KwaCrete Ready Mix — Financial Plan
The key assumptions, the funding structure and use of funds, the projected income statement, balance sheet and cash-flow statement, break-even, the unit economics, debt-service coverage, the investment returns, the sensitivity analysis, the exit and the funding-requirement summary.
Section 12 · Business Plan
Financial Plan
The key assumptions, the funding structure and use of funds, the projected income statement, balance sheet and cash-flow statement, break-even, the unit economics, debt-service coverage, the investment returns, the sensitivity analysis, the exit and the funding-requirement summary.
This section presents the Company’s integrated five-year financial
projections — the projected income statement, balance sheet and
cash-flow statement — together with the underlying assumptions, the
funding structure, and a full suite of investor metrics including
break-even, debt-service coverage, returns and sensitivity analysis. The
three statements are fully linked: every figure derives from a single,
internally consistent model, and the balance sheet ties out in every
year.
| Financial highlights at a glance Revenue (FY30): R134.9m • EBITDA (FY30): R27.5m (20.4%) Project IRR: 33.1% • Equity IRR: 38.4% • NPV @ 16%: R38.1m Upfront capital: R44.0m • Peak WC facility: R7.0m • FY30 DSCR: 4.17x |
12.1 Key Assumptions
The projections rest on a transparent set of operating and financial
assumptions, summarised below. Volume and pricing are deliberately
conservative; cost assumptions reflect current South African input
prices with realistic escalation.
| Assumption | Basis / value |
|---|---|
| Volume ramp | 28,500 m³ (FY26) rising to 67,000 m³ (FY30) |
| Average selling price | R1,665/m³ (FY26) escalating to R2,014/m³ (FY30) |
| Variable cost / m³ | R1,160 (FY26) — materials + delivery |
| Gross margin | 30.3% (FY26) expanding to 32.6% (FY30) |
| Debtor days | 45 days |
| Creditor days | 30 days |
| Inventory days | 15 days |
| Corporate tax rate | 27% |
| Term-debt rate | 13.5% p.a. over 6 years |
| Depreciation | Straight-line, ~11.8% blended |
| Discount rate (WACC) | 16% |
| Exit multiple | 4.5× EBITDA |
Table 12.1 — Key operating and financial assumptions.
12.2 Funding Structure & Use of Funds
The Company seeks R44.0m of upfront capital, comprising R18.0m of
equity and R26.0m of senior term debt, alongside a R8.0m revolving
working-capital facility. The upfront raise is split 41% equity and 59%
debt — a conservative gearing that provides comfortable debt-service
headroom.
| Use of funds | Amount (ZAR) | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Batch plant & silos | R9,800,000 | 22.3% |
| Truck mixers (6 units) | R13,200,000 | 30.0% |
| Concrete pumps (2) | R3,600,000 | 8.2% |
| Front-end loaders (2) | R2,900,000 | 6.6% |
| Site works, yard, weighbridge | R4,100,000 | 9.3% |
| Lab, IT, batching software | R1,450,000 | 3.3% |
| Office & ablutions | R950,000 | 2.2% |
| Working capital & contingency | R8,000,000 | 18.2% |
| Total upfront funding | R44,000,000 | 100.0% |
Table 12.2 — Use of the upfront capital raise.
12.3 Projected Income Statement
The projected income statement below shows the Company moving from a
modest first-year loss — inherent to a plant ramp-up — to robust
profitability. Revenue grows at a compound annual rate of approximately
29.9%, while EBITDA margin expands from 4.6% to 20.4% as fixed costs are
absorbed across rising volume.
| Income statement (ZAR) | FY 2026 | FY 2027 | FY 2028 | FY 2029 | FY 2030 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume (m³) | 28,500 | 41,000 | 52,000 | 61,000 | 67,000 |
| Revenue | R47,452,500 | R71,668,000 | R95,420,000 | R117,547,000 | R134,938,000 |
| Variable costs | (33,060,000) | (49,487,000) | (65,260,000) | (79,605,000) | (90,919,000) |
| Gross profit | R14,392,500 | R22,181,000 | R30,160,000 | R37,942,000 | R44,019,000 |
| Gross margin % | 30.3% | 30.9% | 31.6% | 32.3% | 32.6% |
| Salaries & wages | (6,200,000) | (6,700,000) | (7,250,000) | (7,800,000) | (8,350,000) |
| Plant overhead | (1,850,000) | (1,950,000) | (2,070,000) | (2,190,000) | (2,320,000) |
| Site lease | (1,320,000) | (1,386,000) | (1,455,000) | (1,528,000) | (1,604,000) |
| Administration | (1,450,000) | (1,560,000) | (1,670,000) | (1,790,000) | (1,910,000) |
| Marketing | (620,000) | (700,000) | (760,000) | (820,000) | (880,000) |
| Maintenance | (780,000) | (980,000) | (1,180,000) | (1,360,000) | (1,480,000) |
| EBITDA | R2,172,500 | R8,905,000 | R15,775,000 | R22,454,000 | R27,475,000 |
| EBITDA margin % | 4.6% | 12.4% | 16.5% | 19.1% | 20.4% |
| Depreciation | (4,248,000) | (4,531,200) | (5,333,600) | (5,711,200) | (6,018,000) |
| EBIT | (R2,075,500) | R4,373,800 | R10,441,400 | R16,742,800 | R21,457,000 |
| Net interest | (3,902,000) | (3,429,553) | (2,886,886) | (2,252,408) | (1,559,506) |
| Profit before tax | (R5,977,500) | R944,247 | R7,554,514 | R14,490,392 | R19,897,494 |
| Taxation | (0) | (254,947) | (2,039,719) | (3,912,406) | (5,372,323) |
| Net profit after tax | (R5,977,500) | R689,300 | R5,514,795 | R10,577,986 | R14,525,171 |
| Net margin % | -12.6% | 1.0% | 5.8% | 9.0% | 10.8% |
Table 12.3 — Projected income statement, FY2026–FY2030. Figures
in parentheses are deductions.
12.4 Projected Balance Sheet
The balance sheet strengthens steadily as retained earnings
accumulate and debt amortises. Shareholders’ equity grows from R12.0m to
R43.3m over the period, while term debt reduces from R22.9m to R5.8m.
The statement balances exactly in every year.
| Balance sheet (ZAR) | FY 2026 | FY 2027 | FY 2028 | FY 2029 | FY 2030 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ASSETS | |||||
| Property, plant & equipment | R31,752,000 | R29,620,800 | R31,087,200 | R28,576,000 | R25,158,000 |
| Trade & other receivables | R5,850,308 | R8,835,781 | R11,764,110 | R14,492,096 | R16,636,192 |
| Inventory | R1,358,630 | R2,033,712 | R2,681,918 | R3,271,438 | R3,736,397 |
| Cash & equivalents | R500,000 | R500,000 | R500,000 | R500,000 | R11,082,348 |
| Total assets | R39,460,938 | R40,990,293 | R46,033,228 | R46,839,534 | R56,612,937 |
| EQUITY & LIABILITIES | |||||
| Share capital | R18,000,000 | R18,000,000 | R18,000,000 | R18,000,000 | R18,000,000 |
| Retained earnings | (R5,977,500) | (R5,288,200) | R226,595 | R10,804,581 | R25,329,752 |
| Shareholders’ equity | R12,022,500 | R12,711,800 | R18,226,595 | R28,804,581 | R43,329,752 |
| Term debt | R22,915,207 | R19,413,968 | R15,440,061 | R10,929,676 | R5,810,390 |
| Working-capital facility | R1,805,971 | R4,797,101 | R7,002,736 | R562,400 | R0 |
| Trade & other payables | R2,717,260 | R4,067,425 | R5,363,836 | R6,542,877 | R7,472,795 |
| Total equity & liabilities | R39,460,938 | R40,990,294 | R46,033,228 | R46,839,534 | R56,612,937 |
Table 12.4 — Projected balance sheet, FY2026–FY2030.
12.5 Projected Cash-Flow Statement
Cash generation is the ultimate test of the business, and the
projections demonstrate strong operating cash flow once the ramp-up year
is past. The working-capital facility absorbs the early-period
requirement, after which the business self-funds, repays the facility
and accumulates cash. Closing cash reaches R11.1m by FY2030.
| Cash flow (ZAR) | FY 2026 | FY 2027 | FY 2028 | FY 2029 | FY 2030 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opening cash | R0 | R500,000 | R500,000 | R500,000 | R500,000 |
| Operating cash flow | (R6,221,178) | R2,910,110 | R8,568,272 | R14,150,720 | R18,864,034 |
| Investing cash flow | (36,000,000) | (2,400,000) | (6,800,000) | (3,200,000) | (2,600,000) |
| Financing cash flow | 42,721,178 | (510,110) | (1,768,272) | (10,950,720) | (5,681,686) |
| Net change in cash | 500,000 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10,582,348 |
| Closing cash | R500,000 | R500,000 | R500,000 | R500,000 | R11,082,348 |
| Memo: WC facility balance | R1,805,971 | R4,797,101 | R7,002,736 | R562,400 | R0 |
Table 12.5 — Projected cash-flow statement,
FY2026–FY2030.
12.6 Break-Even Analysis
The Company’s first-year break-even volume is approximately 40,337
cubic metres — the point at which contribution covers fixed costs,
depreciation and interest. The FY2026 plan of 28,500 cubic metres sits
below this threshold, which is why the first year records a small loss
funded by the facility; from FY2027 planned volume comfortably exceeds
break-even. The contribution margin per cubic metre is approximately
R505 in FY2026.
12.7 Unit Economics
The chart below decomposes the per-cubic-metre economics, showing how
the average selling price covers raw materials, delivery and absorbed
fixed cost. As volume rises, fixed cost per cubic metre falls, widening
the margin even as input costs escalate.
12.8 Debt-Service Coverage
Debt-service coverage is the metric lenders scrutinise most closely.
KwaCrete’s DSCR — EBITDA divided by debt service — is below 1.0x in the
FY2026 ramp-up year (bridged by the working-capital facility, as
planned) but rises rapidly thereafter, exceeding a typical 1.30x
covenant from FY2027 and reaching 4.17x by FY2030. This trajectory
provides substantial comfort on the serviceability of the term debt.
12.9 Investment Returns
On the assumptions set out above, including a conservative 4.5×
EBITDA terminal value at the end of FY2030, the investment generates
attractive returns:
| Return metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Project IRR (unlevered) | 33.1% |
| Equity IRR (levered) | 38.4% |
| NPV at 16% discount rate | R38.1m |
| Terminal value (4.5× FY30 EBITDA) | R123.6m |
| FY2030 EBITDA | R27.5m |
| Cumulative NPAT (FY26–FY30) | R25.3m |
Table 12.6 — Headline investment-return metrics.
| Returns in context A project IRR of 33.1% and equity IRR of 38.4% comfortably exceed the Company’s estimated 16% cost of capital, and the positive NPV of R38.1m confirms genuine value creation. The returns are underpinned by tangible, financeable assets and a conservative volume ramp — not by aggressive growth assumptions. |
12.10 Sensitivity Analysis
The model has been stress-tested against the variables that most
affect value. The tornado chart below ranks each factor by its impact on
NPV. Selling price and the pace of the volume ramp are the most
influential levers, followed by cement cost; the project’s value is
relatively robust to movements in discount rate and capital cost. Even
under adverse movements in the leading factors, the project retains a
positive NPV across plausible ranges, reflecting the buffer provided by
cement-price pass-through and the variable cost base.
12.11 Exit & Investment Realisation
The plan provides a clear path to value realisation for equity
investors. By FY2030 the Company is a profitable, cash-generative,
asset-backed business with an established customer base, certification
and an operating track record — precisely the profile sought by trade
acquirers and consolidators in the building-materials sector. At a
conservative 4.5× FY2030 EBITDA exit multiple, the implied enterprise
value is approximately R123.6m, before considering the accumulated cash
on the balance sheet. Realisation options include a trade sale to an
integrated major or regional consolidator, a sale to a private-equity
buyer seeking a platform asset, or a recapitalisation that returns
capital to founders and early investors while retaining upside. The
de-geared balance sheet and the second-shift growth option further
enhance attractiveness to an incoming owner.
12.12 Funding Requirement Summary
In summary, the Company requires R44.0m of upfront capital plus a
R8.0m revolving facility. The capital is deployed into financeable
assets and a funded ramp-up, generating a self-sustaining, cash-positive
business by FY2027 and strong returns over the plan horizon. The clear,
conservative and fully linked financial model presented here is intended
to give lenders and investors the transparency required to underwrite
the opportunity with confidence.
Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of KwaCrete Ready Mix (Pty) Ltd.