criteria, just like those specified in the Swedish Code. However, the Management Board being the executive body is composed of persons in executive positions at Arctic Paper S.A., and these members may not be treated as independent of the Company. The terms of office of members of the Management Board – just like the members of the Supervisory Board – lasts three years.
It is the Supervisory Board and not the General Meeting that elects the chairperson and the deputy chairperson from its members.
The Regulations of the Management Board are approved by the Supervisory Board, and the Regulations of the Supervisory Board are approved by the Supervisory Board. The Regulations are not reviewed each year – they are reviewed and modified as need arises. The same principles apply to regulations of committees operating within the Supervisory Board that are approved by the Supervisory Board. The operation of the General Director is not regulated separately since he/she also acts as the president of the Management Board.
The Company shall pay remuneration to the Members of the Management Board and the Supervisory Board solely in compliance with the Remuneration Policy adopted by the General Meeting.
The Polish Corporate Governance Rules do not require the same detail as to the disclosed information as required by the Swedish Code. However, information on members of the Company’s bodies, company’s Articles of Association, internal regulations and a summary of material differences between the Swedish and Polish approach to corporate governance and shareholders’ rights is published on the Company’s website.
On the basis of a statement made by the Supervisory Board of Arctic Paper S.A. on the selection of the audit firm to audit the annual consolidated financial statements of the Arctic Paper Group and standalone financial statements of the Company for the financial year ended on 31 December 2020 in compliance with applicable laws and on the basis of a statement received from KPMG Audyt spółka z ograniczoną odpowiedzialnością spółka komandytowa, the Company’s Management Board informs that the audit firm and members of its team performing the audit have complied with the requirements to make an impartial and independent report from the audit of the annual consolidated financial statements of the Arctic Paper Group and standalone financial statements of the Company for the financial year ended on 31 December 2020 in compliance with the applicable laws, professional standards and the rules of professional ethics.
The Management Board of the Company also informs that the applicable laws with regard to a change of the audit firm and the key statutory auditor, as well as mandatory periods of grace have been complied with. The Arctic Paper Group has a policy relating to the selection of the auditing company and a policy of the provision of services that are not an audit by the audit firm, entities related to the audit firm or a member of its group, including services that are not covered with the ban on being provided by audit firms.
Signatures of the Members of the Management Board
Position |
First and last name |
Date |
Signature |
|
|
|
|
President of the Management Board |
Michał Jarczyński |
16 March 2021 |
signed with a qualified electronic signature |
Member of the Management Board |
Göran Eklund |
16 March 2021 |
signed with a qualified electronic signature |
Members of the Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A. represent that to the best of their knowledge:
—The financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A. for the year ended on 31 December 2020 and the comparable data were prepared in compliance with the applicable accounting principles and they reflect Company’s economic and financial condition and its financial result for 2020 in a true, reliable and clear manner.
—The Management Board’s Report from operations of Arctic Paper S.A. in 2020 contains a true image of the development, achievements and condition of Arctic Paper S.A., including a description of core hazards and risks.
Signatures of the Members of the Management Board
Position |
First and last name |
Date |
Signature |
|
|
|
|
President of the Management Board |
Michał Jarczyński |
16 March 2021 |
signed with a qualified electronic signature |
Member of the Management Board |
Göran Eklund |
16 March 2021 |
signed with a qualified electronic signature |
|
Note |
Year ended on |
Year ended on |
|
|
|
|
Continuing operations |
|
|
|
Sales of services |
25 |
20 495 |
28 976 |
Interest income on loans |
25 |
3 687 |
4 918 |
Dividend income |
25 |
15 287 |
49 188 |
Sales revenues |
11 |
39 469 |
83 083 |
|
|
|
|
Interest expense to related entities and costs of sales of logistics services |
12.5 |
(4 329) |
(5 512) |
|
|
|
|
Gross profit (loss) on sales |
|
35 139 |
77 571 |
|
|
|
|
Other operating income |
12.1 |
783 |
5 533 |
Selling and distribution costs |
12.5 |
- |
(3 134) |
Administrative expenses |
12.5 |
(24 292) |
(28 153) |
Impairment charges to assets |
12.2 |
1 110 |
(2 830) |
Other operating expenses |
|
(94) |
(2 032) |
|
|
|
|
Operating profit (loss) |
|
12 646 |
46 955 |
|
|
|
|
Financial income |
12.3 |
4 893 |
4 366 |
Financial expenses |
12.4 |
(14 120) |
(17 980) |
|
|
|
|
Gross profit (loss) |
|
3 419 |
33 340 |
|
13.1 |
|
|
Income tax |
|
(32) |
(305) |
|
|
|
|
Net profit (loss) from continuing operations |
|
3 387 |
33 035 |
|
|
|
|
Discontinued operations |
|
- |
- |
Profit (loss) for the financial year from discontinued operations |
|
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
Net profit (loss) for the reporting period |
|
3 387 |
33 035 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings per share in PLN: |
|
|
|
– basic earnings from the profit (loss) for the period |
14 |
0,05 |
0,48 |
– basic earnings from the profit (loss) from continuing operations for the period |
|
0,05 |
0,48 |
– diluted earnings from the profit (loss) for the period |
14 |
0,05 |
0,48 |
– diluted earnings from the profit (loss) from the continuing operations for the period |
|
0,05 |
0,48 |
|
Note |
Year ended on |
Year ended on |
|
|
|
|
Net profit (loss) for the reporting period |
|
3 387 |
33 035 |
Items to be reclassified to profit/loss in future reporting periods: |
|
|
|
Measurement of financial instruments |
28.2,28.3 |
(591) |
(715) |
|
|
|
|
FX differences on translation of foreign operations |
19.2 |
(1 335) |
324 |
|
|
|
|
Other total comprehensive income |
|
(744) |
1 039 |
|
|
|
|
Total comprehensive income |
|
2 643 |
34 075 |
|
Note |
As at 31 December 2019 |
As at 31 December 2018 |
|
|
||
ASSETS |
|
|
|
Fixed assets |
|
|
|
Fixed assets |
|
1 239 |
1 969 |
Intangible assets |
|
1 440 |
1 738 |
Shares in subsidiaries |
16.1 |
676 137 |
673 937 |
Other financial assets |
16.3 |
20 699 |
45 318 |
Other non-financial assets |
16.4 |
2 283 |
1 731 |
|
|
701 798 |
724 693 |
Current assets |
|
|
|
Zapasy |
|
|
|
Trade and other receivables |
17 |
28 973 |
69 730 |
Income tax receivables |
|
335 |
425 |
Other financial assets |
16.3 |
107 070 |
94 057 |
Other non-financial assets |
16.4 |
3 793 |
5 643 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
18 |
40 148 |
31 939 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
180 319 |
201 794 |
|
|
|
|
TOTAL ASSETS |
|
882 117 |
926 487 |
|
|
|
|
|
Note |
As at 31 December 2019 |
As at 31 December 2018 |
|
|
||
EQUITY AND LIABILITIES |
|
|
|
Equity |
|
|
|
Share capital |
19.1 |
69 288 |
69 288 |
Reserve capital |
19.3 |
427 502 |
427 502 |
Other reserves |
19.4 |
136 741 |
103 115 |
FX differences on translation |
19.2 |
450 |
1 785 |
Retained earnings / Accumulated losses |
|
(63 386) |
(33 611) |
|
|
|
|
Total equity |
|
570 595 |
568 078 |
|
|
|
|
Long-term liabilities |
|
|
|
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds |
21 |
28 093 |
54 549 |
Provisions |
22 |
2 837 |
2 151 |
Other financial liabilities |
23.3 |
119 |
626 |
Accruals and deferred income |
23.2 |
- |
- |
|
|
31 049 |
57 326 |
Short-term liabilities |
|
|
|
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds |
21 |
252 112 |
252 320 |
Trade payables |
23.1 |
18 443 |
33 962 |
Other financial liabilities |
23.3 |
2 717 |
3 335 |
Other short-term liabilities |
23.1 |
1 685 |
2 102 |
Accruals and deferred income |
23.2 |
5 515 |
9 362 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
280 472 |
301 081 |
|
|
|
|
Total liabilities |
|
311 521 |
358 407 |
|
|
|
|
TOTAL EQUITY AND LIABILITIES |
|
882 117 |
926 485 |
|
Note |
Year ended on |
Year ended on 31 December 2019 |
Cash flows from operating activities |
|
|
|
Gross profit (loss) |
|
3 419 |
33 340 |
|
|
|
|
Adjustments for: |
|
|
|
Depreciation/amortisation |
12.6 |
1 021 |
1 119 |
Loss on exchange rate differences |
|
4 256 |
1 897 |
Impairment of interests |
12.2 |
(2 200) |
- |
Net interest and dividends |
|
7 450 |
8 600 |
Profit / loss from investing activities |
|
(5) |
- |
Increase / decrease in receivables and other non-financial assets |
|
42 145 |
22 846 |
Increase / decrease in liabilities except for loans and borrowings and other financial liabilities |
|
(16 874) |
(53 269) |
Change in accruals and prepayments |
|
(3 847) |
2 677 |
Change in provisions |
|
686 |
297 |
Income tax paid |
|
- |
- |
Change to liabilities due to cash-pooling |
|
32 546 |
80 153 |
Increase / decrease of loans granted to subsidiaries |
25 |
29 367 |
26 936 |
Other |
|
(15) |
(81) |
Net cash flows from operating activities |
|
97 949 |
124 516 |
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from investing activities |
|
|
|
Disposal of tangible fixed assets and intangible assets |
|
- |
- |
Purchase of tangible fixed assets and intangible assets |
|
- |
(488) |
Increase of interests in subsidiaries |
|
- |
- |
Net cash flows from investing activities |
|
- |
(488) |
|
|
|
|
Cash flows from financing activities |
|
|
|
Repayment of leasing liabilities |
|
(567) |
(1 003) |
Repayment of loan liabilities |
|
(86 635) |
(144 843) |
Change of balance of working capital loans |
|
- |
- |
Borrowings and bonds received |
21 |
- |
42 753 |
Interest paid |
|
(2 539) |
(8 600) |
Dividend disbursed |
|
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
Net cash flows from financing activities |
|
(89 741) |
(111 693) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period |
21 |
31 939 |
19 605 |
Change in cash and cash equivalents |
|
8 208 |
12 334 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period |
21 |
40 148 |
31 939 |
|
|
Note |
Share |
Reserve capital |
Translation reserve |
Other reserves |
Retained earnings |
Total equity |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As at 1 January 2020 |
|
|
69 288 |
427 502 |
1 785 |
103 115 |
(33 611) |
568 078 |
Net profit / (loss) for the period |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
3 387 |
3 387 |
Other comprehensive income for the period |
|
|
- |
- |
(1 335) |
591 |
- |
(744) |
Total comprehensive income for the period |
|
|
- |
- |
(1 335) |
591 |
3 387 |
2 643 |
Profit distribution |
|
19.4 |
- |
- |
- |
33 035 |
(33 035) |
- |
Dividend distribution |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Settlement of the tax group in Sweden |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
(127) |
(127) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As at 31 December 2020 |
|
|
69 288 |
427 502 |
450 |
136 741 |
(63 386) |
570 594 |
|
|
Note |
Share |
Reserve capital |
Translation reserve |
Other reserves |
Retained earnings |
Total equity |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As at 1 January 2019 |
|
|
69 288 |
407 979 |
1 461 |
102 399 |
(46 002) |
535 124 |
Net profit / (loss) for the period |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
33 035 |
33 035 |
Other comprehensive income for the period |
|
|
- |
- |
324 |
715 |
- |
1 039 |
Total comprehensive income for the period |
|
|
- |
- |
324 |
715 |
33 035 |
34 075 |
Profit distribution |
|
|
- |
19 523 |
- |
- |
(19 523) |
- |
Dividend distribution |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
Settlement of the tax group in Sweden |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
(1 120) |
(1 120) |
As at 31 December 2019 |
|
|
69 288 |
427 502 |
1 785 |
103 115 |
(33 611) |
568 078 |
The financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A cover the year ended on 31 December 2020 and contain comparative data for the year ended on 31 December 2019.
Arctic Paper S.A. (hereinafter: (“Company”, “Entity”) is a joint stock company established with Notary deed on 30 April 2008 with its stock publicly listed. The Company's registered office
is located in Kostrzyn nad Odrą, ul. Fabryczna 1. The Company also has a foreign branch in Göteborg, Sweden.
The Company is entered in the register of entrepreneurs of the National Court Register maintained by the District Court in Zielona Góra, 8th Commercial Division of the National Court Register, under KRS number 0000306944. The Company holds statistical number REGON 080262255. The duration of the Company is indefinite.
The main area of the Company’s business activity is holding activity for the benefit of the Arctic Paper Capital Group.
Nemus Holding AB is the direct parent entity to the Company. The Ultimate Parent Entity is Thomas Onstad.
The Company prepared its consolidated financial statements for the year ended on 31 December 2020 which were approved for publishing on 16 March 2021.
As at 31 December 2020, the Company’s Management Board was composed of:
— Michał Jarczyński – President of the Management Board appointed on 10 December 2019, effective in 1 February 2019;
— Göran Eklund – Member of the Management Board appointed on 30 August 2017.
From 31 December 2020 until the publication date of the financial statements no other changes in the composition of the Management Board of the Company occurred.
These financial statements were approved for publication by the Management Board on 16 March 2021.
The Company holds interests in the following subsidiary companies:
Unit |
Registered office |
Group profile |
Share |
|
|
|
|
31.12.2020 |
31.12.2019 |
Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. |
Poland, Kostrzyn nad Odrą, Fabryczna 1 |
Paper production |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Munkedals AB |
Sweden, SE 455 81 Munkedal |
Paper production |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper UK Limited |
United Kingdom, 8 St Thomas Street |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Baltic States SIA |
Latvia, K. Vardemara iela 33-20, Riga LV-1010 |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Benelux S.A. |
Belgium, Ophemstraat 24, B-3050 Oud-Heverlee |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Schweiz AG |
Szwajcaria, Gutenbergstrasse 1, |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Italia srl |
Italy,Via Cavriana 7, 20 134 Milano |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Danmark A/S |
Denmark, Korskildelund 6 |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper France SAS |
France, 43 rue de la Breche aux Loups, 75012 Paris |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Espana SL |
Spain, Avenida Diagonal 472-474, 9-1 Barcelona |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Papierhandels GmbH |
Austria, Hainborgerstrasse 34A, A-1030 Wien |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Polska Sp. z o.o. |
Poland, Okrężna 9, 02-916 Warsaw |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Norge AS |
Norway, Eikenga 11-15, NO-0579 Oslo |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Sverige AB |
Sweden, SE 455 81 Munkedal |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper East Sp. z o.o. |
Poland, Kostrzyn nad Odrą, Fabryczna 1 |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Investment GmbH |
Germany, Fabrikstrasse 62, DE-882, 84 Wolpertswende |
Activities of holding companies |
99,80% |
99,80% |
Arctic Paper Investment AB |
Sweden, Box 383, 401 26 Göteborg |
Activities of holding companies |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Deutschland GmbH |
Germany, Am Sandtorkai 72, D-20457 Hamburg |
Trading company |
100% |
100% |
Arctic Paper Finance AB (previous Arctic Energy Sverige AB) |
Sweden, Box 383, 401 26 Göteborg |
Activities of holding companies |
100% |
100% |
Rottneros AB |
Szwecja, Box 144, Sunne |
Pulp production |
51,27% |
51,27% |
As at 31 December 2020 and as at 31 December 2019, the share in the overall number of votes held by the Company in its subsidiary entities was equal to the share of the Company in the share capital of those entities.
In the process of applying accounting policies to the areas presented below, professional judgement of the management staff had the most significant effect, apart from accounting estimations.
6.1.Deferred income tax asset
Due to the uncertainty regarding utilisation in future periods of tax losses recorded in 2016-2020, the Management Board decided not to create a deferred income tax asset for tax losses. Furthermore, the Management Board decided not to create a deferred income tax asset up to the amount of the deferred tax provision (note 13.3).
6.2.Impairment of assets in subsidiaries
As at 31 December 2020, an impairment test was held at Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB whose 100% are held by Arctic Paper Investment AB. The test was performed with the discounted cash flow method with reference to investments in both companies (note 16.2).
In connection with the test, the Company made many estimates, the greatest impact of which on the values disclosed in these standalone financial statements was the forecasted sales volume, sales prices, purchase prices of raw materials, energy prices, and the discount rate. Some of the assumptions used to determine the value in use of investments in Arctc Paper Grycksbo AB and Arctic Paper Investment AB are based on unobservable input data and therefore are subject to estimation uncertainty.
These financial statements have been prepared on a historical cost basis (except financial instruments).
These standalone financial statements are presented in Polish zloty (“PLN”) and all values are disclosed in PLN thousand unless specified otherwise.
These standalone financial statements have been prepared based on the assumption that the Company will continue as a going concern in the foreseeable future.
As at the publication date hereof, no circumstances were identified that would pose a threat to the Company continuing as a going concern.
7.1.Compliance statement
These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”), endorsed by the European Union. As at the balance sheet date, in light of the current process of IFRS endorsement in the European Union and the nature of the Company’s activities, there is no material difference between the IFRS applied by the Company and the IFRS endorsed by the European Union.
IFRS cover standards and interpretations approved by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB).
7.2.Covid-19
The COVID 19 coronavirus pandemic had a huge impact on the functioning of the global economy in 2020, as well as on the activities of the Arctic Paper group. On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organisation recognised the coronavirus epidemic as a pandemic. In order to reduce the significant threat to public health posed by COVID-19, the authorities of individual Member States of the European Union and worldwide, while awaiting further developments, have taken measures to stop the epidemic, including restrictions on the movement of persons, banning activities in certain sectors. In particular, the organisation of mass events has been suspended, the functioning of cultural facilities has been restricted, public transport has been restricted, retail outlets have been closed down, excluding grocery stores and pharmacies. Some companies have also advised their employees to work remotely from home. These events have the following consequences in a macroeconomic perspective:
—disruption of supply chains of goods, in particular for cross-border and transcontinental supplies;
—significant reduction of the capability to provide services or production, in certain sectors and regions. The affected sectors are mainly trade and transport, travel and tourism, trade fair and exhibition organisations, cultural activities and entertainment and education;
—a significant decrease in demand for non-essential goods and services;
—increased economic uncertainty, reflected by fluctuations in asset prices and foreign exchange rates.
The Arctic Paper Group operates in the pulp and paper sector, which, at the time of preparing these consolidated financial statements, was affected by the COVID-19 epidemic by significantly reducing the demand for paper. According to statistical data, the decrease in demand for paper grades produced by the Group was approx. 25% compared to 2019. As of 31 December 2020, the Group’s current ratio was 1.4x and the net debt-to-EBITDA ratio for the last 12 months was 0.57x. The Group has unused credit lines and unused factoring limits. Under the Group’s cash-pool agreement, cash available within individual units can be freely disposed of. The management of the Group has considered the following operational risks, which may have an adverse impact on the Group:
—unavailability of staff for a long time;
—interruptions in the transport of production materials and products that would disrupt distribution;
—recession in the economy of developed countries, which would reduce the purchasing power of consumers, resulting in reduced sales of non-essential goods.
In order to mitigate the risks arising from potential adverse scenarios, the management of the Group has implemented measures, which include in particular:
—implementation of employee protection programmes, including the introduction of personal protection solutions and shift work;
—confirmation with the suppliers of key materials, the capability to deliver the volumes ordered and an estimation of the sufficiency of the stock held, in particular cellulose;
—contractual arrangements with transport companies to ensure uninterrupted circulation of materials and products;
—adjusting the scale of the Group’s operations in response to a possible temporary decrease in demand for its goods;
—securing financial liquidity as a result of working capital management and securing possible bridge financing.
In the opinion of the management of the Entity, the above circumstances justify the assumption that the Entity will have sufficient resources to continue its business activities for at least 12 months from the balance sheet date. The management of the Entity concluded that the impact of the possible scenarios considered in making this judgement does not create material uncertainty about events or circumstances that would cast serious doubt on the Entity’s ability to continue as a going concern.
7.3.Functional currency and presentation currency
The Polish zloty (PLN) is the functional currency and the presentation currency of the Company in these financial statements.
The accounting principles (policies) applied to prepare these financial statements are compliant with those applied to the financial statements of the Company for the year ended on 31 December 2019, with the exception of those listed below. The amendments to IFRS listed below were applied to these financial statements when they became effective; however, they have no material impact on the presented and disclosed financial information and did not apply to any transactions concluded by the Company:
—
Amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements and IAS 8 Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates and errors – applicable to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020;
The amendments harmonise and clarify the definition of “Material” and provide guidelines in order to improve consistency in applying the concept in International Financial Reporting Standards.
—Amendments to IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, IAS 39 Financial Instruments and IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures – applicable to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020;
The amendments are mandatory and apply to all hedge relationships affected by the uncertainty resulting from the reformed interest rates. The amendments provide for a temporary waiver of the use of certain hedge accounting requirements so that the interest rate reform does not cancel hedge accounting. The key waivers concerning the amendments refer to:
the requirement that flows are “highly probable”,
risk components,
prospective assessment,
retrospective tests of effectiveness (applies to IAS 39),
reclassification of provisions under cash flow hedges.
The amendments further require that entities disclose additional information to investors on hedge relationships that affect the above uncertainties.
—Amendments to IFRS 3 Business Combinations; effective for annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2020. Those amendments have not yet been endorsed by the EU.
—The changes restrict and clarify the definition of business. They also support a simplified assessment if a set of assets and activities constitutes a group of assets and not a business.
The aforesaid amendments did not have any significant impact on the Entity’s financial statements.
The Entity did not decide to adopt earlier any other standards, interpretations or amendments that were issued but are not yet effective for periods commencing on 1 January 2020.
The following standards and interpretations were issued by the International Accounting Standards Board but are not yet effective:
—Disposal or Transfer of Assets between the Investor and an Associate Company or a Joint Venture (amendments to IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements and to IAS 28 Investments in Associates); The European Commission took a decision on deferring approval of those amendments for an undefined period. The amendments clarify that in case of a transaction made with an associate or a joint venture, the extent to recognise the related transactional profit or loss depends on that if the transferred or sold assets constitute a venture:
the entire profit or loss is recognised if the transferred assets meet the definition of a venture (irrespective of the fact if the venture is a subsidiary entity or not);
the profit or loss is recognised in part when the transaction covers assets that do not constitute a venture even if such assets were held in a subsidiary entity.
—IFRS 17 Insurance Contracts applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2021, prospective application; earlier application is permitted. The standard has not been yet endorsed by the EU. IFRS 17 that replaces temporary standard IFRS 4 Insurance Contracts that was implemented in 2004. IFRS 4 provided companies with a possibility to continue disclosing insurance contracts pursuant to the accounting principles applicable in national standards, which, as a result, meant application of different solutions. IFRS 17 solves the issue of comparability created by IFRS 4 through a requirement of coherent disclosure of all insurance contracts, which will be beneficial for both investors and insurers. Liabilities arising from contracts will be recognised at present values, instead of historic cost.
—Amendments to IAS 1 Presentation of Financial Statements Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current (applicable to annual reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2022, earlier application is permitted). Those amendments have not yet been endorsed by the EU. The amendments clarify that presentation of liabilities as current and non-current should be based solely on the right available to the Entity as of the reporting date to defer the payment of relevant liabilities. Such right to defer the payment of a liability for minimum 12 months from the reporting date does not have to be unconditional but it has to be material. The above presentation is not affected by intentions or expectations of the Entity's management as to the exercising of the right or the date when this is to happen. The amendments further provide clarification as to the events that are treated as discharge of liabilities.
The Entity does not expect the Standards to have material effect on its financial statements when they become effective.
9.1.Implementation of new standards
As at the date of approval of these financial statements for publication, the Management Board does not expect material impact of the introduction of other standards and interpretations on the accounting principles (policy) applied by the Company with respect to the Company’s operations or its financial results.
10.1.Foreign currency translation
The presentation currency of the Company is Polish zloty, however, for the foreign branch the functional currency is Swedish crown. As at the balance sheet date, assets and liabilities of the branch are translated into the presentation currency of the Company using the FX rate prevailing on that date and its income statement is translated using a weighted average FX rate for the reporting period.
The FX differences arising from the translation are recognised in other total comprehensive income and accumulated in a separate item of equity – FX differences on translation.
Transactions denominated in currencies other than Polish zloty are translated to Polish zloty at the FX rate prevailing on the transaction date.
As at the balance sheet date, assets and monetary liabilities expressed in currencies other than Polish zloty are translated into Polish zloty using the National Bank of Poland’s mean FX rate prevailing for the given currency as at the end of the reporting period.
FX differences resulting from translation are recognised under financial income (expenses), or – in cases defined in the accounting policies – are capitalised in assets. Non-monetary foreign currency assets and liabilities recognised at historical cost in foreign currency are translated at the historical FX rates prevailing on the transaction date. Non-monetary foreign
currency assets and liabilities recognised at fair value in foreign currency are translated using the FX rates prevailing as at the date of fair value measurement.
The following exchange rates were used for book valuation purposes:
|
31 December 2020 |
31 December 2019 |
USD |
3,7584 |
3,7977 |
EUR |
4,6148 |
4,2585 |
SEK |
0,4598 |
0,4073 |
DKK |
0,6202 |
0,5700 |
NOK |
0,4400 |
0,4320 |
GBP |
5,1327 |
4,9971 |
CHF |
4,2641 |
3,9213 |
|
01/01 - 31/12/2020 |
01/01 - 31/12/2019 |
USD |
3,8978 |
3,8399 |
EUR |
4,4449 |
4,2988 |
SEK |
0,4240 |
0,4061 |
DKK |
0,5963 |
0,5758 |
NOK |
0,4145 |
0,4365 |
GBP |
4,9974 |
4,8988 |
CHF |
4,1534 |
3,8644 |
For translation of assets and liabilities of the foreign branch as at 31 December 2020, the exchange rate SEK/PLN of 0.4598 was applied (31 December 2019: 0.4073). For translation of the items of comprehensive income for the year ended on 31 December 2020, the exchange rate SEK/PLN of 0.4240 was applied (for the year ended on 31 December 2019: 0.4061) which is an arithmetic mean of NBP’s mean exchange rates published by NBP in 2020.
10.2.Impairment of non-financial fixed assets
An assessment is made at each reporting date to determine whether there is any indication that a component of non-financial fixed assets may be impaired. If such indications exist, or in case an annual impairment test is required, the Company makes an estimate of the recoverable amount of that asset or the cash generating unit that the asset is a part of.
The recoverable amount of an asset or a cash-generating unit is the fair value of such asset or cash-generating unit reduced by costs to sell or its value in use, whichever is higher. The recoverable amount is determined for an individual asset, unless the asset does not generate cash inflows that are largely independent of those from other assets or groups of assets. When the carrying amount of an asset exceeds its recoverable amount, the asset is considered impaired and is written down to its recoverable amount. In assessing the value in use, the estimated future cash flows are discounted to their present value using a pre-tax discount rate that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money and the risks specific to the asset.
Impairment allowances of continuing operations are recognised in the expense categories consistent with the function of the impaired asset.
An assessment is made at each reporting date as to whether there is any indication that previously recognised impairment allowance may no longer exist or may have decreased. If such indications exist, the Company makes an estimate of recoverable amount of the asset. A previously recognised impairment allowance is reversed only if there has been a change in the estimates used to determine the asset’s recoverable amount since the last impairment allowance was recognised. If that is the case, the carrying amount of the asset is increased to its recoverable amount. That increased amount cannot exceed the carrying amount that would have been determined (net of depreciation or amortisation), had no impairment allowance been recognised for the asset in prior years.
Reversal of impairment allowance to assets is recognised immediately as income. After a reversal of an impairment allowance is recognised, the depreciation (amortisation) charge for the asset is adjusted in future periods to allocate the asset’s carrying amount, reduced by its residual value (if any), on a systematic basis over its remaining useful life.
10.3.Shares in subsidiaries, affiliated entities and in joint ventures
Shares in subsidiaries, affiliated entities and joint ventures are presented at historical cost basis, subject to impairment allowances.
10.4.Financial assets
In compliance with IFRS 9, the Company classifies financial assets to one of the following categories:
—measured at amortised cost: To measure its financial assets measured at amortised cost, the Company applies the effective interest rate method; those are trade receivables, loans granted, other financial receivables and cash and cash equivalents. After initial recognition, trade receivables are measured at amortised cost with the effective interest rate method subject to impairment allowances’ trade receivables due within 12 months of the day of their origin (without financing elements) and not forwarded to factoring, are not discounted and are measured at nominal value;
—measured at fair value through other income: profit and loss on a financial asset being a capital instrument which is subject to a measurement option via other income, are recognised in other income with the exception of dividend received;
—measured at fair value through profit or loss: profit or loss resulting from measurement of financial assets, classified as measured at fair value through profit and loss, are recognised through profit or loss in the period in which it was generated; those are primarily derivative instruments not designated for hedge accounting. Profit or loss resulting from measurement of items measured at fair value through profit and loss covers also interest and dividend income.
—hedging financial instruments: Hedging financial instruments are measured in compliance with the principles of hedge accounting.
The Company classifies debt financial assets to an appropriate category subject to the business model of managing financial assets and to the characteristics of contractual cash flows for each financial asset.
10.5.Impairment of financial assets
As at each balance sheet date, the Company assesses whether there is any objective evidence that a financial asset or a group of financial assets is impaired.
In line with IFRS 9, financial assets are measured at amortised cost or at fair value through other comprehensive income (except for investments in equity and contract assets). The impairment model is based on the calculation of expected losses. Loans and trade receivables are the most important financial asset in the Company’s financial statements that are subject to the new principles of calculating anticipated credit losses.
In accordance with IFRS 9, the entity measures allowances for expected credit losses in the amount equal to the 12-month expected credit losses or expected credit losses in the life of the financial instrument. In the case of trade receivables, the Company applies a simplified approach and measures an allowance for expected credit losses at the amount equal to the expected credit losses over the whole life of the asset.
In the case of trade receivables, the Company classifies receivables into the following categories:
-group 1 – includes trade receivables for which a simplified approach has been applied to the valuation of expected credit losses over the lifetime of receivables, except for receivables included in group 2;
- group 2 – includes trade receivables identified individually as uncollectible.
The Company applies similar groups to other financial assets.
The Company applies a simplified model to recognise impairment allowances to trade receivables. In the simplified model, the Company does not monitor changes to credit risk level over the life of the instrument and estimates anticipated credit losses over the horizon until the maturity of the instrument. In order to estimate the anticipated credit loss, the Company applies a provision matrix estimated on the basis of historic collectibility levels and recoveries from counterparties. The anticipated credit loss is calculated at the time the receivables are recognised in the statement of financial position and it is updated as at each closing of reporting periods, subject to the number of overdue dates.
10.6.Financial derivatives and hedges
The derivative instruments used by the Company to hedge the risks associated with changes in interest rates and exchange rates are primarily floor option contracts and interest rate swap contracts (interest rate swaps). Such derivative financial instruments are measured at fair value. Such derivatives are stated as assets when the value is positive and as liabilities when the value is negative.
Any gains or losses arising from changes in the fair value of the derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting are recognised directly in the net profit or loss for the financial year.
The fair value of floor option contracts is calculated by reference to current forward exchange rates for contracts with similar maturity profiles. The fair value of interest rate swap contracts is determined based on a valuation model which takes into account observable market data, particularly including current term interest rates.
For the purpose of hedge accounting, hedges are classified as:
—fair value hedges when hedging the exposure to changes in the fair value of a recognised asset or liability, or
—cash flow hedges when hedging exposure to variability in cash flows that is attributable to a particular risk inherent in the recognised asset or liability or a forecast transaction, or
—hedges of interests in net assets in a foreign entity.
Hedges of foreign currency risk in an unrecognised firm commitment are accounted for as cash flow hedges.
At the inception of a hedge relationship, the Company formally designates and documents the hedge relationship as well as the risk management objective and strategy for undertaking the hedge. The documentation includes identification of the hedging instrument, the hedged item or transaction, the nature of the risk being hedged and the assessment method of the hedging instrument’s effectiveness in offsetting the exposure to changes in the hedged item’s fair value or cash flows attributable to the hedged risk. Hedges are expected to be highly effective in offsetting the exposure to changes in the fair value or cash flows attributable to the hedged risk. Hedge effectiveness is assessed on a regular basis to check if the hedge is highly effective throughout all reporting periods for which it was designated.
Fair value hedge is a hedge of the exposure to changes in fair value of a recognised asset or liability or an unrecognised firm commitment, or an identified portion of such an asset, liability or firm commitment, that is attributable to a particular risk and could affect profit or loss. In the case of a fair value hedge, any profit or loss on the hedged item attributable to the hedged risk is adjusted against the carrying amount of the hedged item, the hedging instrument is re-measured to fair value and the gains and/or losses on the hedging instrument and hedged item are recognised in profit or loss.
For fair value hedges relating to items recognised at amortised cost, the adjustment to the carrying amount is amortised and recognised in profit or loss over the remaining term to maturity of the instrument.
When an unrecognised firm commitment is designated as a hedged item, the subsequent cumulative change in the fair value of the firm commitment attributable to the hedged risk is recognised as an asset or liability with a corresponding profit or loss recognised in profit or loss. The changes to the fair value of the hedging instrument are also recognised in profit or loss.
The Company discontinues hedge accounting if the hedging instrument expires, or is sold, terminated or exercised, or the hedge no longer qualifies for hedge accounting, or the Company revokes the designation. Any adjustment to the carrying amount of a hedged financial instrument for which the effective interest method is used is amortised and the allowances are recognised in profit or loss. Amortisation may begin as soon as an adjustment is made, however no later than when the hedged item ceases to be adjusted for changes in its fair value attributable to the risk being hedged.
Cash flow hedges are hedges securing for the risk of cash flow fluctuations which can be attributed to a particular kind of risk inherent in the given item of assets or liabilities or in a contemplated investment of high probability, and which could influence profit or loss. The part of profit or loss related to the hedging instrument which constitutes an effective hedge is recognised directly in other comprehensive income and the non-effective part is recognised in profit or loss.
If a hedged intended transaction subsequently results in the recognition of a financial asset or financial liability, the associated gains or losses that were recognised in other comprehensive income and accumulated in equity shall be reclassified to profit and loss account in the same period or periods in which the asset acquired or liability assumed affects profit or loss.
If a hedge of a intended transaction subsequently results in the recognition of a non-financial asset or a non-financial liability, or a forecast transaction for a non-financial asset or non-financial liability becomes a firm commitment for which fair value hedge accounting is applied, then gains and losses that were recognised in other comprehensive income are reclassified from equity to profit or loss in the same period or periods during which the asset acquired or liability assumed affects profit or loss.
For derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting, any gains or losses arising from changes in fair value are recognised directly to net financial result for the period.
Hedge accounting is discontinued when the hedging instrument expires or is sold, terminated or exercised, or the hedge no longer qualifies for hedge accounting. At that point in time, any cumulative profit or loss on the hedging instrument that has been recognised directly in other comprehensive income and accumulated in equity, remains recognised in equity until the forecast transaction occurs. If the forecast transaction is no longer expected to occur, the net cumulative profit or loss recognised in equity is recognised in net profit or loss for the period.
Hedges of interests in net assets in a foreign entity, including a hedge of a monetary item that is accounted for as part of the net assets, are accounted for similarly to cash flow hedges. The portion of the profit or loss on the hedging instrument that is determined to be an effective portion of the hedge is recognised in other comprehensive income and the ineffective portion is recognised in profit or loss. On disposal of the foreign entity, the net cumulative profit or loss that was previously recognised in other comprehensive income is recognised in profit or loss as an adjustment resulting from reclassification.
10.7.Trade and other receivables
Trade and other receivables are stated and recognised at original invoiced amount subject to an allowance for doubtful receivables. The allowance for receivables is estimated according to principles presented in note 10.5. The allowance for doubtful receivables is estimated when collection of the full amount of the receivable is no longer probable.
If the effect of the time value of money is material, the value of receivables is determined by discounting the estimated future cash flows to present value using a discount rate that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money. Where discounting is used, any increase in the balance due to the passage of time is recognised as financial income.
Budgetary receivables are presented within trade and other receivables, except for corporate income tax receivables that constitute a separate item in the statement of financial condition.
10.8.Cash and cash equivalents
Cash and short-term deposits in the statement of financial condition comprise cash at bank and on hand and short-term deposits with an original maturity of three months or less.
For the purpose of the cash flow statement, cash and cash equivalents consist of cash and cash equivalents as defined above.
10.9.Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds
All bank loans, borrowings and bonds are initially recognised at fair value reduced by costs associated with obtaining the loan or borrowing.
After initial recognition, interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds are subsequently measured at amortised cost using the effective interest rate method.
The amortised cost is calculated by taking into account any costs associated with obtaining the loan or borrowing, and any discount or premium received in relation to the liability.
Revenues and expenses are recognised in profit or loss when the liabilities are derecognised from the statement of financial condition or accounted for with the effective interest method.
10.10.Trade and other payables
Short-term trade payables are recognised at amounts payable.
In compliance with IFRS 9, the Company classifies financial liabilities to one of the following categories:
measured at amortised cost: trade payables, loans, borrowings and bonds
measured at fair value through profit or loss: liabilities under derivative instruments not designated to hedge accounting
hedging financial instruments, assets and financial liabilities being derivative instruments hedging cash flows and hedging fair value
Financial liabilities measured at fair value through profit or loss include financial liabilities held for trading and financial liabilities designated upon initial recognition as measured to fair value through profit or loss.
Financial liabilities are classified as held for trading if they are acquired for the purpose of re-sale in the near term. Derivatives, including separated embedded derivatives are also classified as held for trading unless they are determined to be effective hedging instruments.
Financial liabilities may be designated at initial recognition as measured at fair value through profit or loss if the following criteria are met:
—the designation eliminates or significantly reduces the inconsistent treatment from measuring or recognising gains or losses based on different regulations; or
—the liabilities are part of a group of financial liabilities which are managed and their performance is measured on a fair value basis, in accordance with a documented risk management strategy; or
—financial liabilities contain an embedded derivative that would need to be recognised separately.
As at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019, no financial liabilities were designated as measured at fair value through profit or loss.
Financial liabilities measured at fair value through profit or loss are measured at fair value, reflecting their market value as at the balance sheet date without taking sales transaction costs into account. Changes in fair value of those instruments are recognised in the profit or loss as financial income or expenses.
Financial liabilities other than financial instruments measured at fair value through profit or loss are measured at amortised cost with the effective interest rate method.
A financial liability is derecognised from the statement of financial condition when the contractual liability has been fulfilled, cancelled or has expired. Replacement of an existing debt instrument with an instrument with basically different conditions, made between the same entities, is recognised by the Company as expiry of the original financial liability and recognition of a new financial liability. Similarly, major changes to contractual terms and conditions related to an existing financial liability is recognised by the Company as expiry of the original and recognition of a new financial liability. The differences in the corresponding carrying amounts resulting from such exchange are recognised in profit or loss.
Other short-term liabilities include in particular liabilities to tax authorities under personal income tax liability and liabilities to ZUS.
Other non-financial liabilities are recognised at the amount payable.
10.11.Offsetting financial assets and liabilities
Financial assets and liabilities are offset, and the net amount is shown in the statement of financial position only if the Company has a valid legal title to set off and intends to settle these amounts net or to realize the asset and settle the liability at the same time.
10.12.Provisions
Provisions are created when the Company is charged with a (legal or customary) obligation relating to past events, and when it is likely that satisfaction of such obligation shall result in a necessity of an outflow of economic benefits and an amount of such obligation may be reliably estimated. Where the Company expects some or all of the provisioned costs to be reimbursed, for example under an insurance contract, the reimbursement is recognised as a separate asset but only when the reimbursement is virtually certain. The expense relating to any provision is presented in the profit and loss account after the deduction of any reimbursement.
If the effect of the time value of money is material, provisions are determined by discounting the estimated future cash flows to their present value using a pre-tax discount rate that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money and, where appropriate, the risks inherent in the liability. Where discounting is used, the increase in the provision due to the passage of time is recognised as financial expenses.
10.13.Revenues
The International Financial Reporting 15 Revenue from Contracts with Customers (“IFRS 15”) establishes a Five-Step Model to recognise revenues resulting from contracts with customers:
—Requirements applicable to identifying contracts with customers: contracts with customers meet the definition when all of the following criteria have been satisfied: the parties to the contract have concluded the contract and are obliged to perform their obligations; the Company is able to identify the rights of each party concerning the goods and services to be provided; the Company is able to identify the payment terms for the goods and services to be provided; the contract has economic content and it is likely that the Company will receive its remuneration due to it in exchange for the goods and services to be provided to the customer.
—Identification of obligations to perform the service: at contract conclusion the Company assesses the goods and services promised in the contract and identifies each promise as a liability for delivery to the customer: the goods or services (or a package of goods or services) that may be identified or a group of separate goods or services that are basically the same and when the delivery has the same nature.
—Identification of the transactional price: in order to determine the transactional price, the Company takes the contractual conditions into account as well as its customary commercial practices. The transactional price is the amount that – as the Company expects – will be due to it in exchange for the delivery of the promised goods or services to the customer, net of any amounts collected on behalf of third parties. The contractual remuneration may cover fixed amounts, variable amounts or both types; in order to estimate the variable remuneration, the Company has decided to apply the most probable value method.
—The allocation of the transactional price of each liability to perform: The Company allocates the transactional price to each obligation to perform (or for separate goods or separate services) in an amount that reflects the remuneration amount, in line with the Company’s expectations – it is due to the Company in exchange for the delivery of the promised goods or services to the customer.
—Revenue recognition when the obligation to perform is being executed: The Company recognises revenues at completion (or during completion) of its obligation to perform by delivery of the promised goods or services (an asset) to the customer (the customer acquires control over the asset). Revenues are recognised in the remuneration amount which – as expected by the entity – is due to it in exchange for the goods or services promised to customers.
The following criteria are also applicable to recognition of revenues.
Revenues are valued on the basis of the payment resulting from the contract concluded with the customer. The Company recognizes revenue when it transfers control over a good or service to the customer.
Revenue is recognized over time as services are provided. As the Company is entitled to receive remuneration from customers in the amount that corresponds directly to the value of the service previously provided by the entity for customers, the Company recognizes revenue in the amount that it is entitled to invoice.
Interest income is recognised as interest accrues (using the effective interest rate method that is the rate that discounts the estimated future cash receipts over the anticipated life of the financial instrument) to the net carrying amount of the financial asset.
Dividend is recognised when the shareholders’ rights to receive dividend are established.
10.14.Taxes
Current income tax liabilities and receivables for the current period and previous periods are measured at amounts projected to be paid to tax authorities (to be recovered from tax authorities) with tax rates and based on tax regulations legally or actually applicable as at the balance sheet date.
For financial reporting purposes, deferred income tax is recognised, using the liability method, regarding temporary differences as at the balance sheet date between the tax value of assets and liabilities and their carrying amount disclosed in the financial statements.
Deferred tax provision is recognised for all positive temporary differences:
—except where the deferred income tax liability arises from the initial recognition of goodwill, an asset or liability in a transaction that is not a business combination and, at the time of the transaction, affects neither the accounting profit or loss nor taxable profit or loss;
—in respect of positive differences associated with investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures, except where the timing of the reversal of the temporary differences can be controlled and it is probable that the temporary differences will not reverse in the foreseeable future.
Deferred income asset is recognised for all negative temporary differences, carry-forward of unused tax credits and unused tax losses, to the extent that it is probable that taxable profit will be available against which the deductible temporary differences, and the carry-forward of unused tax credits and unused tax losses can be utilised:
—except where the deferred tax asset relating to the negative temporary difference arises from the initial recognition of an asset or liability in a transaction that is not a business combination and, at the time of the transaction, affects neither the accounting profit nor taxable profit or loss;
—in respect of negative temporary differences associated with investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures, the deferred income tax asset is recognised in the statement of financial condition solely to the extent to which it is probable that in the foreseeable future the above differences will be reversed and sufficient taxable income to deduct such temporary negative differences.
The carrying amount of the deferred tax asset is reviewed as at each balance sheet date and reduced to the extent that it is no longer probable that sufficient taxable profit will be available to allow all or part of the deferred income tax asset to be utilised. Unrecognised deferred income tax asset is reassessed as at each balance sheet date and is recognised to the extent that it has become probable that future taxable profit will be available that will allow the deferred tax asset to be recovered.
Deferred tax asset and provisions are measured at the tax rates that are expected to apply in the period in which the asset is realised or the liability is settled, based on tax rates (and tax laws) that have been enacted or substantively enacted as at the balance sheet date.
Income tax relating to items recognised outside profit or loss is recognised outside profit or loss: in other comprehensive income in correlation items recognised in other comprehensive income or directly in equity with reference to items recognised directly in equity.
Deferred income tax asset and deferred income tax liability are offset, if a legally enforceable right exists to set off current income tax asset against current income tax liability and the deferred income tax relates to the same taxable entity and the same tax authority.
Revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities are recognised after the deduction of the amount of VAT, except:
—where VAT incurred on a purchase of assets or services is not recoverable from the tax authority, in which case VAT is recognised as part of the cost of purchase of the asset or as part of the expense item as applicable and
—receivables and payables which are disclosed with the VAT amount inclusive.
The net amount of VAT recoverable from or payable to the tax authority is included in the statement of financial condition as part of receivables or payables.
10.15.Net profit per share
Net profit per share is calculated by dividing the net profit for the period by the weighted average number of shares during the reporting period. Diluted profit per share is calculated by dividing the net profit for the period by the diluted weighted average number of shares during the reporting period.
Arctic Paper S.A. is a holding company, providing services mostly to the Group companies.
The table below presents a geographical split of revenues from sales of services as well as dividend and interest income in 2020-2019.
|
Year ended |
|
Year ended |
Revenues from sales of services |
|
|
|
- Poland |
8 050 |
|
12 087 |
- Sweden |
12 445 |
|
16 888 |
- other |
- |
|
- |
|
20 495 |
|
28 975 |
Other income (dividends and interest) |
|
|
|
- Poland |
15 917 |
|
2 883 |
- Sweden |
2 296 |
|
46 607 |
- other |
761 |
|
4 618 |
|
18 974 |
|
54 107 |
|
|
|
|
Total |
39 468 |
|
83 082 |
The above information about revenues is based on data regarding registered offices of subsidiaries of Arctic Paper S.A.
Service revenues (management, logistics services) constitute revenues recognised on a time basis since the underlying services are those provided for a specified time agreed in contracts with customers. The Company usually applied a 14 or 21 day payment term, and does not receive payments before services are completed.
12.1.Other operating income
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Re-invoices |
- |
|
1 |
Reversal of impairment allowance to assets (Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH) |
- |
|
5 083 |
Reversal of provision for pension benefits |
147 |
|
- |
Other |
635 |
|
449 |
|
|
|
|
|
782 |
|
5 533 |
12.2.Impairment allowances to assets
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Impairment allowance to assets (Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH) |
(1 090) |
|
(2 830) |
Impairment allowance to assets reversal (Arctic Paper Investment AB) |
2 200 |
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 110 |
|
2 830 |
12.3.Financial income
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Interest income on funds in bank accounts |
431 |
|
213 |
FX gains |
612 |
|
- |
Re-invoiced financial services |
3 890 |
|
4 117 |
Other financial income |
(38) |
|
36 |
|
|
|
|
|
4 893 |
|
4 366 |
12.4.Financial expenses
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Interest on loans and other liabilities from related entities |
11 137 |
|
14 385 |
FX losses |
- |
|
912 |
Warranty costs |
2 489 |
|
2 298 |
Other financial expenses |
494 |
|
385 |
|
|
|
|
|
14 120 |
|
17 980 |
12.5.Prime costs
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
Depreciation/amortisation |
1 021 |
|
1 119 |
Materials |
75 |
|
189 |
Third party services |
17 114 |
|
15 051 |
Taxes and charges |
134 |
|
66 |
Wages and salaries |
8 119 |
|
16 122 |
Employee benefits |
128 |
|
581 |
Other prime costs |
1 178 |
|
2 010 |
|
|
|
|
|
27 769 |
|
35 138 |
|
|
|
|
Interest and other not recognised in costs by type |
853 |
|
1 692 |
|
|
|
|
|
28 621 |
|
36 829 |
Prime costs, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Items recognised as selling and distribution costs |
- |
|
3 134 |
Items recognised as administrative expenses |
24 292 |
|
28 153 |
Items recognised as internal costs of sales |
4 330 |
|
5 512 |
12.6.Depreciation/amortisation
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
Depreciation of tangible fixed assets |
724 |
|
944 |
Amortisation of intangible assets |
297 |
|
176 |
|
|
|
|
|
1 021 |
|
1 119 |
Attributable to: |
|
|
|
- continuing operations |
1 021 |
|
1 119 |
- discontinued operations |
- |
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
1 021 |
|
1 119 |
12.7.Employee benefit costs
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Wages and salaries |
6 660 |
|
12 942 |
Social insurance premiums |
1 253 |
|
2 319 |
Costs of retirement benefits |
334 |
|
1 442 |
|
8 247 |
|
16 703 |
13.1.Tax liability
The major components of income tax liabilities for the year ended on 31 December 2020 and on 31 December 2019 are as follows:
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Current income tax liability |
(32) |
|
(305) |
Amount of deferred income tax charge |
- |
|
- |
|
|
|
|
Tax charge disclosed in the profit and loss account |
(32) |
|
(305) |
13.2.Recognition of effective tax rate
A reconciliation of income tax expense applicable to gross profit (loss) before income tax at the statutory income tax rate, to income tax expense at the Company’s effective income tax rate for the year ended on 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019 is as follows:
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
Gross profit (loss) before tax from continuing operations |
3 419 |
|
33 340 |
Profit (loss) before tax from discontinued operations |
- |
|
- |
Gross profit (loss) before tax |
3 419 |
|
33 340 |
|
|
|
|
Tax at the statutory rate in Poland of 19% |
650 |
|
6 335 |
Adjustments related to current income tax from previous years |
- |
|
305 |
Non-activated loss of the current year |
1 456 |
|
2 421 |
Dividend income |
(3 208) |
|
(9 430) |
Adjustment to accrued and paid interest |
- |
|
- |
Costs that are permanently non-tax deductible |
1 560 |
|
647 |
Taxable costs being accounting costs in the year |
- |
|
- |
Use of non-activated tax losses |
(4) |
|
(2) |
Unrealised FX differences |
- |
|
- |
Unrecognised other temporary income/expenses |
- |
|
- |
Impairment allowances for interests and loans |
- |
|
- |
Impairment allowances for other receivables |
- |
|
- |
Difference resulting from income tax rates in force in other countries |
(421) |
|
30 |
|
|
|
|
Income tax at the effective tax rate: the company does not pay income tax (2018: the company did not pay income tax) |
- |
|
- |
|
|
|
|
Income tax (charge) recognised in profit or loss |
32 |
|
305 |
Income tax attributed to discontinued operations |
- |
|
- |
13.3.Deferred income tax
Deferred income tax relates to the following items:
|
Balance sheet |
|
|
|
Profit and loss account |
|
|
|
31 December 2020 |
|
31 December 2019 |
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended on |
Deferred income tax liability |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Accelerated tax depreciation/amortisation |
- |
|
- |
|
- |
|
- |
Accrued interest income |
868 |
|
564 |
|
304 |
|
386 |
FX gains |
2983 |
|
1 343 |
|
1 640 |
|
(160) |
Gross deferred income tax provision |
3 851 |
|
1 908 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred income tax asset is recognised for tax losses carried forward to the extent that realisation of the related tax benefit through future taxable profit is probable.
|
Balance sheet |
|
|
|
Profit and loss account |
|
|
|
31 December 2020 |
|
31 December 2019 |
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended on |
Deferred income tax assets |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Provisions and accruals and deferred income |
1 031 |
|
1 114 |
|
83 |
|
(323) |
Interest accrued on loans received and bonds |
- |
|
62 |
|
62 |
|
(29) |
FX losses |
3 384 |
|
2 027 |
|
(1 357) |
|
309 |
Impairment charges |
- |
|
- |
|
- |
|
- |
Other |
(24) |
|
(22) |
|
2 |
|
(96) |
Gross deferred income tax assets |
4 391 |
|
3 181 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred income tax charge |
- |
|
- |
|
733 |
|
(2 067) |
Deferred income tax assets, not recognised in the balance sheet |
540 |
|
1 274 |
|
(733) |
|
2 067 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Net deferred income tax provision, |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
of which: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deferred income tax liability – continuing activity |
- |
|
- |
|
- |
|
- |
Deferred income tax asset has not been recognised for the following titles, as it is unlikely that taxable profit will be achieved that will allow the related tax benefits to be used.
Deferred income tax asset has not been recognized for the following titles, as it is unlikely that taxable profit will be achieved that will allow the related tax benefits to be used.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020 |
|
2020 |
|
2019 |
|
2019 |
|
Gross value |
|
Tax effect |
|
Gross value |
|
Tax effect |
Negative temporary differences |
2 843 |
|
540 |
|
6 707 |
|
1 274 |
Impairment allowances API Gmbh, APMW GmbH and API AB |
1 089 |
|
207 |
|
1 511 |
|
287 |
Tax losses |
51 258 |
|
9 739 |
|
47 193 |
|
8 966 |
|
55 190 |
|
10 486 |
|
55 411 |
|
10 527 |
Tax losses for which deferred income tax have not been recognised expire in the years 2021-2025.
Earnings per share is established by dividing the net profit for the reporting period attributable to the Company’s ordinary shareholders by weighted average number of issued ordinary shares existing in the reporting period.
There are no instruments for profit dilution of the Company. All shares are ordinary shares. Shares are not privileged. All ordinary shares belong to the same class.
The information regarding profit and the number of shares which was the base for calculation of earnings per share and diluted earnings per share is presented below:
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended |
Net profit (loss) from continuing operations |
3 387 |
|
33 035 |
Profit (loss) for the financial year from discontinued operations |
- |
|
- |
Net profit/(loss) for the reporting period |
3 387 |
|
33 035 |
|
|
|
|
Number of ordinary shares – A series |
50 000 |
|
50 000 |
Number of ordinary shares – B series |
44 253 500 |
|
44 253 500 |
Number of ordinary shares – C series |
8 100 000 |
|
8 100 000 |
Number of ordinary shares – E series |
3 000 000 |
|
3 000 000 |
Number of ordinary shares – F series |
13 884 283 |
|
13 884 283 |
|
|
|
|
Total number of shares |
69 287 783 |
|
69 287 783 |
Weighted average number of shares |
69 287 783 |
|
69 287 783 |
Weighted average diluted number of shares |
69 287 783 |
|
69 287 783 |
Profit per share (in PLN) |
0,05 |
|
0,48 |
Diluted profit per share (in PLN) |
0,05 |
|
0,48 |
Dividend is paid based on the net profit disclosed in the annual standalone financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A.
Dividend is paid based on the net profit disclosed in the standalone annual financial statements of Arctic Paper S.A. after covering losses carried forward from the previous years.
As on the date hereof, the Company had no preferred shares.
The possibility of disbursement of potential dividend by the Company to its shareholders depends on the level of payments received from its subsidiaries. The risk associated with the Company’s ability to disburse dividend was described in the part “Risk factors” of the annual report for 2020.
In connection with the term and revolving loan agreements signed on 9 September 2016, agreements related to the bond issue pursuant to which on 30 September 2016 the Company issued bonds and the intercreditor agreement, the possibility of the Company to pay dividend is subject to satisfying certain financial ratios by the Group in two periods preceding such distribution (as the term is defined in the term and revolving loan agreements) and no occurrence of any events of default (as defined in the term and revolving loan agreements).
In 2019 the Company did not pay out dividend.
On 30 April 2020, the Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A. approved a decision concerning a change to its recommendation on dividend distribution from 2019 profit, originally published in current report No. 4/2020 of 27 February 2020. The Company’s Management Board approved a resolution to recommend to the Company’s General Meeting no dividend distribution from the profit for the financial year ended on 31 December 2019. The change of the previous recommendation of the Company’s Management Board is related to a change of demand for products of the Arctic Paper Group companies as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as no possibility to assess the impact of the pandemic on economic situation in Q2 and Q3 2020. At its meeting of 30 April 2020, the Company’s Supervisory Board provided its positive opinion to the above proposal of the Management Board on no distribution of dividend from the profit for the financial year ended on 31 December 2019.
The Company’s General Meeting held on 31 August 2020 did not make any decision on dividend disbursement.
According to the current report no. 7/2021 published on 26 February 2021, Taking into account the preliminary financial results of the Company and the Arctic Paper S.A. Group of 2020, the Management Board of the Company decided to recommend to the Annual General Meeting of the Company the payment of dividend from the Company's net profit of 2020 in the amount of PLN 0.30 gross per share.
16.1.Shares in subsidiaries
|
As at |
|
As at |
|
|
|
|
Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. |
442 535 |
|
442 535 |
Arctic Paper Munkedals AB |
88 175 |
|
88 175 |
Rottneros AB |
101 616 |
|
101 616 |
Arctic Paper Investment AB, of which: |
26 779 |
|
24 579 |
Arctic Paper Investment AB (shares) |
307 858 |
|
307 858 |
Arctic Paper Investment AB (loans) |
82 709 |
|
82 709 |
Arctic Paper Investment AB (impairment charge) |
(363 788) |
|
(365 988) |
Arctic Paper Investment GmbH |
0 |
|
0 |
Arctic Paper Investment GmbH (shares) |
120 031 |
|
120 031 |
Arctic Paper Investment GmbH (impairment charge) |
(120 031) |
|
(120 031) |
Arctic Paper Sverige AB |
2 936 |
|
2 936 |
Arctic Paper Sverige AB (shares) |
11 721 |
|
11 721 |
Arctic Paper Sverige AB (impairment charge) |
(8 785) |
|
(8 785) |
Arctic Paper Danmark A/S |
5 539 |
|
5 539 |
Arctic Paper Deutschland GmbH |
4 977 |
|
4 977 |
Arctic Paper Norge AS |
516 |
|
516 |
Arctic Norge AS (shares) |
3 194 |
|
3 194 |
Arctic Paper Norge AS (impairment charge) |
(2 678) |
|
(2 678) |
Arctic Paper Italy srl |
738 |
|
738 |
Arctic Paper UK Ltd. |
522 |
|
522 |
Arctic Paper Polska Sp. z o.o. |
406 |
|
406 |
Arctic Paper Benelux S.A. |
387 |
|
387 |
Arctic Paper France SAS |
326 |
|
326 |
Arctic Paper Espana SL |
196 |
|
196 |
Arctic Paper Papierhandels GmbH |
194 |
|
194 |
Arctic Paper East Sp. z o.o. |
102 |
|
102 |
Arctic Paper Baltic States SIA |
64 |
|
64 |
Arctic Paper Schweiz AG |
61 |
|
61 |
Arctic Paper Finance AB |
68 |
|
68 |
|
|
|
|
Total |
676 137 |
|
673 937 |
The value of investments in subsidiary companies was disclosed on the basis of historic costs. In 2020 there were no changes in the value of Arctic Paper S.A. shares in subsidiaries, apart from partial reversal of impairment allowances of Arctic Paper Investment AB amounting for PLN 2.200 thousand (detailed description in note 16.2).
16.2.Test of impairment of tangible fixed assets
As at 31 December 2020, 31 December 2019 and in previous periods, analyses were carried out in terms of premises for impairment of investments in individual subsidiaries.
As a result of the analysis, it was decided to conduct a full impairment test of the investment in the subsidiary Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB (directly and exclusively controlled by Arctic Paper Investment AB, in which the Parent Company holds 100% shares). The necessity to conduct an investment test in Arctic Paper Grycksbo was due to the achievement of lower results than expected by the Group's Management Board, as a result of market conditions, such as the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the intensification of competition in the segment of paper produced by Grycksbo. Conducting the above test was related to the revision of the assumptions of the impairment tests carried out in previous years, mainly with regard to sales prices, production volume and investment plans.
As at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019, the Company conducted an impairment test of its investment in Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB. The estimated value of the entity as at 31 December 2020 was set at PLN 78,686 thousand. PLN, while the carrying amount of the investment in Arctic Paper Investment AB (direct shareholder of Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, whose one significant net asset component are shares in Artic Paper Grycksbo AB) as at 31 December 2020 amounted to PLN 76,486 thousand. PLN (shares and long-term loans).
As a result of the impairment test, it was decided as at 31 December 2020 to partially reverse the impairment losses recognized in previous years for the amount of PLN 2,200 thousand. PLN. The total impairment loss on investments as at 31 December 2020 amounted to PLN 363,788 thousand (31 December 2019: PLN 365,988 thousand).
Below is a presentation of the key assumptions underlying the impairment tests held as at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019.
Calculations of the value in use of the paper sale centre at the Grycksbo Paper Mill is most sensitive to the following variables:
—Sales level
—Sales prices
—Discount rates;
—Changes of raw material prices;
—Changes of energy prices;
—Exchange rates
—Changes of transport costs
Sales level - estimates of the sales level are made on the basis of budget data based on the expected demand for a given type of paper manufactured at AP Grycskbo and taking into account the production capacity of the Paper Mill.
Sales prices - estimates of sales prices are made on the basis of budget data based on the expected demand for a given type of paper manufactured at AP Grycskbo and in correlation with the prices of raw materials, mainly pulp. Sales prices include the discounts and discounts granted.
Discount rate – reflects the assessment of risks inherent to the centre estimated by the management. This is the rate applied by the management to estimate the operational effectiveness (results) and future investment proposals. In the budgeted period the applied discount rate is 8.0% (projected for 31 December 2019: 8.0%). The discount rate was determined on the basis of the following: Weighted average cost of capital (WACC).
Changing raw material prices (mainly pulp) – estimates concerning changes to raw materials are made on the basis of the ratios related to pulp prices. The data underlying the applied assumptions is obtained from: www.foex.fi. It should be noted that the costs of pulp is characterised by high volatility.
Changing energy prices – a growth of energy prices, mainly electricity, listed at Nordpool, the commodity exchange in Sweden, and of the energy generated from biomass as the core source of energy, results from the assumptions applied to the projections approved by the local management of the Grycksbo Paper Mill.
Exchange rates - determined on the basis of data published by the Central Bank in Sweden as of the date of the test.
Changes of transport costs - have been estimated on the basis of budgeted transport costs per tonne of product sold.
The table below presents the main assumptions used to calculate the value in use as at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019. The individual values represent the Management Board's assessment of the future trends of individual assumptions and are based on historical data both from internal and external sources of the Paper Mill.
Main assumptions |
|
2020 |
2019 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Approved projections based on |
|
2021-2025 |
2020-2024 |
|
Income tax rate |
|
21,4% (20,6% since 2021) |
21,4% (20,6% od 2021 roku) |
|
Discount rate before tax effect |
|
10,2% |
10,2% |
|
Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) |
|
8,0% |
8,0% |
|
Growth rate in the residual period |
|
0,0% |
0,0% |
The test assumed that the Paper Mill would continue its operations in the residual period.
The table below presents an analysis of an impairment test held on 31 December 2020:
Parameter |
|
Change of the |
Impact on the value of assets in use |
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 December 2020 |
|
|
|
|
Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) |
|
+0,1 p.p. |
(751) |
|
Growth rate in the residual period |
|
+0,1 p.p. |
83 |
|
Sales volume only in the first year of the projection |
|
+ 0,1% |
134 |
|
Sales prices only in the first year of the projection |
|
+ 0,1% |
490 |
|
Pulp purchase prices only in the first year of the projection |
|
+1,0% |
(1 875) |
|
Energy purchase prices only in the first year of the projection |
|
+1,0% |
(372) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) |
|
-0,1 p.p. |
770 |
|
Growth rate in the residual period |
|
-0,1 p.p. |
(81) |
|
Sales volume in the first year of the projection |
|
- 0,1% |
(134) |
|
Sales prices only in the first year of the projection |
|
- 0,1% |
(490) |
|
Pulp purchase prices in the first year of the projection |
|
-1,0% |
1 875 |
|
Energy purchase prices in the first year of the projection |
|
-1,0% |
372 |
|
31 December 2019 |
|
|
|
|
Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) |
|
+0,1 p.p. |
(613) |
|
Growth rate in the residual period |
|
+0,1 p.p. |
413 |
|
Sales volume in the first year of the projection |
|
+ 0,1% |
6 248 |
|
Sales prices in the first year of the projection |
|
+ 0,1% |
575 |
|
Pulp purchase prices in the first year of the projection |
|
+1,0% |
(2 208) |
|
Energy purchase prices in the first year of the projection |
|
+1,0% |
(451) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) |
|
-0,1 p.p. |
628 |
|
Growth rate in the residual period |
|
-0,1 p.p. |
(403) |
|
Sales volume in the first year of the projection |
|
- 0,1% |
(6 248) |
|
Sales prices in the first year of the projection |
|
- 0,1% |
(575) |
|
Pulp purchase prices in the first year of the projection |
|
-1,0% |
2 208 |
|
Energy purchase prices in the first year of the projection |
|
-1,0% |
451 |
16.3.Other financial assets
|
|
Maturity date |
As at |
As at |
Short-term |
|
|
|
|
Loan granted to Arctic Paper Munkedals AB |
|
2020 |
- |
7 929 |
- amount: PLN 7,849 thousand |
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. (short-term portion) |
|
2021 |
4 813 |
4 958 |
- amount: PLN 4,800 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loan granted to Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. (Capex B, short-term part) |
|
2021 |
15 706 |
14 543 |
- amount: EUR 3,333 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB (short-term part) |
|
2021 |
8 137 |
8 807 |
- amount: EUR 2,014 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Paper Grycksbo AB |
|
2021 * |
39 035 |
36 021 |
- amount: EUR 8,400 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Arctic Paper Benelux |
|
2022 * |
277 |
457 |
- amount: EUR 100 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cashpooling Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB |
|
|
39 102 |
21 341 |
|
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH |
|
|
26 103 |
25 014 |
- amount: EUR 5,743 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loan granted to Arctic Paper Investment GmbH |
|
|
30 269 |
30 269 |
- amount: EUR 6,992 thousand |
|
|
|
|
Impairment allowances to assets |
|
|
(56 372) |
(55 283) |
- applies to Arctic Paper Investment GmbH and Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
107 070 |
94 057 |
*possibility to repay upon request within 14 days |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maturity date |
As at |
As at |
|
|
|
|
|
Long-term |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loan granted to Arctic Paper Investment GmbH |
|
|
4 286 |
4 286 |
- amount: EUR 990 thousand |
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. |
|
|
- |
4 800 |
- amount: PLN 4,800 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loan granted to Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. (Capex B) |
|
2022 |
15 383 |
28 390 |
- amount: EUR 6,667 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Paper Grycksbo AB |
|
2022 |
5 132 |
12 128 |
- amount: EUR 2,848 thousand |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loans granted to Arctic Paper Benelux |
|
|
|
|
- amount: EUR 100 thousand |
|
2022 |
185 |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
Impairment allowances to assets |
|
|
|
|
- applies to Arctic Paper Investment GmbH |
|
|
(4 286) |
(4 286) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
20 699 |
45 318 |
|
|
|
|
|
Total other financial assets |
|
|
127 769 |
139 374 |
*may be repaid prematurely upon request
16.4.Other non-financial assets
|
As at |
|
As at |
Insurance |
3 |
|
149 |
Rent and security deposits |
- |
|
110 |
Leasing |
- |
|
165 |
Receivables from pension fund |
2 283 |
|
1 731 |
VAT refundable |
1 671 |
|
2 868 |
Accounting for costs related to new financing |
1 824 |
|
1 915 |
Other |
295 |
|
436 |
|
|
|
|
Total |
6 076 |
|
7 373 |
|
|
|
|
- long-term |
2 283 |
|
1 731 |
- short-term |
3 793 |
|
5 643 |
|
|
|
|
|
6 076 |
|
7 374 |
|
Note |
As at |
As at |
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables from related entities |
25 |
51 008 |
89 754 |
Trade receivables from other entities |
|
497 |
554 |
|
|
|
|
Total (gross) receivables |
|
51 505 |
90 308 |
Impairment charges to receivables |
|
(22 531) |
(20 578) |
|
|
|
- |
Net receivables |
|
28 973 |
69 730 |
The Company has no receivables payable after 12 months.
As at 31 December 2020, the cumulated amount of allowances to short-term receivables from AP Investment GmbH amounted to PLN 11,415 thousand and receivables from AP Mochenwangen GmbH: PLN 11,116 thousand.
Terms and conditions of transactions with related entities are presented in note 25.
Ageing of trade receivables as at 31 December 2020
|
|
current |
1 - 30 |
31 - 90 |
91 - 180 |
181 - 365 |
over 365 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables from related entities |
51 008 |
23 059 |
2 869 |
771 |
77 |
44 |
1 657 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables from other entities |
497 |
81 |
50 |
47 |
30 |
203 |
85 |
Net receivables |
28 973 |
23 140 |
2 919 |
818 |
107 |
247 |
1 742 |
Cash at bank earns interest at variable interest rates based on overnight bank deposit rates.
Short-term deposits are made for varying periods of between one day to one month depending on the immediate cash requirements of the Company and earn interest at the respective short-term deposit rates.
As at 31 December 2020, the fair value of cash and cash equivalents was PLN 40,148 thousand (31 December 2019: PLN 31,939 thousand). .
The balance of cash and cash equivalents disclosed in the cash flow statement consisted of the following items:
|
As at |
|
As at |
|
|
|
|
Cash in bank and on hand |
40 148 |
|
31 939 |
|
|
|
|
|
40 148 |
|
31 939 |
19.1.Share capital
Share capital |
|
As at |
|
As at |
|
|
|
|
|
Ordinary series A shares |
|
50 000 |
|
50 000 |
Ordinary series B shares |
|
44 253 500 |
|
44 253 500 |
Ordinary series C shares |
|
8 100 000 |
|
8 100 000 |
Ordinary series E shares |
|
3 000 000 |
|
3 000 000 |
Ordinary series F shares |
|
13 884 283 |
|
13 884 283 |
Total number of shares |
69 287 783 |
|
69 287 283 |
|
Total share capital (in PLN) |
|
69 287 783 |
|
69 287 283 |
All outstanding shares currently have a nominal value of PLN 1 and have been fully paid.
Until the day of these financial statements, the Management Board of Arctic Paper S.A. has not purchased any treasury shares of the Company.
|
|
As at |
|
As at |
|
|
|
Share in the share capital |
Share in the total number of votes |
Share in the share capital |
Share in the total number of votes |
Thomas Onstad |
68,13% |
68,13% |
68,13% |
68,13% |
|
indirectly via |
59,15% |
59,15% |
59,15% |
59,15% |
|
|
Nemus Holding AB |
58,28% |
58,28% |
58,28% |
58,28% |
|
other entity |
0,87% |
0,87% |
0,87% |
0,87% |
directly |
8,98% |
8,98% |
8,98% |
8,98% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other |
31,87% |
31,87% |
31,87% |
31,87% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19.2.FX differences on translation of investments in foreign entities
Swedish krona is the functional currency of the Company’s foreign branch.
As at the balance sheet date, the assets and liabilities of the branch are translated into the presentation currency of the Group and its income statement is translated using the average weighted exchange rate for the relevant reporting period. The FX differences on translation are recognised in other comprehensive income and cumulated in a separate equity item.
On 31 December 2020, FX differences on translation of the foreign branch recognised in equity amounted to PLN 450 thousand (as at 31 December 2019: PLN 1,785 thousand). . The FX differences on translation of the foreign branch, recognised in the total comprehensive income statement, amounted to PLN -1.335 thousand in 2020 and PLN 324 thousand in 2019.
19.3.Reserve capital
The reserve capital was originally established from the issue premium in 2009 of PLN 35,985 thousand which was reduced by the costs of the issue recognised as a decrease of the reserve capital and was modified over the successive years as a result of subsequent share issues and allocations from profit.
As at 31 December 2020, the total amount of the Company's reserve capital was PLN 427.502 thousand (31 December 2019: PLN 427.502 thousand). .
19.4.Other reserves
As at 31 December 2020, the total value of the Company’s other reserves was PLN 136.741 thousand (31 December 2019: PLN 103.115 thousand). (PLN ‘000)
19.5.Retained earnings (losses) and restrictions to dividend distribution
In accordance with the provisions of the Code of Commercial Companies, the Company is obliged to establish reserve capital to cover potential losses. At least 8% of the profit for the financial year disclosed in the financial statements of the Company should be transferred to the category of the capital until the capital has reached the amount of at least one third of the share capital. Appropriation of the reserve capital and other reserves depends on the decision of the General Meeting; however, the reserve capital equivalent to one third of the share capital may be used solely for the absorption of losses disclosed in the financial statements and may not be used for any other purposes.
Dividend payment restrictions were described in note 15.
As at 31 December 2020, there were no other restrictions concerning dividend distribution.
In 2020, the Company did not acquire any new interests in subsidiaries.
|
|
Repayment date |
Interest rate |
As at |
|
As at |
Short-term |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loan from Arctic Paper Finance AB; short-term portion and interest |
|
|
|
- |
|
21 619 |
Long-term loan from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development - agreement of 9 September 2016 |
|
2021-2022 |
2,65% |
9 547 |
|
25 237 |
Long-term loan from Santander Bank Polska S.A. - agreement of 9 September 2016 |
|
2021 |
2,55% |
2 293 |
|
4 584 |
Long-term loan from Bank BNP Paribas S.A. - agreement of 9 September 2016; short-term portion |
|
2021 |
2,65% |
2 389 |
|
4 382 |
Long-term loan CAPEX A from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development - agreement of 9 September 2016; short-term portion |
|
2021-2022 |
2,80% |
8 383 |
|
19 654 |
Long-term loan CAPEX B from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development - agreement of 9 September 2016; short-term portion |
|
2021-2022 |
3,00% |
15 826 |
|
41 032 |
Loan from a bank consortium: Santander and BNP PLN; short-term portion |
|
2021 |
2,55% |
2 876 |
|
14 348 |
Bond issue - agreement of 9 September 2016; short-term portion |
|
2021 |
3,05% |
58 194 |
|
19 166 |
Cashpooling Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A. |
|
|
|
122 892 |
|
52 754 |
Cashpooling Arctic Paper Munkedals AB |
|
|
|
29 713 |
|
49 544 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
252 112 |
|
252 321 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Repayment date |
Interest rate |
As at |
|
As at |
Long-term |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long-term loan from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development – agreement of 09 September 2016; long-term portion |
|
2021-2022 |
2,65% |
8 815 |
|
- |
Long-term loan CAPEX from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development – agreement of 09 September 2016; long-term portion |
|
2021-2022 |
2,80% |
4 928 |
|
- |
Long-term loan CAPEX from the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development – agreement of 09 September 2016; long-term portion |
|
|
3,00% |
14 350 |
|
- |
Bond issue – agreement of 9 September 2016; long-term portion |
|
2021 |
|
- |
|
54 549 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
28 093 |
|
54 549 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* The interest rate depends on the reference rates (WIBOR 6M, EURIBOR 6M) and on compliance with certain financial ratios |
|
|
In connection with the term and revolving loan agreements, agreements related to bond issues, signed on 9 September 2016, the Group agreed to maintain specified financial ratios that are calculated at the end of each quarter. As at 31 December 2020, the Group maintained the levels of these ratios specified in the agreements.
21.1.Collateral to loans
In connection with the term and revolving loan agreements, agreements relating to the bond issue and the intercreditor agreement (described in more detail in the note “Obtaining new financing”) signed on 9 September 2016, on 3 October 2016 the Company signed agreements and statements pursuant to which collateral to the above debt and other claims would be established in favour of Bank BNP Paribas S.A., acting as the Collateral Agent, that is
1. under Polish law – Collateral Documents establishing the following Collateral:
›financial and registered pledges on all shares and interests registered in Poland, owned by the Company and the Guarantors, in companies in the Company Group (with the exception of Rottneros AB, Arctic Paper Mochenwangen GmbH and Arctic Paper Investment GmbH), except the shares in the Company;
›mortgages on all properties located in Poland and owned by the Company and the Guarantors;
›registered pledges on all material rights and movable assets owned by the Company and the Guarantors, constituting an organised part of enterprise, located in Poland (with the exception of the assets listed in the Loan Agreement);
›assignment of (existing and future) insurance policies covering the assets of the Company and the Guarantors (with the exception of insurance policies listed in the Loan Agreement);
›declaration by the Company and the Guarantors on voluntary submission to enforcement, in the form of a notary deed;
›financial pledges and registered pledges on the bank accounts of the Company and the Guarantors, registered in Poland;
›powers of attorney to Polish bank accounts of the Company and the Guarantors, registered in Poland;
›subordination of the debt held by intragroup lenders (specified in the Intercreditor Agreement).
2. under Swedish law – Collateral Documents establishing the following Collateral:
›pledges on all shares and interests registered in Poland, owned by the Company and the Guarantors, in Group companies, with the exception of the shares in the Company, as well as pledged on the shares in Rottneros (with the exception of the free package of shares in Rottneros);
›mortgages on all properties located in Sweden and owned by the Company and the Guarantors as long as such collateral covers solely the existing mortgage deeds;
›corporate mortgage loans granted by the Guarantors registered in Sweden as long as such collateral covers solely the existing mortgage deeds;
›assignment of (existing and future) insurance policies covering the assets of the Company and the Guarantors (with the exception of insurance policies listed in the Loan Agreement);
›pledges on Swedish bank accounts of the Company and the Guarantors as long as such collateral is without prejudice to free management of funds deposited on bank accounts until an event of default specified in the Loan Agreement.
As at 31 December 2020 provisions created by the Company amounted to PLN 2,837 thousand (2.151 thousand PLN in 2019) The amount fully includes a provision for retirement employee benefits.
23.1.Trade payables and other short-term liabilities
|
Note |
As at |
|
As at |
|
|
|
|
|
Trade payables |
|
|
|
|
Due to related entities |
25 |
6 515 |
|
1 913 |
Due to other entities |
|
11 929 |
|
32 049 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18 443 |
|
33 962 |
|
|
|
|
|
Other liabilities |
|
|
|
|
Liabilities due to employees |
|
672 |
|
1 047 |
Liabilities towards the budget |
|
941 |
|
1 048 |
Other liabilities |
|
71 |
|
6 |
|
|
1 685 |
|
2 101 |
The terms and conditions of financial liabilities presented above:
Terms and conditions of transactions with related entities are presented in note 25.
Other liabilities are interest free and the usual payment term is 30 days.
There are no receivables payable after 12 months.
23.2.Accruals and deferred income
|
As at |
|
As at |
Accruals and deferred income, including: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unutilised holiday leaves |
- |
|
1 598 |
Bonus for employees |
1 638 |
|
1 055 |
Advisory services |
153 |
|
184 |
Costs of sales agents |
- |
|
75 |
Transport costs |
3 498 |
|
2 821 |
Severance pay for employees |
- |
|
1 451 |
Settlement costs with a former employee |
- |
|
1 600 |
Other |
225 |
|
578 |
|
|
|
|
|
5 515 |
|
9 362 |
|
|
|
|
- long-term |
- |
|
- |
- short-term |
5 515 |
|
9 362 |
|
|
|
|
|
5 515 |
|
9 362 |
23.3.Other financial liabilities
|
|
As at |
|
As at |
|
|
|
|
|
Other financial liabilities |
|
|
|
|
Measurement of financial instruments |
|
2 195 |
|
2 748 |
Lease liabilities |
|
641 |
|
1 212 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 836 |
|
3 961 |
|
|
|
|
|
Other financial liabilities |
|
|
|
|
Long-term |
|
119 |
|
626 |
Short-term |
|
2 717 |
|
3 335 |
|
|
2 836 |
|
3 961 |
As at 31 December 2020, the Company had no contingent liabilities.
24.1.Tax settlements
Tax settlements and other areas of activity subject to specific regulations (like customs or FX matters) may be inspected by administrative bodies that are entitled to impose high penalties and sanctions.
No reference to stable legal regulations in Poland results in lack of clarity and consistency in the regulations. Frequent differences of opinion as to legal interpretation of tax regulations – both inside state authorities and between state authorities and enterprises – generate areas of uncertainty and conflicts. As a result, tax risks in Poland are much higher than in countries with a more developed tax system.
Tax settlements may be subject to inspections for five years from the end of the year in which the tax was paid. Consequently, the Company may be subject to additional tax liabilities, which may arise as a result of additional tax audits.
In the opinion of the Management Board, such risk does not exist as at 31 December 2020 and therefore the Company has not established any provision for recognised and quantifiable tax risk.
24.2.Uncertainties related to tax settlements
Regulations related to VAT, corporate income tax and charges related to social insurance are subject to frequent changes. Those frequent changes result in unavailability of appropriate points of reference, inconsistent interpretations and few precedents that could apply. Additionally, the applicable regulations contain also certain ambiguities that result in differences of opinion as to legal interpretations of tax regulations – among public authorities and between public authorities and enterprises.
Tax settlements and other areas of operations (for instance customs or foreign exchange issues) may be inspected by the authorities that are entitled to impose high penalties and fines as well additional tax liabilities resulting from inspections that have to be paid along with high interest. As a result, tax risk in Poland is higher than in countries with more mature tax systems.
Therefore, the amounts presented and disclosed in the financial statements may change in the future as a result of final decisions by tax inspection authorities.
The Company recognises and measures assets or liabilities applying the requirements of IAS 12 Income Taxes, on the basis of profit (tax loss), taxation base, carried forward tax losses, unutilised tax credits and applicable tax rates, and further subject to uncertainties related to tax settlements. When an uncertainty exists if and to what extent the tax authority accepts tax settlements to specific transactions, the Company recognises those settlements subject to uncertainty assessment.
Related party |
|
Sales to related entities |
|
Purchases from related entities |
Interest – operational income |
Dividends received |
Interest – |
Guarantees received - other financial expenses |
Receivables from related entities |
including overdue |
Loan receivables |
Liabilities to related entities |
including overdue, after the payment date |
Loan liabilities |
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
Jednostka dominująca: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nemus Holding AB |
2020 |
1 |
|
1 345 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
3 274 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
2019 |
1 |
|
1 193 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
3 215 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Subsidiaries: |
2020 |
25 383 |
|
14 695 |
5 582 |
15 287 |
853 |
2 489 |
51 006 |
22 531 |
271 137 |
6 469 |
- |
152 651 |
|
2019 |
32 648 |
|
2 039 |
6 930 |
5 428 |
1 692 |
2 298 |
86 541 |
20 578 |
281 654 |
1 914 |
- |
123 915 |
Razem |
2020 |
25 384 |
|
14 695 |
5 582 |
15 287 |
853 |
2 489 |
51 006 |
22 531 |
271 137 |
6 469 |
- |
152 651 |
|
impairment charges |
- |
|
- |
(1 896) |
- |
- |
- |
(22 531) |
- |
(60 658) |
- |
- |
- |
|
presentation as interests in subsidiary entities |
- |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(82 709) |
- |
- |
- |
2020 following impairment charges and changes to presentation |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 384 |
* |
14 695 |
3 687 |
15 287 |
853 |
2 489 |
28 475 |
22 531 |
127 769 |
6 469 |
- |
152 651 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2019 |
32 648 |
|
3 232 |
6 930 |
5 428 |
1 692 |
2 298 |
89 753 |
20 578 |
281 654 |
1 913 |
- |
123 915 |
|
impairment charges |
- |
|
- |
(2 012) |
- |
- |
- |
(20 578) |
- |
(59 569) |
- |
- |
- |
|
presentation as interests in subsidiary entities |
- |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(82 709) |
- |
- |
- |
2019following impairment charges and changes to presentation |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
32 648 |
|
3 232 |
4 919 |
5 428 |
1 692 |
2 298 |
69 175 |
20 578 |
139 375 |
1 913 |
- |
123 915 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* Income statement position Sales of services amounts for PLN 20.495. Other sales to related patries incomes are presented in other positions of income statement. |
|
|
|
|
25.1.Transactions with parent entities
Transactions between the Company and Nemus Holding AB took place during the year ended on 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019. They were disclosed in note 25.
25.2.Terms and conditions of transactions with related entities
Related entity transactions are made at arm’s length.
25.3.Loan granted to members of the Management Board
In the period covered by these financial statements, the Company did not grant any loans to key management and did not grant any loans in the comparable period.
25.4.Remuneration of the Company’s managerial staff
Key management staff of the Company as at 31 December 2020 comprised two persons: President of the Management Board and a Member of the Management Board.
The table below presents the total value of remuneration to the members of the Management Board and the members of the Supervisory Board for the current and previous year:
|
As at |
|
As at |
Management Board |
|
|
|
Employee benefits (salaries and overheads) |
2 081 |
|
1 724 |
Benefits after employment period |
334 |
|
250 |
|
2 415 |
|
1 974 |
Supervisory Board |
|
|
|
Employee benefits (salaries and overheads) |
998 |
|
987 |
|
|
|
|
Total |
3 079 |
|
2 711 |
The table below presents the remuneration of the statutory auditor, paid or payable for the year ended on 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019 by category of services:
|
|
|
|
Service type |
As at |
|
As at |
Statutory audit of the annual financial statements |
195 |
|
170 |
Review of interim financial statements |
83 |
|
83 |
Mandatory audit of the annual financial statements (branch) |
13 |
|
26 |
Other services |
35 |
|
35 |
|
|
|
|
Total |
326 |
|
314 |
The core financial instruments used by the Company include bank loans, bonds, cash on hand and loans granted and borrowings received within the Group. The main purpose of these financial instruments is to raise finance for the Company’s and Group’s operations. The Company has various other financial instruments such as trade payables which arise directly from its operations.
The principle used by the Company currently and throughout the whole period covered with these financial statements is not to trade in financial instruments.
The core risks arising from the Company’s financial instruments include: interest rate risk, liquidity risk, FX risk and credit risk.
The Management Board verifies and approves the management principles of each type of risk – the principles are concisely presented herebelow. The Company has also been monitoring the risk of market prices of holdings of financial instruments.
27.1.Interest rate risk
The Company’s exposure to the risk of changes in market interest rates relates primarily to financial liabilities and granted variable interest loans.
The table below presents financial instrument split into fixed and variable interest rate:
|
|
31.12.2020 |
|
31.12.2019 |
Financial instruments: |
|
carrying amount |
|
carrying amount |
- fixed interest rate |
|
|
|
|
Trade receivables |
|
28 973 |
|
90 308 |
Loans granted to related entities |
|
88 667 |
|
118 034 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
|
40 148 |
|
31 939 |
Financial liabilities |
|
(18 397) |
|
(55 581) |
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds (excluding cashpooling) |
|
69 406 |
|
109 238 |
|
|
208 797 |
|
293 938 |
SWAP effect |
|
(69 406) |
|
(109 238) |
|
|
139 391 |
|
184 700 |
|
|
|
|
|
- variable interest rate |
|
|
|
|
Loans granted - cashpooling |
|
39 102 |
|
21 341 |
Borrowings received - cashpooling |
|
(152 605) |
|
(102 298) |
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds (excluding cashpooling) |
|
(127 600) |
|
(182 953) |
Leasing liabilities |
|
(641) |
|
(1 212) |
|
|
(241 744) |
|
(265 122) |
SWAP effect |
|
69 406 |
|
109 238 |
|
|
(172 338) |
|
(155 884) |
The following table demonstrates the sensitivity of gross profit (loss) to a reasonably possible change in interest rates, with all other variables held constant (in connection with liabilities with variable interest rates. No impact on equity or total comprehensive income has been presented.
|
Gross financial effect 2020 |
Gross financial effect 2019 |
||
|
+ 1 p.p. |
-1 p.p. |
+ 1 p.p. |
-1 p.p. |
|
|
|
|
|
Variable interest rate financial instruments |
(2 417) |
2 417 |
(2 651) |
2 651 |
SWAP effect |
694 |
(694) |
1 092 |
(1 092) |
|
(1 723) |
1 723 |
(1 559) |
1 559 |
|
|
|
|
|
27.2.FX risk
The Company is exposed to transactional FX risk. The risk mainly arises as a result of receiving by the Company dividend from its subsidiaries and granted and received FX loans – and to a lesser extent – as a result of purchase transactions made in currencies other than its functional currency.
The following table demonstrates the sensitivity of gross profit (loss) (due to changes in the fair value of monetary assets and liabilities) and the Company’s equity to reasonably possible change of FX rates with all other variables held constant.
31.12.2020 |
|
|
|
|
|
PLN |
EUR |
SEK |
Inne |
Trade receivables |
12 902 |
5 759 |
9 419 |
893 |
Loans granted |
4 813 |
122 956 |
- |
- |
Cash and cash equivalents |
20 582 |
15 949 |
3 040 |
577 |
Interest-bearing loans |
63 363 |
64 237 |
- |
- |
Trade and other payables |
10 203 |
4 005 |
3 747 |
488 |
Borrowings received |
53 180 |
99 426 |
- |
- |
Net exposure |
(88 449) |
(23 003) |
8 712 |
982 |
31.12.2019 |
|
|
|
|
|
PLN |
EUR |
SEK |
Inne |
Trade receivables |
8 165 |
28 651 |
39 070 |
15 943 |
Loans granted |
(19 070) |
167 312 |
- |
- |
Cash and cash equivalents |
13 274 |
17 600 |
620 |
446 |
Interest-bearing loans |
92 648 |
90 305 |
- |
- |
Trade and other payables |
6 994 |
6 496 |
8 740 |
14 249 |
Borrowings received |
39 426 |
84 165 |
- |
- |
Net exposure |
(136 699) |
32 597 |
30 950 |
2 140 |
|
Growth/drop of FX rates |
|
Impact on gross profit or loss |
|
Impact on total comprehensive income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 December 2020 – SEK |
+1% |
|
87 |
|
- |
|
-1% |
|
(87) |
|
- |
31 December 2020 – EUR |
+1% |
|
(230) |
|
- |
|
-1% |
|
230 |
|
- |
31 December 2020 – other |
+1% |
|
10 |
|
- |
|
-1% |
|
(10) |
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Growth/drop of FX rates |
|
Impact on gross profit or loss |
|
Impact on total comprehensive income |
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 December 2019 – SEK |
+1% |
|
310 |
|
- |
|
-1% |
|
(310) |
|
- |
31 December 2019 – EUR |
+1% |
|
326 |
|
- |
|
-1% |
|
(326) |
|
- |
31 December 2019 - other |
+1% |
|
21 |
|
- |
|
-1% |
|
(21) |
|
- |
27.3.Credit risk
With respect to the Company’s other financial assets such as cash and cash equivalents, the Company’s exposure to credit risk arises from default of the counter party, with a maximum exposure equal to the carrying amount of those instruments.
|
|
|
|
2020-12-31 |
2019-12-31 |
Other financial assets |
127 769 |
139 375 |
Trade receivables |
28 973 |
69 730 |
Cash and cash equivalents |
40 148 |
31 939 |
Total |
196 890 |
241 044 |
There are no significant concentrations of credit risk within the Company, except for the Group entities.
The table below presents information on credit risk exposure for trade receivables and other financial assets (loans and cash pooling) as at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019:
|
2020-12-31 |
|
2019-12-31 |
|
|
Group 1 |
Group 2 |
Group 1 |
Group 2 |
Trade receivables – gross value |
28 973 |
22 531 |
69 730 |
20 578 |
Loss charges of the value |
- |
22 531 |
- |
20 578 |
Trade receivables – book value |
28 973 |
- |
69 730 |
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other financial assets – gross value |
127 769 |
60 658 |
139 375 |
59 569 |
Loss charges of the value |
- |
60 658 |
- |
59 569 |
Trade receivables – book value |
127 769 |
- |
139 375 |
- |
Credit risk is primarily influenced by the individual characteristics of each of the Company's counterparties. Credit risk is limited by the fact that the Company only cooperates with related entities. Group 2 assets were fully covered by an impairment allowance. For group 1, the default rates calculated for the previous 3 years are zero, therefore the Company did not recognize expected credit losses on these assets as at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019.
The Company recognises impairment allowances that correspond to the estimated values of expected credit losses.
The core component of such allowances is the part covering specific losses due to exposure to a single material risk.
27.4.Liquidity risk
The Company monitors its risk to a shortage of funds using a recurring liquidity planning tool. The tool considers the maturity of both its financial investments and financial assets (e.g. receivables, other financial assets) and projected cash flows from guaranteed bank loans.
The table below presents the maturity profile of the Company’s financial liabilities at 31 December 2020 based on maturities of contractual undiscounted payments.
31 December 2020 |
Carrying amount |
Upon request |
|
Less than 3 months |
|
3 to 12 months |
|
1 to 5 years |
|
> 5 years |
|
Total |
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds |
280 205 |
- |
|
183 742 |
|
72 217 |
* |
30 903 |
|
- |
|
286 863 |
Other liabilities |
21 279 |
- |
|
18 465 |
|
2 702 |
|
121 |
|
- |
|
21 288 |
|
|
- |
|
202 207 |
|
74 919 |
|
31 024 |
|
- |
|
308 151 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 December 2019 |
|
Upon request |
|
Less than 3 months |
|
3 to 12 months |
0 |
1 to 5 years |
|
> 5 years |
|
Total |
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds |
306 870 |
- |
|
132 638 |
|
62 623 |
|
129 018 |
|
- |
|
324 279 |
Other liabilities |
37 922 |
3 377 |
|
30 769 |
|
3 324 |
|
641 |
|
- |
|
38 111 |
|
|
3 377 |
|
163 407 |
|
65 947 |
|
129 659 |
|
- |
|
362 390 |
* This amount includes bonds in the amount of PLN 50,200 thousand. PLN. They were shown in the table in line with the original maturity, but the redemption took place on an earlier date on 1 March 2021, as announced in current report No.5/2021 as of 8 February 2021.
Financial liabilities with a maturity period of less than 3 months include, among others, cash-pooling liabilities towards related entities, as at 31 December 2020 they amounted to PLN 152,605 thousand.
As at 31 December 2020, the Company held no contingent liabilities
.
The Company holds the following financial instruments: cash in bank accounts, loans, borrowings, receivables, liabilities under financial leases and SWAP interest rate contracts.
28.1.Interest rate risk
Due to the fact that the book values of the Company's financial instruments do not differ significantly from their fair value (except for those described in the table below), the table below presents the carrying amount of the interest bearing financial instruments held by the Company, exposed to interest rate risk, split into specific age categories
Abbreviations used: WwZK - Financial assets/liabilities measured at amortised cost WwWGpWF – Financial assets/liabilities measured at fair value through profit and loss account IRZ- hedging instruments
PLN bonds issued by AP S.A. with the carrying amount of PLN 58,194 thousand as at 31 December 2020 have fair value of PLN 58,500 thousand. Loans with the carrying amount of PLN 69,406 thousand as at 31 December 2020 have fair value of PLN 70,133 thousand. As at 31 December 2020 and as at 31 December 2019, financial instruments as at the measurement hierarchy are qualified to level 3 and level 2 in case of derivative instruments.
|
28.2.Changes to liabilities resulting from financing activity
Year ended on |
|
Note |
As at 1 January 2020 |
Changes from financing cash flows |
Effect of changes in foreign exchange rates |
Changes in fair values |
Other changes |
As at |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interest-bearing loans, borrowings and bonds |
|
21 |
306 870 |
(89 174) |
4 256 |
- |
32 546 |
254 499 |
Finance lease liabilities |
|
23.3 |
1 212 |
(567) |
- |
- |
- |
645 |
Derivative financial instruments |
|
23.3 |
2 748 |
- |
- |
(553) |
- |
2 195 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total liabilities from financing activities |
|
21 |
310 831 |
(89 741) |
4 256 |
(553) |
32 546 |
257 339 |
28.3.Collateral
In connection with interest rate risk as detailed in note 30.1, the Company hedges its future cash flows that may fluctuate as a result of the risk. As at 31 December 2020, the Company held loans and debt securities for PLN 127,600 thousand with a variable interest rate that were hedged with SWAP derivative instruments (PLN 183,054 thousand as at 31 December 2019).
In the Company’s opinion, the effectiveness of the hedging instruments is very high due to the fact that the parameters of the hedging instruments are matched to the hedged positions, in particular with respect to nominal values and dates of cash flows, interest rates underlying the calculation of the cash flows and the interest accrual convention.
As at 31 December 2020, the Company used cash flow hedge accounting for the following hedging items:
—the Company designated SWAP derivatives to hedge accounting to hedge interest payments in EUR on a bank loan in EUR,
—the Company designated SWAP derivatives to hedge accounting to hedge interest payments in PLN on a bank loan in PLN.
— The table below presents detailed information concerning the hedging relationship in the cash flow hedge accounting related to the payment of interest:
Interest rate SWAPs |
EUR |
PLN |
|
Type of hedge |
Hedge of cash flows related to variable interest rate on the EUR long-term loan |
Hedge of cash flows related to variable interest rate on the PLN long-term loan |
|
Hedged position |
Future EUR interest flows on EUR loan calculated on the basis of 6M EURIBOR |
Future PLN interest flows on PLN loan calculated on the basis of 6M WIBOR |
|
Hedging instruments |
SWAP transaction under which the Company agreed to pay interest in EUR on the EUR loan on the basis of a fixed interest rate |
SWAP transaction under which the Company agreed to pay interest in PLN on the PLN loan on the basis of a fixed interest rate |
|
|
|
|
|
Currency |
Date |
Amount in currency |
PLN amount as at 31.12.2020 |
EUR |
2016-11-21 - 2022-08-31 |
12 000 |
18 362 |
EUR |
2016-11-21 - 2022-08-31 |
2 600 |
2 389 |
EUR |
2017-07-18 - 2022-08-31 |
3 986 |
8 142 |
EUR |
2018-07-27 - 2022-08-31 |
3 344 |
5 169 |
EUR |
2019-10-15 - 2022-08-31 |
10 000 |
30 176 |
|
|
31 930 |
64 238 |
PLN |
2016-11-21 - 2021-08-31 |
100 000 |
58 194 |
PLN |
2018-07-31 - 2021-01-29 |
25 800 |
2 876 |
PLN |
2016-11-21 - 2022-08-31 |
11 500 |
2 293 |
|
|
137 300 |
63 363 |
Amount hedged by interest rate SWAPs as at 31.12.2020 |
|
127 600 |
The table below presents the fair value of hedging instruments in cash flow hedge accounting as at 31 December 2020 and the comparative data:
|
|
As at 31 December 2020 |
As at 31 December 201 |
||
|
|
Assets |
Equity and liabilities |
Assets |
Equity and liabilities |
|
|
|
|
|
|
SWAP |
- |
2 195 |
- |
2 748 |
|
Corridor options |
- |
- |
|
- |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total hedging derivative instruments |
- |
2 195 |
- |
2 748 |
The table below presents the nominal value of derivative hedging instruments as at 31 December 2020:
|
|
|
Up to 1 year |
1 to 5 years |
Over 5 years |
Total |
interest rate SWAP |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
principal repayment (in ‘000 PLN) |
|
98 875 |
29 752 |
- |
128 627 |
The table below presents the amounts related to cash flow hedge accounting that were recognised in 2020 by the Company in the income statement and in the total comprehensive income statement:
|
|
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
|
Revaluation reserve as at 31 December 2020 – changes of fair value measurement of hedging derivative instruments due to the hedged risk, corresponding to effective hedging |
|
2 572 |
|
Ineffective part of the change in fair value measurement due to the hedged risk, recognised in financial income or expenses |
|
38 |
|
The period of the anticipated hedged flows |
|
|
|
|
|
1 January 2021 - 31 August 2022 |
The table below presents changes to revaluation reserve due to cash flow hedge accounting in 2020:
|
|
|
Year ended |
|
|
|
|
Revaluation reserve as at 01 January 2020 |
|
|
4 019 |
Deferral to changes of fair value measurement of the hedging derivative instruments due to the hedged risk, corresponding to the effective hedge |
- |
||
The amount of the changes of fair value measurement of the hedging derivative instruments due to the hedged risk, removed from the revaluation reserve and transferred to financial income or expenses |
|
|
(38) |
|
|
|
|
Revaluation reserve as at 31 December 2020 |
|
3 981 |
Interest rate floor option |
EUR |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Type of hedge |
The right to reduce cash flows under payment of interest due to decrease of EURIBOR below 0% |
|
|
Hedged position |
The hedged item are future EUR interest flows in EUR related to a loan in EUR calculated on the basis of 6M EURIBOR |
|
|
Hedging instruments |
The hedging item is a floor option under which the Company acquires the right to pay interest in EUR on the basis of EURIBOR below 0% |
|
|
Currency |
Date |
Amount in currency |
PLN amount as at 31.12.2020 |
EUR |
2016-11-21 - 2022-08-31 |
12 000 |
18 362 |
EUR |
2017-07-18 - 2022-08-31 |
3 986 |
8 142 |
EUR |
2018-07-27 - 2022-08-31 |
3 344 |
5 169 |
EUR |
2019-10-15 - 2022-08-31 |
10 000 |
30 176 |
|
|
29 330 |
61 849 |
The primary objective of the Company’s capital management is to ensure that it maintains a strong credit rating and healthy capital ratios in order to support its business and maximise shareholder value.
The Company manages its capital structure and makes adjustments to it, in light of changes in economic conditions. To maintain or adjust the capital structure, the Company may adjust the dividend payment to shareholders, return capital to shareholders or issue new shares. No changes were made in the objectives, policies or processes during the year ended on 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019.
|
As at |
|
As at |
Interest-bearing loans,bonds, borrowings and other financial liabilities |
283 041 |
|
310 830 |
Trade and other payables |
20 128 |
|
36 063 |
Minus cash and cash equivalents |
(40 148) |
|
(31 939) |
Net debt |
263 022 |
|
314 954 |
Equity |
570 595 |
|
568 078 |
|
|
|
|
Equity and net debt |
833 616 |
|
883 033 |
Leverage ratio |
0,32 |
|
0,36 |
The Company monitors its equity using a leverage ratio, which is net debt divided by total equity plus net debt. The Company includes interest bearing loans and borrowings, trade and other payables, reduced by cash and cash equivalents within its net debt.
The average headcount in the Company in the year ended on 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2019 was as follows:
|
As at |
|
As at |
Management Board |
1 |
|
2 |
Finances |
4 |
|
5 |
Sales & Marketing |
- |
|
5 |
Logistics |
26 |
|
26 |
Administration |
2 |
|
7 |
IT |
- |
|
- |
Total |
33 |
|
45 |
The differences between changes resulting from the statement of financial condition and changes resulting from the cash flow statement are presented in the table below:
|
Year ended on |
|
Year ended on 31 December 2019 |
|
|
|
|
Change to income tax receivables as specified in the statement of financial condition |
90 |
|
(76) |
|
|
|
|
Income tax paid |
(32) |
|
(305) |
|
|
|
|
|
58 |
|
(381) |
32.1.Extending the Revolving Loan
On 27 October 2020 and again on 12 January and 11 February 2021, the Lenders (BNP Paribas Bank Polska SA, Santander Bank Polska SA) extended the availability of the Renewable Loan to the Company. The loan availability was extended until 31 March 2021 under the conditions adopted so far.
The Revolving Loan was granted to the Company for the total amount of EUR 19,800,000 and PLN 20,000,000 and was provided primarily to refinance the Company’s intragroup liabilities or to finance intragroup loans.
The availability of the Revolving Loan has been extended as the Company is working on the possibilities of simplifying the current structure of the Group's debt and further optimizing the conditions and reducing the costs of its servicing.
32.2.Commencement of negotiations for the conclusion of a Financing Agreement
On 5 February 2021, the Management Board of the Company began negotiating a new loan agreement with selected banks in order to obtain funds for:
(i)refinancing the existing financial debt of the Company and its subsidiaries;
(ii)financing transaction costs (including costs, commissions and fees related to refinancing the existing financial debt);
(iii)financing the current operations of the corporate capital group of the Company.
Based on the preliminary financing offers received from banks, the Company anticipates the following main conditions for New Financing:
1. total amount of financing: the equivalent of PLN 300,000,000 (three hundred million zlotys);
2. currency: PLN and EUR;
3. loans: a term loan in the total amount of PLN 150,000,000 (one hundred and fifty million zlotys) divided into two equal tranches in PLN and EUR and a revolving loan in the total amount of the EUR equivalent of PLN 150,000,000 (one hundred and fifty million zlotys);
4.financing period: 5 years for a term loan and 3 years for a revolving loan with the possibility of extending it for an additional 2 years (provided that the agreed extension conditions are met);
5. loan repayment terms: repayment of the term loan in equal half-yearly instalments starting from November 2021 and repayment of the revolving loan on the final repayment date;
6. interest rate: variable based on the WIBOR base rate in the case of financing in PLN and the EURIBOR base rate in the case of financing in EUR and a variable margin, the level of which will depend on the level of the net debt to EBITDA ratio; and
7. collateral: the collateral package will include collaterals customarily established in this type of transactions, such as: a registered pledge and a financial pledge on shares of Arctic Paper Kostrzyn S.A., pledges on shares of Swedish companies Arctic Paper Munkedals AB and Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, statements of submission enforcement by the Company and Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA, registered pledges and financial pledges on the bank accounts of the Company and Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA, pledges on bank accounts of Arctic Paper Munkedals AB and Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, mortgages on the real estate of the Company and Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA, mortgages on the properties of Arctic Paper Munkedals AB and Arctic Paper Grycksbo AB, a registered pledge on the assets of Arctic Paper Kostrzyn SA and an assignment agreement to secure rights under property insurance policies.
The above-mentioned parameters of New Financing are preliminary and may be changed by negotiation with banks. Additionally, New Financing negotiations with banks may or may not result in a new loan agreement. The company will provide information on the completion of negotiations and their result in a separate current report.
32.3.Complete early redemption of the Bonds issued by Arctic Paper S.A.
On 8 February 2021, the Company's Management Board adopted a resolution on the early redemption of all Series A Bonds (marked with ISIN code: PLARTPR00038), the issue of which the Company reported in current report No. 24/2016 of 30 September 2016.
The early redemption of the Bonds, was carried out on 1 March 2021. On the Early Redemption Date, the Company redeemed 100,000 (in words: one hundred thousand) Bonds with a total nominal value of PLN 58,500,000 (in words: fifty-eight million five hundred zlotys). The consideration per Bond amounted to PLN 585, plus accrued interest and a premium, calculated in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Bond issue. The redeemed Bonds were cancelled.
From the balance sheet date until the day of publishing of these standalone financial statements, there were no other events which might have a material impact on the Company’s financial and capital position.
Signatures of the Members of the Management Board
Position |
First and last name |
Date |
Signature |
|
|
|
|
President of the Management Board |
Michał Jarczyński |
16 March 2021 |
signed with a qualified electronic signature |
Member of the Management Board |
Göran Eklund |
16 March 2021 |
signed with a qualified electronic signature |