Blueprint
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER
PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 UNDER
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the
month of October 2017
PEARSON plc
(Exact
name of registrant as specified in its charter)
N/A
(Translation
of registrant's name into English)
80 Strand
London, England WC2R 0RL
44-20-7010-2000
(Address
of principal executive office)
Indicate
by check mark whether the Registrant files or will file annual
reports
under
cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F:
Form
20-F
X
Form 40-F
Indicate
by check mark whether the Registrant by furnishing the
information
contained
in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to
the
Commission
pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934
Yes
No X
17 October 2017
London
Press Release
PEARSON NINE-MONTH TRADING UPDATE (UNAUDITED)
Good progress in the first nine months of the year
Today
we are providing our nine-month trading update and narrowing
guidance for 2017 to the upper half of the range. We have had a
good competitive performance year to date, and our plans to
accelerate our digital transformation and simplify the company are
on track.
Revenue growth analysis: first nine months of 2017
|
Headline
|
CER
|
Underlying
|
North
America
|
3%
|
(4)%
|
(4)%
|
Core
|
1%
|
(3)%
|
(1)%
|
Growth
|
11%
|
2%
|
3%
|
Total
|
4%
|
(3)%
|
(2)%
|
●
Nine-month
revenues in line with expectations and consistent with the upper
half of our guidance range
o Sales in the first
nine months decreased by 2% in underlying terms primarily due to
expected declines in North America in school assessment, school and
higher education courseware, and the retirement of Learning
Studio.
o Sales in US higher
education courseware declined by 1% on an underlying basis, towards
the upper half of our expected range. The negative impact of lower
enrolments and attrition from growth in the secondary market driven
by print rental was partially offset by the benefit of increased
digital revenue and a year on year benefit from the reduction in
returns from last year's unprecedented levels, helped by the
actions we announced at the beginning of the year.
o Underlying sales in
Core and Growth were in line with our expectations.
●
2017 adjusted
operating profit and EPS guidance narrowed
o Whilst we anticipate
the underlying structural pressures in US higher education
courseware will persist in the medium term, the relative strength
of trading in this business is helping our profits this year. As a
result, we now expect Pearson's 2017 operating profits to be in the
upper half of the range we set at the start of the
year.
o Our profit
performance year to date is benefiting from ongoing savings from
the 2016 restructuring programme and this underpins our confidence
in the full year.
o In addition, we are
revising our guidance on taxation as a result of the favourable
outcome of certain historical tax issues and now expect our 2017
adjusted tax rate to be around 16% as against our prior expectation
of 21%. Finance costs in 2017 are now expected to be around
£78m, compared to our prior expectation of £74m, due to
the costs of a higher than expected take up of our debt tender
offer. This increases charges in 2017 but will lower finance costs
in 2018, which we now expect to be in the range £40m to
£45m.
o As such, we now
expect 2017 adjusted operating profit and EPS to be as
follows:
Full Year 2017 Guidance*
|
New Guidance
|
|
Previous Guidance
|
Lower
|
Upper
|
|
Lower
|
Upper
|
Adjusted
operating profit (revised for PRH transaction)†
|
£576m
|
£606m
|
|
£546m
|
£606m
|
Adjusted
EPS†
|
51.0p
|
54.0p
|
|
45.5p
|
52.5p
|
Adjusted
EPS at current exchange rates
|
49.0p
|
52.0p
|
|
|
|
*
Adjusted operating profit excludes the expected restructuring cost
of £70m associated with the £300m 2017-2019 cost
efficiency programme as announced on August 4th
†based on 31 December 2016 exchange rates
|
● Strong balance sheet
o Net debt at the end
of September 2017 was £1,312m (2016: £1,365m) reflecting
good operating cash generation, a lower interim dividend payment
and a modest benefit from the strengthening of Sterling against the
US Dollar, offsetting pension contributions relating to the 2013
creation of Penguin Random House and restructuring
costs.
o The sale of a 22%
stake in Penguin Random House to Bertelsmann, announced on July
11th, closed on October 5th. We expect to start to return
£300m in surplus capital via a share buyback soon.
o Our UK Pension Plan
has used its strong funding position to purchase two insurance
buy-in policies with Legal & General and Aviva,
covering approximately £1.2bn (one third) of its total
liabilities. This puts the Plan in an even stronger
position and substantially reduces Pearson's future pension
funding risk, at no further cost to the Company.
● Simplification, digital
transformation and tactical actions on track
o We continue to
reshape our portfolio and during the first nine months of the year
we have made good progress with the divestment of a 22% stake in
Penguin Random House and the completion of the sale of Global
Education (GEDU) to Puxin Education.
o US higher education
digital courseware revenue grew 11%.
o We continue to focus
on institution-wide Direct Digital Access. We have signed 195 new
contracts this year, up 89%, bringing the total to
477.
o We reduced the rental
price of 2,000 eBook titles and have seen eBook revenues increase
more than 20% in the first nine months of 2017.
o Our print rental
pilot has had a successful start, and we have plans to add a
further 100 titles in January.
Pearson's
chief executive, John Fallon said:
"We
continue to invest in growing market opportunities, gaining share
with our digital transformation, and becoming simpler and more
efficient. With good cash generation and a strong balance
sheet, we are going to return £300 million in surplus capital
through a share buyback.
"We
expect tough market conditions in our biggest business to continue
over the next couple of years. We're focused on being the long
term winner in digital learning and creating sustainable value for
our shareholders."
Operating highlights for the first nine months of 2017
North America
In the
first nine months of 2017, sales declined by 4% in underlying terms
primarily due to expected contract losses in school assessment,
weakness in school and higher education courseware and the
retirement of Learning Studio. This was partially offset by growth
in professional certification, Online Program Management (OPM) and
Connections Education.
In US
higher education courseware revenue declined 1% on an underlying
basis due to lower gross sales partially offset by significantly
lower returns and good growth in digital revenues, which were up
11%.
We
estimate that the negative impact of lower enrolment and impact of
print rental in the secondary market have been in line with our
expectations, partially offset by the expected benefit of a
shift to institutional selling and digital subscription. The impact
of adoption losses to Open Educational Resources (OER) is running
slightly below our original assumption. Returns are down
considerably from last year's elevated rates, although they have
not quite reached levels seen prior to the inventory
correction.
Core
In the
first nine months of 2017, sales decreased by 1% in underlying
terms. Strong growth in Pearson Test of English and OPM services in
Australia, was more than offset by declines in revenue at VUE, in
UK school assessment and in courseware revenues in smaller
markets in Europe and Africa. At VUE, revenues declined due
to the impact of last year's renegotiated terms for the UK Driving
Theory test for the DVSA. UK school assessment revenues declined
modestly on lower GCE-AS level entries, as a result of a
policy-driven shift to more linear courses, and stabilisation in
vocational qualifications revenue.
Growth
In the
first nine months of 2017, sales increased by 3% in underlying
terms. This was primarily due to growth in school textbooks in
South Africa, growth in Wall Street English, China from new
centres, higher sales in China English language courseware and
Pearson Test of English in India. This was partialy offset by exits
in the Middle East and declines in Brazil due to lower enrolments
in our English language learning business, related to macroeconomic
pressures, despite greater stability in our private sistemas. We
completed the sale of Global Education (GEDU) to Puxin Education on
August 16th.
Penguin Random House
Penguin
Random House performed in line with our expectations, with
revenues down slightly on broadly stable sales of print and audio
books and ongoing modest declines in demand for e-books, whilst the
business benefited from the annualisation of integration synergies.
Performance in the third quarter benefited from bestsellers
from John le Carré, Ken Follett, Sue Grafton, John
Grisham and Jamie Oliver.
We will hold a conference call at 8:30am today, Tuesday
17th
October to discuss our third quarter
results. A replay will be available soon after on our
website www.pearson.com.
Analyst and investor conference call details
UK Toll
Number: +44 (0) 203 139 4830
UK
Toll-Free Number: +44 (0) 808 237 0030
Participant
Pin Code: 69342445#
Audience
URL:
http://event.onlineseminarsolutions.com/r.htm?e=1488354&s=1&k=7C482A8AC3F89D943FE1068D8DA3EFB9
Throughout this statement underlying growth rates exclude the
impact of both currency movements and portfolio
changes.
For more information
T + 44 (0)20 7010 2310
Investors: Jo Russell, Tom Waldron, Anjali
Kotak
Press: Tom Engel, Tom Steiner
ENDS
Forward looking statements:
Except for the historical information contained herein, the matters
discussed in this statement include forward-looking statements. In
particular, all statements that express forecasts, expectations and
projections with respect to future matters, including trends in
results of operations, margins, growth rates, overall market
trends, the impact of interest or exchange rates, the availability
of financing, anticipated cost savings and synergies and the
execution of Pearson's strategy, are forward-looking statements. By
their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and
uncertainties because they relate to events and depend on
circumstances that will occur in future. They are based on numerous
assumptions regarding Pearson's present and future business
strategies and the environment in which it will operate in the
future. There are a number of factors which could cause actual
results and developments to differ materially from those expressed
or implied by these forward-looking statements, including a number
of factors outside Pearson's control. These include international,
national and local conditions, as well as competition. They also
include other risks detailed from time to time in Pearson's
publicly-filed documents and you are advised to read, in
particular, the risk factors set out in Pearson's latest annual
report and accounts, which can be found on its website
(www.pearson.com/investors). Any forward-looking statements speak
only as of the date they are made, and Pearson gives no undertaking
to update forward-looking statements to reflect any changes in its
expectations with regard thereto or any changes to events,
conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based.
Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such
forward-looking statements.
SIGNATURE
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf
by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
|
PEARSON
plc
|
|
|
Date: 17
October 2017
|
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By: /s/
NATALIE WHITE
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------------------------------------
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Natalie
White
|
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Deputy
Company Secretary
|