2003 Yearly report PDF
Transcription
2003 Yearly report PDF
ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING, JUNE 29TH 2004 Annual Report 2003 CONTENTS MONTUPET on line - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5 MONTUPET, group overview - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6 Board of Directors and Auditors ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Board of Directors Management Report --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 10 Economical aspects of the company - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10 Legal aspects of the company ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Social and environmental indicators --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Report from the President on the internal control Board of Directors support and organisation 19 26 ------------------------------------------------------------------- 34 --------------------------------------------------------------------- 34 Internal audit procedures - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 35 Conclusion --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 40 Auditors’ Report on the Board of Directors President’s report with reference to internal audit procedures regarding preparation and treatment of accounting and financial information ---------- 41 Data for last five fiscal years - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 42 Table of subsidiaries and shareholding interests --------------------------------------------------------------------- 43 Resolutions presented before the Annual Meeting - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 44 Report of the auditors on the financial statement - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 47 Report of the auditors on the consolidated financial statement - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 49 Auditors’ Report on an Employee Share Issue Special report of the auditors ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 51 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 52 Consolidated balance-sheet - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 56 Consolidated income statement - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 58 Notes to the consolidated accounts - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 60 Significant items in the fiscal year ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 60 1. Consolidation rules - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 60 2. Notes to the balance-sheet and income statement --------------------------------------------------------- 64 3. Financial commitments and other data - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 70 4. Data per geographical area - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 73 MONTUPET SA balance-sheet ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 76 MONTUPET SA income statement - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 78 Notes to MONTUPET SA financial statements ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 1. Accountancy rules and methods - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 80 2. Development and notes to the financial statements -------------------------------------------------------- 84 3. Financial commitments and other data - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 90 The original language version of the document in French takes precedence over this English language version. page 3 Annual Report 2003 Annual Report 2003 page 4 MONTUPET ON LINE Visit MONTUPET website http://www.montupet.fr presenting data on our group (its history, financial data, activity overview), the news, the firm (its customers, products, manufacturing processes), its strategy, the production units, and a “career” heading. On www.journal-officiel.gouv.fr under the heading “les annonces publiées au balo”, or on your minitel 3615 or 3617 balo, consult MONTUPET legal notices (quarterly turnover, half-year accounts, notifications of shareholders meetings). On financial websites, consult MONTUPET SA share value by indicating its Euroclear code nr 3704. page 5 Annual Report 2003 MONTUPET: GROUP OVERVIEW M ONTUPET is a major french manufacturer, a public limited company dedicated to the production of moulded car-parts in aluminium alloys. The group was created in 1977 by merging three french foundries: MONTUPET, DEBARD (later VIRAX), and FONDERIE DE PRECISION. After 10 years of industrial and financial restructuring, the group became international by buying in 1987 ALUMALSA, a spanish foundry, and by creating in 1988 and 1989 three new foundries in France, Canada and UK. In the meantime, MONTUPET became a producer and supplier of tooling equipment, to secure its most technical supplies that are a strong part of its technology. Threatened by the automotive crisis from 1991 to 1997, MONTUPET resumed its development by enhancing its facilities and creating a new foundry in Mexico. Upon FORD’s request, MONTUPET has taken over a factory in Northern-Ireland that produces 500 000 cylinder-heads per year for the US FORD “Explorer” engine, and will rationalize the management and operations of this unit. THE COMPANY HAS THREE LOCATIONS IN FRANCE: • A plant in Châteauroux • A plant in Nogent/Oise - Laigneville • The head office in Clichy/Seine THE COMPANY HOLDS 9 SUBSIDIARIES: • MFT-MONTUPET Snc in Brussels (Belgium): coordination center • ALUMALSA in Saragossa (Spain): foundry • MONTUPET Limitee in Rivière-Beaudette (Canada): foundry • MONTUPET UK in Dunmurry (UK): foundry and tooling • CALCAST Ltd in Londonderry (UK): foundry • MONTIAC SA de CV in Torréon (Mexico): foundry • MONTUPET Inc in Livonia (USA): commercial representation • MONTUPET Deutschland GmbH (Germany): commercial representation • MFT Sarl in Paris: trading subsidiary MONTUPET DESIGNS AND MANUFACTURES 3 PRODUCT RANGES IN CAST ALUMINIUM: • Unmachined or finished motor-parts: cylinder heads, cylinder-blocks, intake manifolds, • Machined and painted wheels, • Unmachined or finished structure parts, and braking parts. Cars keep taking more and more functions and electronics, and their weight therefore tends to increase. In the same time, car manufacturers are subject to more stringent rules protecting the environment; they therefore need to make their vehicles lighter and to bring their engines up to date. This is where aluminium, and moulded aluminium in particular, plays a great role: thanks to a better heath conductivity than the cast iron, it enables to design more compact, more powerful and less polluting motors, and thanks to its low density as compared with steel or cast iron, it enables to make lighter motors and chassis. Annual Report 2003 page 6 Moreover, aluminium casting processes offer a large design flexibility, appreciated by both engineers and stylists and explain that an increasing part of wheels are made in light alloy against steel and plastic wheels. To further enhance these qualities and offer products tailored to special needs of each manufacturer, MONTUPET has diversified its casting processes (gravity or low-pressure casting in metal, sand or mixed moulds) and extended its know-how to mass-production on transfer lines or on rapid numerical centres. This technical policy, together with an internationalised industrial and commercial policy with MONTUPET total quality policy enable our group to provide our services and products to AUDI, BOSCH, FIAT, FORD, GENERAL MOTORS, PSA, RENAULT, NISSAN, SAAB, VOLVO, CHRYSLER and DAIMLER. MONTUPET, an hundred-year old company, also endeavours to control the effects of its activity upon the environment and to best use and enhance its people abilities to meet its customers demand on a long term basis. A GLOBAL PRESENCE FOR A GLOBAL MARKET In the current growing trend, our strategy of proximity has led us to set up industrial and commercial bases close to our current and future customers. Therefore, by ensuring that all its production plants work closely with each other, MONTUPET can offer a consistent level of service and a uniform standard of quality to customers who already have, or are looking for, a global manufacturing presence. The production plants The commercial bases page 7 Annual Report 2003 Annual Report 2003 page 8 PRESIDENT - STÉPHANE MAGNAN BOARD OF DIRECTORS DIRECTORS - DIDIER CROZET, Executive Director - MARC MAJUS, Executive Director - FRANÇOIS FEUILLET - PHILIPPE GOEBEL AUDITORS REGULAR AUDITORS - CABINET GUILLERET, represented by René Guilleret - BELLOT MULLENBACH & ASSOCIÉS, represented by Thierry Bellot - and Pascal de Rocquigny SUBSTITUTE AUDITORS - ANDRÉ CRESTEIL - OLIVIER MARION page 9 Annual Report 2003 BOARD OF DIRECTORS MANAGEMENT REPORT You have been invited to attend this Annual General Meeting, in compliance with the legal statutory and articles of association provisions, to hear our management report for the fiscal year 2003, and approve the annual accounts for this fiscal year. ECONOMICAL ASPECTS OF THE COMPANY MAIN ACTIVITIES AND PRODUCTS MONTUPET designs and manufactures parts in cast aluminium and equipment for the automotive industry: - unmachined or finished motor-parts: cylinder-heads, cylinder-blocks, intake manifolds, - machined and painted wheels, - unmachined or finished structure parts, suspension and braking parts, - part of the tooling necessary to its production. ACTIVITY AND RESULTS The consolidated turnover for the financial year 2003, is down by 7.4% at 438.47 million Euros (i.e. down by 2,6% using a comparable structure (constant exchange rates and metal price). The cash-flow (net of grants) shows a decrease of 5,6 M2 to 52,3 million Euros (M2). Operating profit amounts to 26,48 M2, down by 4,8 M2. This decline resulted from various factors: • Exceptional factors: - restructuring costs of the tooling sector, amounting to 1,5 M2, - total depreciation of capital expenditures relating to the lost-foam process (posted as an extraordinary cost in the first half-year), - unfavourable translation into Euros of profits from subsidiaries out of the Euros-zone, for the consolidated accounts. • Operating factors: - collapse of the tooling activity (50%) following the drop in the US$/2 rate, and the shortage of new orders during this “wait-and-see” period for car-manufacturers, - decrease in the activity of CALCAST, dedicated to a single FORD cylinder-head for Northern America. Group net profit is 20,44 M2 against 24,51 M2 in 2002, a decrease of 16,6%. Net foreign exchange gains amount to 2,4 M2 against 4,4 M2 en 2002 ; interest expenses are reduced from 4,7 M2 to 2,7 M2 in 2003 due to the drop in debt. Annual Report 2003 page 10 CONSOLIDATED DATA (IN M3) 2003 2002 Consolidated turnover 438,47 473,72* - at comparable structure (constant exch. rate & metal price) 461,41 Trading profit 26,48 31,37 Result from ordinary activities 27,37 30,45 Group net profit 20,44 24,51 Cash-flow (net of grants) 52,3 58,12 Net Debts (D) 38 87,5 Permanent Capital (PC) D/PC 178,71 0,21 Capital expenditures (fixed assets) net of grants 21,5 170,9 0,51 18,84 The 2002 turnover amounted to 474,694 M2. A reclassification amounting to 0,977 M2 was implemented to enable a comparison between the two years. Consolidated turnover (in K3) Repartition by customer Consolidated operating profit (in K3) Repartition by product page 11 Annual Report 2003 CONTRIBUTION TO CONSOLIDATED FIGURES Turnovers Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 Operating profit Variation Variation at constant exchange rates and metal price Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 France (incl. Belgium) Mexico United-Kingdom 210.68 212.59 (0.90%) 3.04% 8.47 12.49 21.61 22.34 (3.26 %) 15.98% 3.2 1.7 11.6 15.06 139.43 160.75 (13.26%) (8.68%) Spain 48.7 47.16 3.27% 5.52 % 4.23 3.72 Canada 18.05 30.88 (41.54%) (35.42 %) (1.0) (1.6) TOTALS 438.47 (7.44%) (2.6%) 26.48 31.39 473.7 In France: The activity has been increasing in spite of the decreasing automotive market, sales of wheels and diesel cylinder-heads remaining very high, and sales of petrol gas-heads still lower than previous year. The prices decrease however compensated this rise, and significantly weakened the operating profit. In Mexico: The activity increases towards the plant full productive capacity, thus increasing the operating profit, despite a scheduled 30% reduction in the part price, as the contractual volume was reached. In the United-Kingdom: The activity has been weakened by the cancellation of a FORD gas cylinder-head on the 4th quarter, and by the sudden collapse in tooling orders. The PSA diesel cylinder heads start-up was successful, with lower than planned quantities. In Spain: The satisfactory profit of 2002 has been maintained despite a reduction in parts prices, thanks to continuous improvements. In Canada: The activity was very low, mainly due to the stop of sales of CADILLAC when the Irak war started. However, thanks to the adjustments of the facilities and workforce, the profit is presently positive and the development capacities are maintained. CHANGES IN THE ACCOUNTS REGISTRATION None. INVESTMENT AND FUNDING Total investment in tangible assets was 21,5 M2, net of grants, splitted-down between France (3,7 M2), United-Kingdom (13,3 M2), Spain (2,2 M2), Mexico (1,7 M2) and Canada (0,6 M2). The cash-flow and the reduction in working capital requirements have this year again led to a considerable debt reduction, bringing the debts/assets ratio of group to 0.21, an exceptionally low figure in our branch. Annual Report 2003 page 12 Cah-flow (in M3) Gearing Net debt / Permanent equity OUTLOOK The year 2004 appears not much different from the year 2003. It remains a transition year of which we shall take advantage to continue to adjust our facilities and processes to meet the steady pressure from car automakers to reduce prices, whilst aiming at a no-debt policy. Nevertheless, in 2005, three new orders will start-up: a new diesel cylinder-head for RENAULT, a “ladder-frame” for the new DAIMLER-MITSUBISHI world engine, that we are currently developing, and brake parts in Mexico. On a long-term basis, the strengthening of the antipollution standards will result in developments of more and more complex cylinder-heads, which is favourable to MONTUPET as the world-leader in the cylinder-heads technology. First quarter 2004 turnover (contribution to consolidated figures) France and Belgium 54,8 United-Kingdom 33,0 Spain 13,2 Canada 4,5 Mexico 6,5 TOTAL 111,9 The consolidated turnover for the first quarter 2004 is down by 3,93% as compared with previous year (116,4 M2), i.e. down by 2,04% at constant exchange rates and metal price. page 13 Annual Report 2003 As compared with the first quarter 2003, the first quarter 2004 is favourably marked in Canada by the return at a standard level of the CADILLAC cylinder-heads production, stopped when the Irak war started on the first quarter 2003. Unfavourable factors were in the UK the cancellation of the FORD Sygma cylinder-head on the 4th quarter 2003, in Mexico the low US $ converted in fewer Euros in the consolidated accounts, and the low tooling sales usually in US $. RISK FACTORS Interest rate exposure MONTUPET group currently no longer does any hedging transaction and there is no currently hedged transaction. All the borrowing is at variable rate. Exchange risks MONTUPET group no longer does any hedging transaction and there is no currently hedged transaction. I - Euro Zone MONTUPET SA exchange losses and gains are connected with foreign currency loans to subsidiaries and bank debts. MONTUPET SA pays in Mexican Pesos (MXN) the running costs invoiced by its Mexican subsidiary MONTIAC SA de CV within the “maquiladora” agreement, generating a currency exposure on the MXN/2 parity. On another hand, MONTUPET SA being the owner of the production tooling of MONTIAC usually paid in 2, lower revenues in converted US $ proportionally increase their depreciation costs. MONTUPET sells in US$ the parts produced by MONTIAC, generating a currency exposure on the US $/2 parity. II - Outside the Euro zone Northern Ireland MONTUPET UK borrowed funds in 2 ; MONTUPET UK, WILLACE UK and CALCAST LTD acquire a small part of their tooling in 2, generating a currency exposure on the GBP/2 parity. WILLACE UK sells its whole production (wheels) in 2 ; MONTUPET UK sells around 40% of its production in GBP and the balance in 2, but the price in 2 contractually varies with the 2/GBP parity. The GBP depreciation is commercially favourable to the subsidiaries in Northern Ireland and positive or neutral on their profits, but their profits and assets are converted in fewer 2 in the consolidated accounts. Tooling subsidiary Tooling sales towards Northern America, sold in US $, are adversely affected by the US $ decrease. Mexico - MONTIAC SA de CV MONTIAC SA de CV owes a debt in US $ to MONTUPET SA, generating for MONTIAC a currency exposure on the MXN/US $ parity. As its industrial installations are mostly paid in US $ by MONTIAC, a lower MXN increases their cost and depreciation (production tooling are owned by MONTUPET SA and mostly bought in 2). Annual Report 2003 page 14 MONTIAC invoices its running costs in MXN to MONTUPET SA and is not subject to the currency exposure, affecting MONTUPET SA instead. A MXN depreciation against 2 results in the conversion of MONTIAC profits and assets in fewer 2 in the consolidated accounts. Canada - MONTUPET LIMITEE MONTUPET LIMITEE acquires its production tooling mostly in US $. A lower CAD increases their costs and depreciation. A new order for CHRYSLER will be sold in US $ (on the basis of the parity US $/CAD = 1,35). The operating result would benefit from the CAD depreciation against US $. A CAD depreciation against US $ is commercially favourable to MONTUPET LIMITEE and positive or neutral on its profits, but its profits and assets are converted in fewer 2 in the consolidated accounts. Market risks MONTUPET relies entirely on automotive sales and holds 23% of the aluminium cylinderheads market share, and around 10% of the aluminium wheels market share. Automotive sales and production are seasonal and highly cyclical and depend on general economic conditions, consumer confidence, employment trends, exchange and interest rates, fuel costs and dealer sales incentives. The volume of automotive sales has fluctuated, sometimes significantly from year to year, inducing delays in new engine programs. We could suffer the effects of such reports, and of lower than anticipated production levels, whereas we develop and launch the manufacture of new parts several months in advance. Our strategy is to systematically obtain written and binding purchase orders from our customers. However, some of our competitors are sometimes more flexible, and the customers are often bound to order a portion of their requirements rather than a specific quantity. Program terminations and cancellations are to be compensated, but may be not fully or partially reimbursed. Our prices are pre-set whereas our costs (metal and energy prices, labour, etc) may then adversely rise. Our parts sales prices usually decline over the term of the contract and must be compensated by increases in efficiency which MONTUPET most often manages to achieve. On another hand, we experience a strong constant pressure for price decreases. To face competition, and to keep being selected by our customers, we strongly manage to reinforce our competitivity, our ability to develop and manufacture new parts, our logistic efficiency, our research and development capacities, our international presence and our durability. Moreover, the expected strengthening of the antipollution standards will result in developments of more and more complex cylinder-heads, which is favourable to MONTUPET as the world-leader in the cylinder-heads technology. As MONTUPET customers are the largest world car-manufacturers, their insolvency risk, except the program terminations or cancellation badly compensated, is quite unlikely (but would be most harmful if it came true). Litigations with customers if any are provisioned in the accounts. Aluminium price fluctuations are passed through our customers, but only after a time-lag with possible adverse effects. We reduce our dependence on aluminium supply by diversifying our sources (6 suppliers in first fusion). page 15 Annual Report 2003 Financing exposure Our extraordinary low debt/permanent equity gearing (0,21) places us at a competitive advantage over our more leveraged competitors, developing our ability to obtain additional financing when needed, with low bank margins, to fully dedicate our cash-flow to our corporate purposes including capital expenditures, and to make us less vulnerable to a downturn in our business. Exposure to adverse effects on the environment from our production activities MONTUPET strives to control the environmental impacts of its production facilities and the related risks. The group operations are classically submitted to regulatory reporting and operating schemes applicable in each country. Over national and local regulations, some specific authorizations rule hazardous operations. Environmental regulations are monitored on each site, responsible for the continuous optimisation of environmental issues. Several industrial facilities are committed to secure the ISO 14001 certification of their Environmental Management System. Nogent and Châteauroux plants in France, Belfast (MONTUPET UK (including WILLACE UK) plants and Londonderry (CALCAST) plant in Northern Ireland, Rivière-Beaudette (MONTUPET LIMITEE) plant in Canada, Torreon (MONTIAC) in Mexico have been certified. ALUMALSA (Spain) is about being certified in the last quarter 2004. Environmental exposures proceed from the use and rejection of mineral oils, chemicals (as amines, volatile compounds, solvents, paints, mastics and glues…) ; from aluminium foundry, from air compression and radiography workshops… Dust filters, de-oiling devices, sand, metal sludges and oil recycling devices, thermical oxydators are installed ; regular monitoring measures are carried-out. Several facilities benefit from their own water detoxication station. On every site, emergency and fire-prevention programs are set-up. In France, the Nogent site was set-up tenths of years ago. It was ISO 14001 certified in 2003. It is however classified as “to watch” in view of the soil pollution by aluminium, copper, and volatile halogenic coumpounds, and in view of the water pollution by aluminium, nickel, and vinyl chlorinate. In France also, the new Laigneville facilities rent by MONTUPET are set-up on a ground polluted by the previous occupier (Desnoyers), who is contractually responsible for de-polluting it. There is no litigation in Canada, neither in Spain nor in Mexico, nor in Northern Ireland. In Nogent in France, a noise litigation is currently only partially solved. A detailed report on the environmental issues is attached to this directors report. Insurance coverage MONTUPET SA and its subsidiaries currently carry insurance that covers their property damages and operating losses, within a general maximum coverage of 150.000.000 2 (with a general excess amount of 200.000 2 on property damages and of 3 production days equivalent), with special limitations to some damages. MONTUPET SA and its subsidiaries are covered by civil liability and post-delivery insurance programs: civil liability affecting bodily, tangible and intangible property damages to thirdparties whether consecutive or not, damages to properties entrusted to MONTUPET, environmental damages occuring accidentally, taking-out and refitting of delivered products, logistic costs to recover the distributed products if applicable, within a global ceiling of 7.623.113 2 for each event, with special limitations to some damages. Annual Report 2003 page 16 RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT POLICY The main axles of the Research and Development at MONTUPET are: • continuous processes improvement, • tooling accuracy (in view of reducing the dimensional tolerance of parts), • knowledge management, • innovative researches on processes, materials, tooling heat, and products. By year-end, there were 27 people at MONTUPET S.A. and MONTUPET UK in the R&D departments. R&D costs incurred mostly by MONTUPET SA and by MONTUPET UK were 2.964 K2 including 682 K2 in investments in 2003.The R&D budget for 2004 is 3.844 K2 including 1.041 K2 in investments. EVOLUTION OF ACCOUNTING REGULATIONS : IFRS/IAS In compliance with the European regulation nr 1725-2003, the European companies quoted on the stock exchange market will publish their accounts opened from January 1st 2005 set-up according to the International Accounting Standards (IFRS). These accounts will show a comparison with the IFRS-retreated previous year accounts. MONTUPET is committed to comply with this rule. MONTUPET currently studies the differences between the accounting principles it applies and the IFRS standards. It also performs a study of the necessary adaptations (which should remain restricted) of its data processing system and networks. The group also launched the collection and analysis of the retrospective data needed to set-up the opening balance-sheet. At this stage, the main identified differences are the following (but may not be the only ones) : • presentation of financial statements : implementing international standards, and particularly the IFRS 1 standard may lead us to modify our financial statements, namely the statement of sources and application of funds, and the data per geographical areas (to comply with the IAS34 standard - data per geographical areas). • IAS 38 - tangible fixed assets : this standard requires that some precisely defined development costs will be accounted within the assets in the balance-sheets and depreciated. Development costs not defined as such in this standard as our spendings on new facilities currently deferred over 3 years will be entirely charged to the profit & loss account. • IAS 16 - fixed tangible assets : this standard requires that the acquired assets are accounted by components and depreciated over their own duration. It will imply that we reconsider the accounting of some extensive maintenance costs, currently in deferred charges. • IFRS 2 - payment in shares : implementing this standard will lead us to charge the subscription options to the P&L account. • IAS 19 – retirement benefits. retirement commitments and similar items will appear as liabilities on the balance-sheet, whereas they currently are only footnotes to the accounts. • IAS 20 – public grants – implementing this standard will lead to no longer include capital grants within the consolidated stockholders’ equity and therefore to show some grants as a decrease in the cost of granted tangible assets. • IAS 12 – tax on profit : this standard does not allow the actualisation of the deferred taxes, which is our current doing. We are still studying the new standards, until the end of 2004. page 17 Annual Report 2003 STOCK MARKET ACTIVITY Isin code : FR00000037046 Reuters code : MNTP.PA RM France / Midcac Monthly transactions in shares quantities MONTUPET SA share - average closing rate (year average: 15,16 3) Annual Report 2003 page 18 Monthly transactions in amounts (3) LEGAL ASPECTS OF THE COMPANY DIRECTORS FEES AND COMPENSATIONS The rewarding and benefits paid by the company of by its subsidiaries to the directors during the fiscal year 2003 were as follows: - to Mr Stéphane MAGNAN, Président & Managing Director: 665.179,26 Euros, - to Mr Didier CROZET, Executive Director: 425.236,90 Euros, - to Mr Marc MAJUS, Executive Director: 435.594,16 Euros. The Board of Directors proposes (4th resolution) the allocation of directors fees up to 10.000 Euros. LIST OF THE OFFICES AND POSITIONS HELD BY THE DIRECTORS DURING THE YEAR Mr STEPHANE MAGNAN France Within MONTUPET group - MONTUPET SA - Président & Managing Director - GESFITEC SA - MONTUPET group holding company - President (company merged with MONTUPET SA on March 31st 2003) Outside MONTUPET group - GROUPE DES INDUSTRIES METALLURGIQUES (G.I.M.) - Director - CHAMBRE SYNDICALE DE L’ALUMINIUM - Director Abroad Within MONTUPET group - MFT-MONTUPET Snc (Belgium) - services within the group - Executive Director - ALUMALSA (Spain) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director - WILLACE UK LTD (Northern Ireland) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director - BS TOOLING (Northern Ireland) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director - GESFITEC LTD (Northern Ireland) - holding - Director - MONTIAC SA de CV (Mexico) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Managing Director CEO - MONTUPET Inc (USA) - commercial representation - Director Mr DIDIER CROZET France Within MONTUPET group - MONTUPET SA - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director & Executive Managing Director - GESFITEC SA - MONTUPET group holding company - Co-Managing Director & Director (company merged with MONTUPET SA on march 31st 2003) Abroad Within MONTUPET group - MFT-MONTUPET Snc (Belgium) - services within the group - Executive Director - ALUMALSA (Spain) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director - BS TOOLING (Northern Ireland) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director - MONTUPET Inc (USA) - commercial representation - Director - MONTUPET GmbH (Germany) - commercial representation - Managing Director page 19 Annual Report 2003 M. MARC MAJUS France Within MONTUPET group - MONTUPET SA - Director & Executive Managing Director - GESFITEC SA - MONTUPET group holding company - Co-Managing Director & Director (company merged with MONTUPET SA on march 31st 2003) Outside MONTUPET group - ETOILE EURO JOUR (France) - mutual fund - Director (mandate terminated in 2004) Abroad Within MONTUPET group - MFT-MONTUPET Snc (Belgium) - services within the group - Executive Director - ALUMALSA (Spain) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director - MONTUPET UK Ltd (Northern Ireland) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Secretary - WILLACE UK LTD (Northern Ireland) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director and Secretary - BS TOOLING (Northern Ireland) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - Director and Secretary - GESFITEC LTD (Northern Ireland) - holding - Director and Secretary - MONTUPET INC (USA) - commercial representation - Director and Secretary - MONTIAC SA de CV (Mexico) - aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer - CEO and Secretary Mr PHILIPPE GOEBEL France Within TOTAL group - ATOGLAS EUROPE SAS - ATOFINA subsidiary - acrylic plates producer - Président - ATOFINA - TOTAL group chemical branch - Co-managing Director - ALPHACAN - TOTAL group - plastics for the building industry - Director - SOCIETE CIVILE IMMOBILIERE AGRICOLE DE PARAPON - Manager Outside TOTAL group - MONTUPET SA - Director Mr FRANÇOIS FEUILLET France Within TRIGANO group - TRIGANO SA - Director, President and Managing Director - ABAK SA - trailers and garden equipment - TRIGANO representative to the Board of Directors - ALIZA SARL - Manager - ARTS ET BOIS SAS - leisure vehicles sub-contractor - Supervisory Board Président - AUTOSTAR SA - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Executive Board Chairman - CARAVANES LA MANCELLE SAS - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Supervisory Board President - CHANOINE DUBOIS SCI– Manager - CLAIRVAL SAS - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Supervisory Board President - CMC DISTRIBUTION France SA - leisure vehicles accessories - Director - CMC France SCP - Manager - Dr LEGRAND SCI - Manager - EURO ACCESSOIRES SAS - leisure vehicles accessories - Président - EUROP’HOLIDAYS SARL - leisure equipment trading - Manager Annual Report 2003 page 20 - LOISIRS FINANCE SA - leisure vehicles financing - TRIGANO representative to the Supervisory Board - MAITRE EQUIPEMENT SAS - leisure vehicles accessories - Supervisory Board President - PLISSON SAS - leisure equipment - Supervisory Board Member - RACLET SAS - leisure vehicles sub-contractor - Président - RESIDENCES TRIGANO SA - leisure vehicles manufacturer - TRIGANO representative to the Board of Directors - RULQUIN SA - leisure equipment - Président - TECHWOOD SARL - leisure vehicles sub-contractor - Manager - TRIGANO JARDIN SA - trailers and garden equipment - TRIGANO representative to the Board of Directors - TRIGANO MDC SAS - camping equipment - Président - TRIGANO REMORQUES SAS - trailers and garden equipment - Président - TRIGANO VDL SAS - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Président - TROIS SOLEILS SARL - leisure vehicles - Manager Outside TRIGANO group - BANQUE REGIONALE DE L’OUEST SA - bank - Director - MONTUPET SA - Director Abroad Within TRIGANO group - ARCA 2001 SPA (Italy) - leisure vehicles - Chairman of the Board of Directors - AUTO TRAIL VR LTD (United Kingdom) - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Managing Director - BENIMAR - OCARSA SA (Spain) - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Sole Executive Director - BENIMPEX SA (Spain) - leisure vehicles - Executive Director - DELWYN ENTERPRISES LTD (United Kingdom) - trailers and garden equipment - Managing Director - E.T. RIDDIOUGH Sales LTD (United Kingdom) - leisure vehicles accessories - Managing Director - S.I.R. FREIZEITARTIKEL GmbH (Germany) - leisure accessories - Manager - SORELPOL (Poland) - trailers and garden equipment - Manager - TRIGANO Belgium (Belgium) - leisure vehicles trading - Manager - TRIGANO SpA (Italy) - leisure vehicles manufacturer - Chairman of the board of Directors - TRIO SPORT INTERNATIONAL (Denmark) - camping equipment - Chairman of the Board of Directors page 21 Annual Report 2003 SUBSIDIARIES MONTUPET SA holds the following subsidiaries (% of directly or indirectly held capital): - MFT Sarl (100%) (France), - MFT-MONTUPET Snc (100%) (Belgium), - MONTUPET UK (100%) (Northern Ireland) and its subsidiaries (Northern Ireland) WILLACE UK LTD, BS TOOLING LTD et GESFITEC UK LTD, - CALCAST LTD (100%) (Northern Ireland), - MONTUPET LIMITEE (100%) (Canada), - ALUMALSA (97,71%) (Spain), - MONTIAC SA de CV (100%) (Mexico), - MONTUPET INC (100%) (USA), - MONTUPET GmbH (100%) (Germany). The company did not acquire any new participation in the fiscal year 2003. No shares from MONTUPET SA are held by any subsidiary. MONTUPET SA SHAREHOLDERS (AS PER DECEMBER 31ST 2003) Shares Mr Stéphane MAGNAN % shares Voting rights % voting rights 1 001 848 9,69% 1 841 196 13,45% Mr Marc MAJUS 939 866 9,09% 1 713 167 12,52% Mr Didier CROZET 929 242 8,99% 1 695 412 12,39% Mr Michel HARAN 538 038 5,20% 983 576 7,19% Mr Philippe MAUDUIT 465 856 4,51% 911 712 6,66% 6 463 077 62,52% 6 540 884 47,79% 10 337 927 100,00% 13 685 947 100,00% PUBLIC (including group staff) The Board proposes (8th resolution) to the Extraordinary General Meeting to amend the memorandum of association, in order to enable him to know its shareholders, 60% of the shares being held in the bearer’s form. CAPITAL - MODIFICATIONS DURING THE YEAR The capital is made of 10.337.927 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euros, i.e. 15.713.649 Euros, against 9.453.147 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euros, i.e. 14.368.783 Euros by December 31st 2002. This increase in capital results from the issuance of 852.980 shares as reported hereunder (see information on stock-option schemes). The corresponding capital surplus amounts to 7.854.077 Euros for the year 2003. On another hand, on march 31st 2003, MONTUPET SA merged with GESFITEC SA. In settlement of the transferred assets, MONTUPET SA increased its capital by 5.120.528 2 and recorded a merger premium amounting to 42.017.462 2. MONTUPET SA immediately decreased its capital by the same amount, in order to cancel its own shares brought by GESFITEC. MONTUPET SA accounted for the long-term profits special reserve at the reduced 18% rate, built-up at GESFITEC for 3.256.269 2, by transferring it from its “retained earnings”. Annual Report 2003 page 22 INFORMATION ON STOCK-OPTION SCHEMES Stock-option scheme Stock options cheme of January 20th 1998 of November 16th 2001 Subscription price 10,44 9,24 Validity deadline 20/01/03 16/11/05 Options attributed to the directors 495 000 725 000 (excluding directors) 319 537 339 000 Options attributed to other staff members 85 463 136 000 Cumulated attribution 900 000 1 200 000 Exercised options during year 2003 852 980 31 800 Exercised options from the beginning of scheme 889 547 31 900 0 1 168 100 Number of shares as per December 31st 2003 10 337 927 10 337 927 Number of shares after exercising the existing options 10 337 927 11 506 027 Options attributed to the 10 first beneficiaries Existing options on December 31st 2003 EMPLOYEES PARTICIPATION IN THE CAPITAL By December 31st 2003, 49.468 nominative shares had been subscribed by employees within stock options schemes or bought within a company savings scheme and could not be freely sold. Shares held within previous stock-option schemes including the 1998 option scheme are not taken into account as they can be freely sold, except within the current stock-option scheme opened in 2001. As there shares represented 0,49% of the capital, lower than the proportion of 3% provided by the article L.225-129, VII of the French Code of Commerce, the Extraordinary General Meeting faces a resolution (7th resolution) aiming at authorizing an increase in capital in favour of the company employees. The issue price will be determined in accordance with the provisions of Article L.443-5 of the Labour Code. It could not exceed the average rate of the twenty stock-market sessions before the Board of Directors’ decision, nor be lower than 80% of this average rate (or 70% within a company scheme providing a freeze of more than ten years). TRANSACTIONS ON THE COMPANY SHARES The annual Ordinary and Extraordinary Shareholders Meeting held on June 30th 2003, pursuant to the provisions of Article L.225-209 of the French Code of Commerce, authorized the Board of Directors to purchase Company shares, representing up to 10% of the share capital on the day of the meeting, with the following objectives: page 23 Annual Report 2003 - the management of cash-flow or of shareholders fund if it appears that implementation of this programme is appropriate; - the repurchase of a number of shares corresponding to the shares issued or to be issued following exercise of subscription options for the Company’s shares; - the application of programmes for purchasing or selling Company shares within the framework of share purchase option plans; - the purchase and sale in the light of market circumstances; - the price stabilization by systematic intervention against market trends; - any other legally permissible objective, or objective which might become legally permissible by applicable law or regulations then in effect. In such a case, the Company would inform its shareholders by a press release. On December 31st, the company owns 83.354 MONTUPET SA shares within this programme, bought at an average price of 13,93 Euros, ie for a total cost of 1.160.751 Euros. Acquiring costs amount to 0,12% of each purchasing order. In view of the average December rate at 13,97 Euros, no depreciation provision was set up on these shares. They are registered among the financial assets, under the account nr 2771. The consolidation re-treatment of this transaction was to reduce the consolidated stockholders’equity. By may 31st 2004, not any further share had been bought within this program. Annual Report 2003 page 24 UNDEDUCTIBLE ITEMS FROM TAX BASIS They amount to 19.266 Euros and relate to the depreciation of company vehicles. DISTRIBUTED DIVIDENDS IN THE LAST THREE YEARS AND APPROPRIATION PROPOSAL Fiscal year Net dividend Tax credit 2000 0 0 2001 0 0 2002 0,50 0 (distributed out of an Ordinary Meeting appropriating the year profit) The Board of Directors proposes to appropriate the year 2003 profit amounting to 25.430.725 Euros as follows: • appropriate 496.546 Euros to the legal reserve, thus increasing it from 1.074.819 Euros to 1.571.365 Euros, • distribute a dividend of 0,20 Euro per share, together with a tax credit of 0,10 Euro, représenting a global amount of 2.050.895 Euros, • Therefore, record: - that the previous retained earnings amounted to 10 484 136 Euros by December 31st 2003 (taking into account the transfer of 3.256.269 Euros to the long term profits special reserve as decided by the General Combined Meeting held on March 31st 2003), - and will therefore increase from 10.484.136 Euros to 33.367.420 Euros. REMARKS FROM THE WORKERS COUNCIL None. page 25 Annual Report 2003 SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL INDICATORS MONTUPET SA SOCIAL INDICATORS (Article L.225-102-1 of the French Commercial Code). Number of employees As per December 31st 2003 the company had 1 780 employees in France. In 2003, MONTUPET SA recruited 59 employees on permanent contracts and 213 fixed-term contracts were signed. By year end, 106 employees were on temporary contracts. The total number of overtime hours for 2003 was 43 291. There were no redundancies and no staff reduction scheme in year 2003 ; 35 employees were severed on various matters. Short-time working measures taken in Nogent affected 184 workers, representing 4.400 hours globally. Organization of the working week As per December 31st 2003, there were 1 766 full-time workers and 14 part-time workers. 105 managers were working on a 217 days per year basis. 1.675 day or shift workers were working 35 hours per week. Absenteeism, expressed as the number of hours absent over the possible number of working hours, totalled 6.66% including 5.64% on sick leave and 0.21% for injuries to workmen. Remuneration The yearly overall payroll amounted to 40 258 150 Euros, with total payroll costs amounting to 16.418.332 Euros. The year result did not enable payments under the legal profit sharing scheme. Employees can benefit from a company savings scheme. There is no incentive scheme. A yearly comparative male-female status report is written and presented to the Workers Council. Labour relations and collective bargaining agreements The Workers Council had three meetings in the year. An agreement upon skills and employment, and aged workers stoppage of work (in French “CASA”) was signed on May 31st 2002. Health and safety There were 60 accidents leading to sick leave. There were no fatalities, and 7 professional diseases were declared. 903 072 Euros were spent on safety. Training 3.9% of payroll were spent in year 2003 for the training of 1 171 employees. Handicapped employees 94 handicapped employees work at the french sites. Social aid programs The Workers Council budget amounted to 530 804 Euros. 2.816.779 Euros were spent on social aid programmes in 2003. Annual Report 2003 page 26 External supports to production The cost of external supports to production (nearly entirely within the group) was 61.307.425 Euros in 2003. MONTUPET ensures that its suppliers comply with the fundamental principles of international Labour Law. In all the countries where the company and its subsidiaries are settled, the international Labour Law (in french OIT) is applicable: France, United kingdom, Spain, Canada, United States and Mexico, and the MONTUPET group complies with them. Local impact of the company activities The Company writes a yearly report upon the management of skills and employment and their impact on the local community, which is presented to the trade-union representatives. In France as abroad, the company plants take into account the impact of their activities upon the local development and the local population as follows: - recruitment in the local employment area and measure of internal stability rate, - service contracts set-up with local suppliers and follow-up of their turnovers, - support of local associations. The group plants regularly meet the authority representatives and the economical and social forces in the regions where they operate. MONTUPET SA ENVIRONMENTAL INDICATORS Presentation and scope of the report This report shows the main indicators of MONTUPET environmental policy. It also shows how the dedicated teams in the production sites deal with the environmental issues. Included in the report are the French production sites: - our plant in Châteauroux (around 1000 employees), - our plant in Nogent-Laigneville on two sites (around 680 employees). Both sites are Classified Installations for the Environmental Protection. For 15 years, MONTUPET has been developing an environmental policy around three main axles: 1. application of regulations, 2. pollution risks prevention, 3. continuous optimisation of every environmental issue: water, air, waste, energy, and pollution risks prevention. Moreover, since year 2000, all the production sites have been certified or are currently under way to be certified ISO 14001. 1. Environmental impacts of the production sites 1.1. Water consumption Consumption (cubic meters) Years Châteauroux Nogent/Laigneville Ratio (cu.m / cast aluminium ton) 2001 2002 2003 2001 2002 2003 100 280 119 969 124 729 4.4 4.6 4.36 35 063 39 543 40 833 1.31 1.46 1.61 page 27 Annual Report 2003 1.2. Energy consumption breakdown Natural gas Consumptions (KWh) Years 2001 Châteauroux Ratio (kWh / cast aluminium ton) 2002 2003 104 711 628 118 989 033 124 107 195 4 550 4 538 4 864 83 199 208 76 224 620 74 511 135 3 128 2 832 2 950 Nogent/Laigneville 2001 2002 2003 Electricity Consumptions (kWh) Years 2001 2002 Ratio (kWh / cast aluminium ton) 2003 2001 2002 2003 Châteauroux 43 147 749 46 326 477 48 258 926 1 875 1 767 1 891 Nogent/Laigneville 24 522 634 24 265 425 23 197 366 922 901 918 Water and energy consumptions are decreasing. Decreasing the energy consumptions is a priority, implemented through: - regular control of the facilities, - prevention and repair of any leak (air, water, gas), - improvement of the energy efficiency of some equipments and stopping some of them during the non-working days, - in Nogent/Laigneville, water consumption remains steady. 1.3. Consumptions of toxic items These are mainly: 1. phenolic resins (average phenol content 6%), 2. superficial treatments with chromic and hydrofluoric acids (in Châteauroux only). Toxic comprounds Years Phenol (in ton) 2001 Châteauroux Nogent/Laigneville 2002 Chromium (in ton) Fluorine (in ton) 2003 2001 2002 2003 2001 2002 2003 6.2 6 5.4 1.43 1.60 1.77 2.31 1.99 1.61 4 4.5 4.2 NA NA NA NA NA NA Since mid-2003, one of the two “wheels-finishing” workshop operates with superficial treatments exempt from chromium compounds, in line with the European regulation issued in September 2000, dedicated to the management of the life cycle of out-of-service cars. The other workshop is to operate with the same process in 2004. Less phenol-concentrated phenolic resins (phenol content under 5%) are still currently being tested (tests began in 2003 in Châteauroux). Other tests are currently focused on replacing the organic solvents used in de-oiling devices with “biological” devices in Châteauroux. The solvents used in this process are recycled in Nogent /Laigneville. Annual Report 2003 page 28 1.4. Main industrial effluents (in air, in water, and waste) Effluent releases are followed-up regularly in compliance with regulatory requirements: Effluent type Effluent description Atmospheric emissions - combustion gas - volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) - dusts - amine fumes (processed in Nogent, and in Laigneville in 2004) Water emissions - industrial waters and rain-waters are filtered through a de-oiling device and in a clarification basin (except in Laigneville) - effluents directed in the natural surroundings in Nogent but under monthly control - in Châteauroux, effluents from the detoxication station of the superficial treatment effluents Special Industrial Waste many industrial waste are produced and eliminated or re-used in compliance with the regulations: aluminium slags and shavings, used sand, used oils, paint sludges and powder, metal sludges, used solvants, etc. 1.4.1. Atmospheric emissions Sites VOCs (in tons) Greenhouse gas emissions (CO2) (in tons) Years 2002 2003 2002 2003 Châteauroux 111 116 21 845 22 786 Nogent/Laigneville 47 44 13 994 13 680 1.4.2. Water emissions In Châteauroux an internal physico-chemical clarification plant processes all the superficial treatment effluents produced in the “wheels-finishing” process. A quality control of the effluents from this station is implemented daily and communicated to the regulatory authorities. In addition, on both sites, water emissions are regularly controlled by certified laboratories. page 29 Annual Report 2003 1.4.3. Industrial waste Waste description Years Special waste* Ordinary waste Aluminium waste re-used quantity (in ton) quantity (in ton) externally (in ton) 2001 2002 2003 2001 2002 2003 2001 2002 2003 Châteauroux 1 051 1 024 1 155 959 1 014 982 3 380 3 179 3 053 Nogent/Laigneville 1 040 1 029 542 146 108 204 1 561 1 690 1 761 * except casting sand In Châteauroux 95% of the used casting sands are thermically regenerated and re-used within the production process. In Nogent/Laigneville, 85% (representing an 8% improvement) of the sands are re-used externally in other companies industrial operations. Efforts were focused in 2003 to re-use waste: a selective waste-sorting process was implemented in Nogent/laigneville by year-end 2003. 1.4.4. Odour pollution Odour pollution at MONTUPET SA principally concerns amine items used in the coring process. Two washing towers fit the Nogent site to process the amine effluents. In 2004, a washing tower will process the volatile organic compounds in Laigneville. 1.4.5. Noise pollution MONTUPET’s operations may cause some noise pollution. The noise emissions can be harmful to the local community, depending upon the site location (industrial zones for Châteauroux and Laigneville or city district for Nogent /Oise). In Nogent, several actions have been being taken and enabled to reduce the noise by several decibels at some places on the property limits. Annual Report 2003 page 30 2. Measures to limit biological imbalance Several devices and actions enable to prevent the pollution risks and to control the environmental impact of the plants. Air Water / subsoil Waste Chemicals • Thermical oxydators • Detoxication station of • Used sand, aluminium • Chemicals stored treat painting solvants the effluents resulting shaves, used oil separately • Regular control of from superficial recycling devices • Nogent and Laigneville atmospheric effluents treatments • Industrial waste stored fitted with a complementary • Dust-filters • Daily control of the separately and retention • Washing tower effluents from the eliminated by certified • Stores currently fitted (in Nogent, and in detoxication station companies in compliance to prevent fire (detectors, Laigneville in 2004) • Dye penetrant effluents with the regulations fire-alarm, fire-proof treatment walls) in Nogent and • Control with Laigneville piezometer of underground waters • Security floodgates to retain industrial waters in case of pollution (in Laigneville only) Well maintained greenery at the group’s sites (trees plantation). 3. Environmental Management System /ISO 14001 certification process Plants Châteauroux Implemented EMS Since September 2000 ISO 14001 certification Obtained in December 2000 Certification renewed in February 2003 Nogent/Laigneville Since September 2003 Obtained in December 2003 4. Action for compliance with the applicable regulations On each site an Environment Department is committed to monitor the environmental regulations and to control the compliance with the orders of the prefect. They are the company representatives with the dedicated authorities (DRIRE). Châteauroux and Nogent Sur Oise plants are Classified Installations for the Environmental Protection subject to authorization. The annex plant of Laigneville was examined on March 2004 before the departmental local authorities, that are expected to issue their decision. The plant regularly communicates to the authorities the monitoring results such as: - the nature and quantity of the eliminated industrial waste, - the effluents analysis (air, water,...). page 31 Annual Report 2003 5. Expenditures to protect the environment Capital expenditures (in Euros) Plants Châteauroux Nogent/Laigneville Waste processing Châteauroux Nogent/Laigneville 66 300 340 600 28 300 2001 305 000 2002 580 000 71 220 289 400 6 680 2003 522 000 455 736 361 035 19 032 6. Environmental management Management An environment department manages the environmental issues and coordinates the actions undertaken in the environmental area in each plant. On each plant district, corresponding members take over these issues with the employees. Training / Information - training of the environment corresponding members, - training of all the employees on the environmental news and such topics as “waste sorting”, - awareness of every new employee to the company environmental culture, - “chemicals” training for all the employees handling chemicals, - training of the staff which work is directly related to the environment, - training of internal auditor in Nogent/Laigneville. Internal audits The environment department is also engaged in organizing internal audits intended to measure the results and progresses on environmental issues. Risks prevention programme An internal operation programme or risks study on each site describes urgency cases. Urgency cases describe the relevant reactions, the means, and the organisation to be set-up to minimize environmental risks, such as: - fire, - explosion, - accidental spreadings. 7. Provisions and guarantees for environmental risks None. 8. Fines for judicial disputes in year 2003 An amount of 46.000 2 was put to guarantee the works for noise pollution in Nogent in 2002. This amount will be refunded after completion. 9. Goals set-up by the mother company All MONTUPET SA subsidiaries are operating in the automotive field. Car manufacturers are engaged to comply with very stringent requirements to protect the environment. Annual Report 2003 page 32 Therefore, in each country, MONTUPET set-up an environmental team in charge of building an Environmental Management system (EMS) and of implementing it, and securing its ISO 14001 certification. The ISO 14001 certification was obtained and then regularly confirmed by: - MONTUPET UK Ltd (UK) in August 1999, - MONTUPET LIMITEE (CAN) in June 2002, - CALCAST Ltd (UK) in January 2003, - MONTIAC SA de CV (Mexico) in August 2003, - ALUMALSA (Spain) is to be certified in the fourth quarter 2004. Throughout the implementation and certification of each subsidiary EMS, MONTUPET sets them three goals: - compliance with the local laws and rules, - customers satisfaction, - pollution risks prevention, - continuous optimisation of the environmental issues. Throughout the implementation of its EMS, each subsidiary defines quantified goals for each environmental side of its operations (consumption, out-sorting, effluents, waste, odour and noise pollutions). These goals obviously depend upon the local context and upon the initial condition of each plant. Whereas these goals are not identical, the group secures the consistency of the implemented methods and techniques. MONTUPET SA and its industrial subsidiaries are in the same field of operations, i.e. aluminium foundry, machining and painting. The group technical management therefore supervises the design, implementation and management of the industrial processes thus securing the consistency of the actions taken to prevent or reduce the environmental impact of their operations. page 33 Annual Report 2003 REPORT FROM THE PRESIDENT ON THE INTERNAL CONTROL INTRODUCTION In accordance with requirements of the French Security Act nr 2003-706 of August 1st 2003, the President of the Board draws-up a report on: • the board preparation and organisation • the internal audit procedures. This report is the first one. In view of recommendations from organisms such as A.F.E.P. (Association Française des Entreprises Privées - Private French Companies Association), A.G.R.E.F. (Association des Grandes Entreprises Françaises - Large French Companies Association) and from the A.M.F. (Autorité des Marchés Financiers - Financial Markets Authority), it logically shows satisfying items, and improvable or missing items. These items are identified and improving actions are described in the last paragraph of each section. The next annual reports will enably to measure the company progress. Therefore, the data enabling them to strengthen their confidence in the current corporate governance and it its continuous improvement policy, are made available to MONTUPET shareholders. BOARD OF DIRECTORS OPERATIONS SUPPORT AND ORGANISATION A. RESPONSIBILITIES AND PREROGATIVES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS The MONTUPET SA Board of Directors defines the strategic guidelines and ensures they are properly applied, appoints the corporate officers, ensures the quality and periodicity of the financial and accounting disclosures to the shareholders and to the financial market. It takes decisions modifying the current strategy and the scope of the activity. It proposes resolutions to be submitted to the shareholders. Its decisions are taken in view of the long-term interests of the company. B. BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEMBERS Directors' skills The appointment of the five current directors was submitted to the shareholders meetings in view of their knowledge of the industrial word (among them, four are aware of the automotive industry), and in view of their successful management of international industrial companies. Independence Two directors are independent, as they do not belong to any group company, have no business relationships with the group, nor any family link with a corporate officer or senior executive. The three other directors are the President and the two executive managing directors, and are therefore totalled implied in the company management. This operational dependency is balanced by their common interest in the company with its shareholders, as they are the company leading shareholders. Annual Report 2003 page 34 INFORMATION TO THE DIRECTORS Access to the information The directors have a free access to the information available within the company. For practical reasons, the independent directors contact the President or the board secretary to be communicated the required data, or get access to the departments or to the people they wish to meet. Steady communication No systematical information is currently given to the directors, except the information sent with the board meetings summoning. BOARD MEETINGS In 2003, the Board met four times with the following attendance: Date th Attendance 7 January 2003 4 présent / 4 directors 20th March 2003 4 présent/ 4 directors th 20 May 2003 3 présent/ 5 directors 25th September 2003 5 présent/ 5 directors No directors fees were paid in 2003. FORECASTED IMPROVEMENTS On the basis of the quarterly achievements revue, a written information will be communicated to the directors, independently from the board meeting summoning. A remuneration committee will meet each year to examine and possibly modify the remuneration of the corporate officers and of the senior executives who are working in direct relation with the President. INTERNAL AUDIT PROCEDURES Stakes MONTUPET internal control main objectives are to: • Ensure that the company activities comply with the legal requirements where they are carried-out, • Control whether the company activities are consistent with the defined strategy, and reach the expected achievements, • prevent errors and frauds, and if any arises, reduce and repair their consequences, • protect and secure the company property, • deliver genuine and reliable financial and accounting disclosures. This control is carried-out in the obvious interest of every concerned party, and therefore in the shareholders'interest. It has always been efficiently usual in our company, thanks to the group nature, its market, its management rules. It rests on the implementation of many procedures and of frequent audits. page 35 Annual Report 2003 PRINCIPLES AND ORGANISATION Group nature Several factors contribute to the efficiency of the control over the group activities. Consistent activities The group companies are implied in only two strongly connected activities: the foundry and machining of aluminium parts on one hand, and the manufacturing of tooling for the aluminium foundry on another hand. Managers and auditors therefore carry-out the same controls anywhere in the group. Long-standing activities These activities are well known as the company began the foundry activity one century ago, the machining activity thirty years ago, and the tooling manufacturing fifteen years ago. A strong internal growth Among the nine MONTUPET SA subsidiaries, seven were created ex-nihilo. This ensures a strong cultural control by the parent company over its subsidiaries. Very demanding customers The automotive field is renowned for its demanding requirements, translated into very frequent audits from our customers in our plants, throughout the implementation stages of our commercial contracts. This opening tradition favours the internal control. A steady management The corporate officers and many managers have been experienced in the company activities for a long time, which enables them to carry-out a relevant control. Management rules MONTUPET specific form of management, adopted in 1984 and developed since then, and its translation into rules governing, among others, information, decision-making, power delegation, enhances at best each one's control over its professional environment and the hierarchy's operational control. For instance, the delegator empowers the proxy without giving up its responsibilities: he becomes therefore binded to carry-out a follow-up, whereas the proxy has to report to him. The follow-up and reporting methods may vary, but the proxy always has to report any difficulty, doubt or error. The implementation of these regulary audited rules, secures the hierarchy line operations. Organisation The essential activities dedicated to our customers satisfaction, the security of the company's staff and assets, its financial health, the protection of its environment, are managed through written and updated procedures.These written procedures: • secure the activities uniformity and repeatability, • facilitate training, • enhance the activities transparency. They are reviewed when modifications arise within the company or in the legal requirements. A procedure is regarded as in force only when it is duly applied. These procedures are steadily audited through internal and external audits. They comply with international standards in view of assessing their relevance and enforcement level. The following pages summarize them. Annual Report 2003 page 36 This organisation and these means enable formal review of the accounting and financial data, as follows: Review Frequency Delay Expenditures Weekly Flash result Capital expenditures Achievements Nature Attendants +2 days Correct gaps Plant Management Monthly +2 weeks Adjust targets President Monthly +2 weeks Monitor commitments President Quarterly +2 weeks Propose to adjust strategy President Define strategy Directors Board of Directors At least twice a year SPECIFIC PROCEDURES FOR THE ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES The implemented procedures aim at three targets: - ensure the exhaustiveness, reliability and availability of the financial information, - decentralise controls and actions, relying upon accountants and auditors in subsidiaries and the plants, -operate with an accurate number of employees and at reasonable costs. 1. Management control In MONTUPET SA and each subsidiary, a “management control” department is in charge of collecting the financial and management data, checking their reliability, comparing them with the target plans, and participating in drafting the group reporting and target-plans. A dedicated team within MFT-MONTUPET SNC screens disparities between forecasted and actual figures in each entity, integrates the financial data, and checks overheads. This team also performs steady on-site visits of foreign operations to ensure the group-wide coherence of the procedures and assess the risks management. The subsidiaries pool their skills and help one another within their geographical area: - MONTUPET UK performs assistance and audit assignments within the three group entities in Northern Ireland, - MONTUPET LIMITEE in Canada and MONTIAC SA de CV in Mexico use the same accounting software and exchange data and skills. MONTUPET LIMITEE has a leading role to audit and reconcile the accounts within the American area. 2. The company accounts Company accounts of MONTUPET SA and each company are established by their own accountants. They are reviewed by independent local auditors, who report to the group managing partners and to the statutory auditors reviewing the consolidated accounts. The “sales-customers” and “purchases-suppliers” processes are ruled by written procedures set-up to ensure the accuracy and exhaustiveness of the accounting entries related to customers and suppliers. page 37 Annual Report 2003 A new upgraded integrated software application will be implemented in 2004 to process the purchasing-suppliers function. The group debt is managed by the top-management as well as the financing decisions. Transactions and cash in currencies are monitored or processed in the headquarters. 3. The accounts consolidation Consolidated statements are established twice a year using the standardized consolidation reports generated by each consolidated subsidiary accounts department on the basis of a reference accounting document. They are audited for group coherence and rely on the management control on each production site and at the head-office, and on their certification by independent local auditors. MONTUPET SA auditors review and certify the consolidated statements presented by the Board of Directors. They also carry-out each year a number of specific audits in connection with financial audits, as for instance the audit of the purchasing procedure or of the automated data-processing. A current application aiming at integrating the monthly financial reporting within the consolidation software should improve the data convergence between the group entities. OTHER PROCEDURES Health - Safety Health and safety procedures are specific in each unit, in view of operational efficiency and compliance with local rules. They are currently managed through the Quality Management System, a certified ISO 9001 or ISO/TS 16949 (where applicable) system. They also are internally audited within the social audit frame. In each unit, a Health and Safety manager reports to the plant manager, and there is a workers representative (CHSCT in France) setup. Capital expenditures and purchases A capital expenditures scheme is drawn-up and reviewed at least each year at the group level. Every capital expenditure, whatever its amount, whatever the subsidiary, is technically and economically screened, and submitted to the President's approval, or to one of the two executive directors'approval when the President is not available. The unit manager authorizes current operating purchases and capital expenditures priory approved by the President. Operating expenses are monitored weekly. Capital expendures are monitored by a project manager. The purchasing department looks for the best sourcings, launches invitations to tender, negotiates and implements contracts and orders. In view of the obtained results, he reviews the suppliers panel together with the technical, quality, logistic, and engineering departments. The purchasing department is liable to hedge the risks of price variation and raw material availability through forward purchases. Such transactions are restricted to our forecasted production needs and are usually reported to the President. A set of procedures rules these activities. They are managed by the Quality Management System, a system certified by internal and external audits according to the ISO 9001 or ISO/TS16949 standards where applicable. Annual Report 2003 page 38 Labour and remunerations Each site usually adjusts its workforce with its workload. The monthly "Flash Result" review assesses this adjustment efficiency. The wages policy is negotiated annually between management and labour (unions representatives in France). It is applied alongside the year through pay rises or individual premiums and monitored by the human resources department of each company. Quality and environment A Quality Management System and an Environment Management System, relying upon the ISO9001, ISO/TS16949 and ISO14000 standards are available in each company. These systems aim at the long-lasting satisfaction of the customers, the local authorities and the social environment of our units. They include commitments to abide by applicable legal requirements and to develop a continuous improvement process. They are monitored regularly, through internal or external audits. Operational risks The purchasing department centralizes the group insurance programmes. These insurance contracts cover damages, operating losses, civil liability and transportations. Our civil liability insurance covers liable damages to third-parties, brought through our activity or through our products, some of which are automotive security products such as wheels for instance. The control over risks secured by the Quality Management System and the Environment Management System is completed by a prevention policy defined with our insurance companies and implemented. Our patent rights are managed by the technical department assisted by an external agency. Dedicated lawyers might be hired when necessary. page 39 Annual Report 2003 Juridical responsibility Our juridical responsibility may become involved in trade litigations with our customers or suppliers or in disputes with employees. Our lawyers are selected according to the litigation nature, to the country and to their reputation. Our patent rights are managed by the technical department assisted by an external agency. Dedicated lawyers might be hired when necessary. FORECASTED IMPROVEMENTS In order to perpetuate our health and security actions, a group responsible has been appointed. She is assigned to deepen and harmonize the existing procedures referring to the OHSAS18001 standard, and to implement any possibly currently missing procedure. An Entreprise Resource Planning (ERP) is currently adopted to process the purchasing function (commercial and accounting processes) insuring the operating productivity and reliability. It will get started on May 2004. CONCLUSION This report describes the running methods within the MONTUPET group, about the board meeting organisation and the internal control. They appear to me mostly fitted to the transparency and security needs as expressed by the financial markets, and liable to keep our shareholders confident in their company's governance. This opinion in reinforced by the reading of the reports issued by other industrial companies, taking into account our size, branch of industry and specificity. However, aiming at improving in this matter as in our industrial activity, we already programmed some improvements in these running methods and obviously remain interested to receive any suggestion. Annual Report 2003 page 40 AUDITORS’ REPORT ON THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS PRESIDENT’S REPORT WITH REFERENCE TO INTERNAL AUDIT PROCEDURES REGARDING PREPARATION AND TREATMENT OF ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION Pursuant to provisions of Article 225-325 of the French Commercial Code. (Translated from the original French language report). To the Shareholders, In our capacity as Statutory Auditors of MONTUPET SA, pursuant to provisions of Article 225-325 of the French Commercial Code, we hereby submit our report on the report presented by the President of the Board of Directors of your Company, in compliance with Article 225-37 of the Commercial Code, for the fiscal year 2003. Managing Partners are responsible for the definition and implementation of adequate and efficient internal audit procedures. The President of the Board of Directors sets forth in his report, the conditions in which the Board of Directors operations are prepared and organized as well as the internal audit procedures established by the Company. We are responsible for expressing our observations on the information and statements set forth in the President’s report on the internal audit procedures with respect to preparation and treatment of accounting and financial information. Pursuant to professional standards applicable in France, we reviewed the internal auditing objectives and general organization together with the internal auditing procedures with respect to preparation and treatment of accounting and financial information presented in the President’s report. On this basis, we have no matters to bring to shareholders’ attention on the information and statements with respect to Company internal audit procedures relative to preparation and treatment of accounting and financial information contained in the Board of Directors President’s report, drawn up under provisions of Article L.225-37 of the French Commercial Code. Paris, June 8th 2004 The Auditors BELLOT MULLENBACH & ASSOCIES GUILLERET & Associés Thierry Bellot, Pascal de Rocquigny René Guilleret Registered in the Auditors Company Registered in the Auditors Company of Paris of Versailles page 41 Annual Report 2003 DATA FOR LAST FIVE FISCAL YEARS Financial data at year’s end 2000 2001 2002 2003 14 362 816 14 369 174 14 340 987 14 368 783 15 713 649 9 421 390 9 425 560 9 434 860 9 453 147 10 337 927 0 0 0 0 0 214 360 263 252 280 439 292 446 214 292 787 883 298 571 762 13 450 925 18 586 908 18 656 118 25 249 595 45 336 564 0 0 30 490 30 490 1 162 873 1 058 271 (4 893 570) (6 580 423) 4 711 808 25 430 725 1 579 642 0 0 5 151 458 2 050 435 1,43 1,97 1,97 2,67 4,27 depreciation and provisions 0,11 (0,52) (0,70) 0,50 2,46 c. Net dividend per share 0,17 0 0 0,50 0,20 d. Tax pre-paid to the Treasury 0,08 0 0 0 0,10 a. Share Capital b. Issued share capital c. Number of convertible debentures 1999 Global result on operating a. Turnover b. Profit before taxes, personnel’s profit sharing, depreciation and provisions c. Income tax d. Profit after taxes, personnel’s profit sharing, depreciation and provisions e. Distributable profit and distributed retained earnings Result on operations per share a. Profit after taxes, personnel's profit sharing, but before depreciation and provisions b. Profit after taxes, personnel's profit sharing, Personnel a. Number of employees 1 742 1 935 1 893 1 819 1 781 b. Wages ans salaries 37 084 690 40 598 004 41 847 254 41 361 180 40 258 150 c. Social security 16 032 867 16 045 315 16 065 764 16 378 916 16 418 332 Annual Report 2003 page 42 TABLE OF SUBSIDIARIES AND SHAREHOLDING INTERESTS AS AT DECEMBER 31ST 2003 (IN K4) MONTUPET MONTUPET MFT MONTIAC UK LTD GMBH SARL SA DE CV 12 390 26 8 7 680 48 187 25 297 100,0 100,0 12 390 ALUMALSA MONTUPET MONTUPET MFT-MON- CALCAST LIMITEE INC TUPET SNC LTD 3 486 7 368 8 10 836 41 (3 402) 8 213 2 908 69 7 698 460 50,0 100,0 97,7 100,0 100,0 99,0 100,0 26 4 7 680 1 561 7 435 9 10 836 41 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 123 690 (1) 0 0 0 4 573 (1) 4 925 0 0 1 419 used amount 2 880 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Turnover for the fiscal year 2003 80 942 127 1 742 7 299 48 700 18 052 306 4 314 27 987 Profit or loss for the fiscal year 2003 9 354 1 58 357 2 426 (747) 5 2 459 1 325 17 027 0 (2) 0 0 0 0 0 0 Issued share capital Accumulated retained earnings before distribution of profit for the fiscal year Share held by parent company in % Value of share capital held by parent Company (gross = net) Loans and advances granted by the parent company and not yet repaid (in MONTUPET SA books) Guarantees given by the parent Cy (converted at year end) maximal amount Dividends received by the parent Cy during the fiscal year 2003 Consolidation retreatments are taken into account. (1) Including 12,196 M2 in favour of MONTUPET UK or its subsidiaries and 4,573 M2 in favour of MONTUPET UK, MONTUPET Limitee or ALUMALSA. (2) Payment of 90% of gross margin in 2003 : 846 363 2. MONTUPET UK Ltd: Dunmurry Industrial Estate - The Cutts - Derriaghy - Belfast bt17 9hu / Nothern Ireland MONTUPET GmbH: Karl-Götz Strasse 17 - 97424 Schweinfurt / Germany MFT Sarl: 41, rue de la Bienfaisance - 75008 Paris / France MONTIAC SA de CV: Calle San Pablo n° 50 - Desarrollo Industrial - Mieleras - CP 27400 - Torréon - Coahuila / Mexico ALUMALSA: Carretera de Castellon - Km 8,400 - Apartado 4047 - Saragosse / Spain MONTUPET Limitee: 50, rue Léger - Riviere-Beaudette / Quebec / Canada MONTUPET Inc: 17197 N. Laurel - Park Drive - Livonia / Michigan 48152 / USA MFT-MONTUPET Snc: Av. Gal Dumonceau, 56 - 1190 Forest / Belgium CALCAST Ltd: 20 Kean’s hill road - Campsie Industrial Estate - Co Londonderry 99136 - North Ireland page 43 Annual Report 2003 RESOLUTIONS PRESENTED BEFORE THE ANNUAL MEETING HELD ON JUNE 29TH 2004 RESOLUTIONS WITHIN THE AUTHORITY OF AN ORDINARY GENERAL MEETING FIRST RESOLUTION Approval of the parent company’s financial statements and directors discharge The Shareholders, having heard the Board of Directors and the Auditors reports on the social accounts for the fiscal year 2003 and after studying the income statement, the balance-sheet, together with their notes, approve these accounts and balance-sheet as shown, as well as all the transactions they reflect. They consequently discharge the directors from their financial administration during the fiscal year 2003. SECOND RESOLUTION Approval of the consolidated financial statements The Shareholders, having heard the Board of Directors and the Auditors reports on the accounts for the fiscal year 2003 and after studying the consolidated income statement, the consolidated balance-sheet, together with their notes, approve these consolidated accounts and balance-sheet as shown, as well as all the transactions they reflect. THIRD RESOLUTION Allocation of income The Shareholders note that the accounting result for the fiscal year 2003 is a profit amounting to 25 430 725 Euros, and in compliance with the Board of directors proposals : • record that the previous retained earnings amounted to 10 484 136 Euros by December 31st 2003 (taking into account the transfer of 3.256.269 Euros to the long term profits special reserve as decided by the General Combined Meeting held on March 31st 2003), • appropriate 496.546 Euros to the legal reserve, thus increasing it from 1.074.819 Euros to 1.571.365 Euros, • distribute a dividend of 0,20 Euro per share, together with a tax credit of 0,10 Euro, representing a total amount of 2.050.895 Euros, • record that the available retained earnings will therefore increase from 10.484.136 Euros to 33.367.420 Euros, • record that the amount of distributed dividends in the last three years and of the corresponding tax credits (tax already paid to the fiscal authorities), were: Annual Report 2003 page 44 Fiscal year Net dividend French Tax Credit 2000 0 0 2001 0 0 2002 0,50 Euros 0 (decided by a Meeting not held to appropriate a year profit) FOURTH RESOLUTION Directors fees The shareholders decide to allocate 10.000 Euros to the Board of Directors. FIFTH RESOLUTION Ratification of the agreements mentioned in article L.225-38 to L.225-42 of the French Code of Commerce The Shareholders, having heard the auditor's report upon the transactions provided by the articles L225-38 to L225-42 of the Code of Commerce, approve and ratify the permission given by the Board of Directors to enter into such transactions. SIXTH RESOLUTION Regulation of a Director’s appointment As an inaccuracy slept into the minutes of the Combined Meeting held on March 31st 2003, the shareholders confirm their decision taken on March 31st 2003 as follows : • on one hand, by ratifying the cooptation of Mr François FEUILLET as Director, up to Mr François HENROT’s - his predecessor – term end, i.e. after the Shareholders’ Meeting called to approve the financial statements for the 2002 fiscal year, • on another hand, by appointing Mr François FEUILLET as Director for a period of six years, expiring at the conclusion of the Shareholders’ Meeting called to approve the financial statements for the 2009 fiscal year. SEVENTH RESOLUTION Authorization of an Employee Share Issue The report of the Board of Directors and the report by the Auditors having been made available to the shareholders, pursuant to the provisions of Article L.225-129, VII of the French Commercial Code, the shareholders hereby authorize the Board of Directors to increase the share capital, if it appears fit to the Board, at the time and in the quantities it will decide, in one or several times, by a maximum amount of 30.400 2 nominal, i.e. by a maximum number of 20.000 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euro, this capital increase being reserved to the company employees within a company savings scheme, and as provided by the Article L.443-5 of the Labour Code. The shareholders empower the Board of Directors to implement this authorization, and in that purpose : page 45 Annual Report 2003 • determine seniority requirements to benefit from this operation, within the legal limits, and the maximum number of shares a single employee may subscribe, • determine the number of shares to be issued and their possession date, • determine, according to the Article L.443-5 al. 3 of the Labour Code, the subscription price of the new shares and the time to subscribe, • determine the payment time limits and modalities, • record the capital increase(s) and the related modifications in the Articles of Association, • carry-out all the official acts needed following the capital increase, including implementing a company savings scheme. This authorization entails the waiver of pre-emptive rights to subscribe for the shares to be offered to employees for subscription. EIGHTH RESOLUTION Shareholders identification The shareholders decide to modify the Article 13 of the Articles of Association as follows : “complying with article L.228-2 of the French Commercial Code, the company may ask at any time to the relevant authorities against payment, the name and birth-date – for legal entities, the name and creation date – the nationality and address of the shareholders with voting rights, the quantity of detained shares, and the possible restrictions attached to their shares”. RESOLUTIONS WITHIN THE AUTHORITY OF THE ORDINARY AND OF THE EXTRAORDINARY GENERAL MEETINGS NINHT RESOLUTION Power to carry-out official acts The General Meeting gives all powers to the carrier of a copy of the minutes of the meeting, in view of carrying out all deposits and official acts provided by the law. Annual Report 2003 page 46 REPORT OF THE AUDITORS ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2003 (Translated from the original French language report). To the Shareholders, In accordance with the terms of our appointment at the Annual Shareholder’s Meeting, we hereby submit our report for the year ended December 31st 2003, on : - our examination of the financial statements of MONTUPET SA, as attached to this report, - the specific procedures and information required by law. These financial statements have been approved by your management board. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements, based on our audit. I – OPINION ON THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS We conducted our audit in accordance with professional standards applied in France. Those standards require that we plan and perform our audit to obtain a reasonable assurance that the financial statements are free from material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. It also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made in the preparation of the financial statements, as well as evaluating their overall presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion. We certify that the financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the assets and liabilities and financial position of the company at December 31st 2003, and the result of operations for the year then ended in accordance with French generally accepted accounting principles. II – JUSTIFICATION OF OUR ASSESMENTS In accordance with Article L.225-235 of the French Commercial Code relating to the justification of the assessments, which applies for the first time to the year ended December 31st 2003, we mention the following points : The introductory paragraph in the notes details the accounting treatment and the consequences of the significant events in the fiscal year on the results of operations and on the financial position. We appreciated the relevance of these information and of their evaluation. Your company describes the nature and depreciation durations of deferred charges in the paragraph 2.11 in the notes to the financial statements. We appreciated the applied accounting treatment and the depreciation methods and durations. The assessments we have performed on the above matters are part of our audit procedures relating to the financial statements, taken as a whole, and have thus contributed to the unqualified audit opinion expressed in part one of this report. page 47 Annual Report 2003 III – SPECIFIC VERIFICATION We have also performed the specific procedures required by law, in accordance with professional standards applied in France. We are satisfied that the information given in the Board of Directors’ report and the documents sent to shareholders on the financial position and financial statements is fairly stated and agrees with those financial statements. As required by the law, we also verified that details of the identify of shareholders are disclosed in the Board of Directors report. Paris, June 8th 2004 The Auditors Annual Report 2003 BELLOT MULLENBACH & ASSOCIES GUILLERET & Associés Thierry Bellot, Pascal de Rocquigny René Guilleret Registered in the Auditors Company Registered in the Auditors Company of Paris of Versailles page 48 REPORT OF THE AUDITORS ON THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2003 (Translated from the original French language report). To the Shareholders, In accordance with the terms of our appointment at the Annual Shareholder’s Meeting, we have audited the Consolidated financial statements of MONTUPET for the year ended December 31st 2003, as attached to this report These consolidated financial statements have been approved by your management board. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements, based on our audit. I – OPINION ON THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS We conducted our audit in accordance with professional standards applied in France. Those standards require that we plan and perform our audit to obtain a reasonable assurance that the financial statements are free from material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. It also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made in the preparation of the financial statements, as well as evaluating their overall presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion. We certify that the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated results of operations and the consolidated assets and liabilities and financial position of the consolidated entities. II – JUSTIFICATION OF OUR ASSESMENTS In accordance with Article L.225-235 of the French Commercial Code relating to the justification of the assessments, which applies for the first time to the year ended December 31st 2003, we mention the following points : The introductory paragraph in the notes details the accounting treatment and the consequences of the significant events in the fiscal year on the results of operations and on the financial position. We appreciated the relevance of these information and of their evaluation. Your company describes the nature and depreciation durations of deferred charges in the paragraph 2.5. in the notes to the financial statements. We appreciated the applied accounting treatment and the depreciation methods and durations. The assessments we have performed on the above matters are part of our audit procedures relating to the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and have thus contributed to the unqualified audit opinion expressed in part one of this report. page 49 Annual Report 2003 III – SPECIFIC VERIFICATION On another hand, we also audited the data contained in the report of the Board of Directors. We have no adverse comments upon the reliability and agreement of the consolidated accounts with the data given in the Group management report. Paris, June 8th 2004 The Auditors Annual Report 2003 BELLOT MULLENBACH & ASSOCIES GUILLERET & Associés Thierry Bellot, Pascal de Rocquigny René Guilleret Registered in the Auditors Company Registered in the Auditors Company of Paris of Versailles page 50 AUDITORS’ REPORT ON AN EMPLOYEE SHARE ISSUE PURSUANT TO PROVISIONS OF ARTICLE 225-19 VII OF THE FRENCH COMMERCIAL CODE - COMBINED MEETING HELD ON JUNE 29TH 2004 (SEVENTH RESOLUTION) - (Translated from the original French language report). To the Shareholders, In our capacity as Statutory Auditors of your company, and pursuant to provisions of Article L. 225-135 of the Commercial Code, we hereby present our report on the planned employee share issue which would result in a capital increase of a maximum of 30.400 2, submitted to shareholders for approval in accordance with the provisions of Article L.225-129 VII of the Commercial Code and Article L. 443-5 of the Labour Code. The Board of Directors are inviting shareholders to grant them full powers to set the terms and conditions of the related share issue, as presented in their report, as well as to waive their preemptive subscription right. We conducted our review in accordance with the professional standards applicable in France. Those standards require that we carry out the necessary procedures to verify the methods used to determine the issue price of new shares. Subject to further examination of the terms and conditions of this issue, we have no matters to bring to shareholders’ attention regarding the methods used to determine the issue price of new shares as presented in the Board of Directors’ report. As the issue price of new shares is not determined, we are not in a position to comment on the final terms and conditions under which the issue will be conducted, nor, in consequence, on the proposed waiver of shareholder’s pre-emptive rights to subscribe for the issue concerned, the principle of which is in keeping with the nature of the proposed operation. In accordance with Article L.155-2 of the decree of March 23rd, 1967, we will issue as supplementary report at the time of each such issue conducted by the Board of Directors. Paris, June 8th 2004 The Auditors BELLOT MULLENBACH & ASSOCIES GUILLERET & Associés Thierry Bellot, Pascal de Rocquigny René Guilleret Registered in the Auditors Company Registered in the Auditors Company of Paris of Versailles page 51 Annual Report 2003 SPECIAL REPORT OF THE AUDITORS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 2003 (Translated from the original French language report). Ladies and Gentlemen, In our capacity as Statutory Auditors of your company, we inform you about the regulated transactions, previously ratified by the Board of directors. In compliance with Article L.225-40 of the French Commercial Code, we were informed of the transactions that were previously approved by your Board of Directors. We are not expected to trace such transactions but to communicate to you, on the basis of the information we received, the main features and implementations of those we are aware of, without assessing their liability. You are expected to appreciate the interest resulting from these transactions in view of approving them. Directors concerned: Messrs Stéphane MAGNAN and Marc MAJUS The Board of Directors agreed that the current account advances between MONTUPET SA and MONTIAC bear interest at the rate of 3,5% for the fiscal year 2003. The current account debiting balance was amounting to 1.377.342 Euros by December 31st 2003. The interests thus charged by MONTUPET SA to MONTIAC amounted to 48.146 Euros for the fiscal year 2003. On another hand, in compliance with the decree of march 23rd 1967, we were informed that the following transactions concluded during previous years were still in force in year 2003. 1. MFT SARL The profit sharing agreement dated January 9th 1990, between MONTUPET SA and MFT SARL, located in 41, rue de la Bienfaisance - 75008 PARIS, that was no longer operative since January 2nd 1997, came back into force in year 1999, in the interest of the MONTUPET SA – MFT group. This agreement, amended on April 8th 1999 provides that MFT SARL will pay 90% of its gross margin to MONTUPET SA, representing 846.363 Euros for the fiscal year 2003. 2. MFT-MONTUPET SNC The Board of Directors, in its meeting of March 29th 2004, confirmed its authorization of the following transactions signed with the group coordination centre, MFT-MONTUPET SNC, located in 56, avenue du Général Dumonceau - 1990 FOREST in Belgium, as follows: 2.1. CAPITAL CONTRIBUTION None in year 2003. 2.2. FINANCING OF SUBSIDIARIES No further loan was granted in year 2003. Annual Report 2003 page 52 2.3. FACTORING TRANSACTIONS MONTUPET SA sold invoices to the coordination centre during year 2003. Sold amounts were 322.134.422 Euros. Financing charges amounted to 811.298 Euros and factoring charges to 651.779 Euros. 2.4. INVOICED SERVICES The coordination centre invoiced 2.418.333 Euros mainly representing staff, administrative and similar costs, plus 8%. MONTUPET SA also pays the social contributions concerning the directors who are expatriated in Belgium, and are the executive directors of the coordination centre MFT-MONTUPET SNC. These costs amounted to 113.725 Euros for the fiscal year 2003. These paid contributions concerning the other employees originating from MONTUPET SA amounted to 177.561 Euros. 3. MONTIAC 3.1. Upon March 27th 1998, MONTUPET SA signed with MONTIAC, its wholly owned subsidiary located in Mexico, a “maquila” (subcontracting) agreement, by which MONTIAC produces cylinder-heads, cylinder-blocks, wheels, braking-parts, structure parts, intake manifolds… on behalf of MONTUPET. Within this agreement, MONTUPET is committed to pay to MONTIAC all its direct and indirect staff costs, rents, utility goods, insurances, raw materials and local components, plus a 5% margin. The amount thus charged in year 2003 amounts to 7.154.083 Euros, including the 5% margin. 3.2. Within a know-how and technical assistance agreement dated march 27th 1998, MONTUPET provides free of charge its know-how, its designs, trade-marks, machining equipment, and raw materials to its wholly owned subsidiary, MONTIAC, located in Mexico; in the sole view of enabling MONTIAC to provide mounting or production services to MONTUPET. 3.3. An agreement of mercantile commission dated July 1st 1999, appendix to the “maquila” agreement, provides that MONTIAC will deliver its production to specified MONTUPET customers and the invoicing to these customers. As a compensation, MONTUPET pays a commission amounting to 0,1% of the invoiced amounts (namely to FORD Mexico). In 2003, MONTIAC invoiced its production up to 21.283.948 Euros and the mercantile commission amounted to 9.352 Euros. Paris, June 8th 2004 The Auditors BELLOT MULLENBACH & ASSOCIES GUILLERET & Associés Thierry Bellot, Pascal de Rocquigny René Guilleret Registered in the Auditors Company Registered in the Auditors Company of Paris of Versailles page 53 Annual Report 2003 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONSOLIDATED BALANCE-SHEET ENDING DECEMBER 31ST 2003 Assets Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 Gross value Depreciation Net value Net value (K Euros) (K Euros) (K Euros) (K Euros) Intangible assets Goodwil 1 620 1 620 0 0 Others 1 304 1 049 255 116 TOTAL 2 924 2 669 255 116 Fixed assets Land Buildings Machinery and equipment Others Assets under construction TOTAL 4 009 0 4 009 4 267 46 814 24 527 22 287 25 984 307 271 186 842 120 429 130 005 38 835 24 012 14 823 17 451 998 0 998 1 621 397 927 235 381 162 546 179 328 Financial assets Shares in unconsolidated subsidiaries 35 0 35 35 Loans and others 521 0 521 634 TOTAL 556 0 556 669 401 407 238 050 163 357 180 113 27 696 1 422 26 274 28 996 1 496 0 1 496 2 250 TOTAL FIXED ASSETS Inventories and work in progress Raw materials Spare-parts Tooling 4 390 0 4 390 7 545 Work in progress and finished goods 18 626 36 18 590 23 567 TOTAL 52 208 1 458 50 750 62 358 Trade debtors Advances and deposits on order 457 0 457 490 Accounts receivable and related 109 111 524 108 587 123 538 Other trade debtors TOTAL 4 560 0 4 560 851 114 128 524 113 604 124 879 Others debtors Deferred taxation 0 0 0 0 Others debtors 2 582 0 2 582 4 625 TOTAL 2 582 0 2 582 4 625 10 0 10 2 445 Cash 9 873 0 9 873 6 734 Prepayment 4 383 0 4 383 1 724 183 184 1 982 181 202 202 765 7 305 0 7 305 10 454 591 896 240 032 351 864 393 332 Marketable securities TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS Deferred charges TOTAL ASSETS Annual Report 2003 page 56 Liabilities > Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 (K Euros) (K Euros) Stockholders’equity Called-up Share capital 15 714 14 369 Capital surplus 11 496 3 642 Legal reserve 1 075 1 075 Regulated reserves 3 735 479 42 42 Other reserves Consolidation difference 110 541 91 855 Retained earnings 10 484 14 180 Translation adjustment (9 958) (3 764) Current year profit - Inside Group 20 458 24 507 163 587 146 385 1 880 5 562 TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS’EQUITY-Inside Group Minority interests as per 01/01/2003 Current year profit - Outside group Minority interests as per 31/12/2003 TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS’EQUITY (78) 291 1 802 5 853 165 389 152 238 12 760 17 691 Other permanent capital and grants Capital grants Conditional advances TOTAL TOTAL PERMANENT CAPITAL 790 1 014 13 550 18 705 178 939 170 943 1 402 1 775 Provisions for liabilities and charges Provisions for liabilities and charges Deferred taxation 14 392 13 062 TOTAL 15 794 14 837 Financial liabilities 47 998 96 734 6 231 7 372 Payments received on account Liabilities Accounts payable 65 972 68 379 Taxation and social security 18 692 17 509 8 367 5 587 93 031 91 475 Other trade creditors TOTAL Other creditors Suppliers of fixed assets and others 8 440 9 489 TOTAL 8 440 9 489 Deferred income 1 431 2 482 351 864 393 332 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’EQUITY page 57 Annual Report 2003 CONSOLIDATED INCOME STATEMENT Fiscal year 2003 (K4) Fiscal year 2002 (K4) Operating income NET SALES 438 472 474 694 Changes in inventory (5 373) (3 346) Own work capitalized 1 297 6 698 Operating subsidies 7 833 5 665 0 2 795 10 995 10 935 453 224 497 441 189 108 205 673 Charges transfers Others TOTAL OPERATING INCOME Operating costs Cost of raw materials and other supplies Other operating expenses Salaries and wages Taxes 52 163 62 648 129 536 139 167 5 964 6 223 40 419 35 613 9 524 16 739 426 714 466 063 26 510 31 378 Depreciation charges on fixed assets and changes in provisions charges on current assets Other charges TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES 1. Operating profit Financial income Receivable interests Exchange gains Release of provisions 376 50 5 924 6 021 1 0 185 158 6 486 6 229 Payable interests and related charges 2 747 4 682 Negative differences in exchange rates 3 508 2 468 1 0 Others (648) 4 TOTAL FINANCIAL EXPENSES 5 608 7 154 878 (925) 27 388 30 453 Others TOTAL FINANCIAL INCOME Financial expenses Write-downs and provisions 2. Financial profit (loss) 3. Profit from ordinary activities Annual Report 2003 page 58 Fiscal year 2003 (K4) Fiscal year 2002 (K4) 4. Extraordinary profit (421) 3 040 Income tax 4 834 1 632 Deferred tax 1 753 7 063 20 380 24 798 (78) 291 20 458 24 507 5. Total net consolidated profit Minority interests NET CONSOLIDATED PROFIT ATTRIBUTABLE TO GROUP ARE: IN EUROS PER SHARE: Net Profit attributable to the Group - per share 1,98 2,59 Profit from ordinary activities after income tax - per share 2,02 2,27 Diluted net Profit - per share 1,78 2,13 10 337 927 9 453 147 1 168 100 2 063 333 11 506 027 11 516 480 Number of issued shares Stock option schemes 1998 (year 2002 only) and 2001: nr of issuable shares Number of issued and issuable shares page 59 Annual Report 2003 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED ACCOUNTS AS PER DECEMBER 31ST 2003 These accounts were approved by the Board of Directors on march 29th 2004. They are shown in thousands Euros. SIGNIFICANT ITEMS IN THE FISCAL YEAR • Following the decrease in the tooling activity, restructuring measures were implemented. Among those, early retirements cost 1.431 K€, accounted among the personnel costs, • In 2003, MONTUPET UK wholly depreciated the capital expenditures incurred to create the lost foam process, thus impacting the year result by 1.710 KGBP, i.e. 2.474 K€, • A part produced by MONTUPET UK for FORD Is no longer produced since end september 2003. Measures were taken to transfer the production equipment on other programmes in Belfast and in Canada, so that no extra depreciation was needed, • After a customer modified its order programme, MONTUPET claimed an indemnity, payment of which was agreed and which was accounted for 1.811 K€ in 2003 accounts, and was paid on May 7th 2004. 1. CONSOLIDATION RULES The consolidated accounts were drawn-up in compliance with the French principles and rules, including the rule nr 99-02 issued by the “Comité de la Réglementation Comptable” (Accountancy Council) probated on June 22nd 1999. 1.1. CONSOLIDATED GROUP Consolidation methods and holding rates are unchanged as compared with previous year. The consolidated entities, that are consolidated using the global method, are the following: - MONTUPET SA (mother-company), - MONTUPET LIMITEE (100%) (Canada): aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer, - MONTUPET UK (100%) (Northern Ireland): aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer, and its subsidiaries WILLACE UK LTD, BS TOOLING LTD, GESFITEC UK LTD, - ALUMALSA (97,71%) (Spain): aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer, - MFT-MONTUPET Snc (100%) (Belgium): services inside the group, - MONTIAC SA DE CV (100%) (Mexico): aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer, - CALCAST LTD (100%) (Northern Ireland): aluminium foundry, car-parts manufacturer, - MFT SARL (100%) (France): metal trading and services. MONTUPET Inc. (USA), and MONTUPET GMBH, wholly owned by MONTUPET SA, of minor significance for the purpose of providing a true and fair view of the Group were not taken into account. Complementary data upon the affiliated companies appear on §2.3 hereunder. 1.2. CONSOLIDATION PRINCIPLES All transactions between consolidated entities were eliminated. Minority interest were recorded proportionally in the stockholders’ equity and in the income statement. Statements of all consolidated entities are closed at December 31st 2003, each fiscal year Annual Report 2003 page 60 including twelve months. The difference deriving from initial consolidation i.e. Between the book-value of a company shares and their purchase price is allocated to identifiable items, or capitalized as goodwill, disclosed under intangible assets. By end 2003, the goodwill was fully written off. Unmatured discounted bills were included into the consolidated balance sheet. The statements of consolidated companies are translated as follows: Balance-sheets are translated at the rate valid at the reporting date. In the P&L account, income and expenses are translated at the annual average market rate. Translation adjustments resulting from the difference between previous and current closing year exchange rates on the items in the balance-sheet, as well as those resulting from the difference between the yearly average and closing exchange rates on the items in the income statement appear as “translation adjustments” in the stockholders’ consolidated entity. • Main exchange rates record: - Sterling Pound: - Canadian Dollar: 31.12.2002: 1 £ = 1,5373 € 31.12.2003: 1 £ = 1,4188 € 31.12.2003: 1 CAD = 0,6042 € 31.12.2002: 1 CAD = 0,616 € 1.3. ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES AND BASES OF VALUATION 1.3.1. Intangible assets Intangible assets are valued at purchase cost. Start-up expenses are written off immediately in the year they are incurred. Research and development expenses are fully recorded in the P&L account. 1.3.2. Fixed assets Fixed assets are valued at purchase cost plus costs to put them in working condition, or at production cost. Interests related to loans financing fixed assets are not included. Assets - except lands - are depreciated according to the following durations and methods: Buildings 20 years Straight line method Fixtures and fittings 8 to 25 years Straight line method Machinery and tooling 8 to 15 years Straight line method or 8 years Declining balance method Vehicles 4 years Straight line method Office furniture and 1 to 10 years Straight line method Equipment or 8 years Declining balance method 1.3.3. Financial assets Participations in unconsolidated subsidiaries are valued either at purchase cost, or on the basis of their value in use in view of their future prospects. Other financial assets are valued at purchase costs. Accruals are set-up if applicable (bad debts). 1.3.4. Inventories and in process products Inventories and in process products are valued at (purchase or manufacturing) cost or sales price, whichever is lower. No financial cost is included. Inventories from intra-group supplies are not reduced by inter-company profits and losses, the total being not significant. page 61 Annual Report 2003 1.3.5. Receivables and liabilities Receivables and liabilities are registered at their nominal value. Those denominated in foreign currencies are translated at the exchange rate valid on the reporting date, or at the hedged rate if covered by hedging transactions. Foreign currencies translation differences are reported in the P&L account (exchange loss or gain). Bad debts are written off when applicable. 1.3.6. Marketable securities Marketable securities are recorded at their nominal value, excluding procurement costs. During the year, MONTUPET SA bought shares within the programme authorized by the Annual General Shareholders Meeting on June 30th 2003. On December 31st 2003, MONTUPET SA thus held 83.354 of its own shares, bought at an average price of 13,98 € i.e. 1.160 K€. The consolidation re-treatment of this transaction was to reduce the consolidated stockholders’equity. 1.3.7. Ordinary and Extraordinary profit (loss) The result from ordinary activities is the addition of the operating profit (or loss) and of the financial profit (or loss). It includes all the profits and losses directly related to the current group activities. Extraordinary profits and losses are made of significant items that, in view of their unordinary and not recurrent nature (such as assets disposals, provisions for risks and charges, expatriation allocations, penalties), cannot be regarded as belonging to the current group activities. 1.3.8. Deferred taxes Timing differences between the taxable income and the accounting profit of consolidated companies, together with some consolidation measures, result in deferred taxes in the consolidated statements. Deferred taxes calculated using the variable method are rated as follows: - French companies: rate is 34,35%, - Spanish companies: rate is 35%, - British companies: rate is 30% (subsidiaries in Northern Ireland) - Canadian subsidiary: rate is 31,35%. When the impact is significant, deferred taxes are discounted at 6%, according to a repayment schedule. This discounting reduces the net deferred tax liabilities by 1.379 K€ in MONTUPET SA accounts and by 1.624 K€ in the subsidiaries in Northern Ireland, and increases them by 43 K€ in MONTUPET LIMITEE accounts. From the fiscal year 2002, deferred taxes were calculated for the subsidiaries in Northern Ireland without taking into account their capital expenditure programmes nor their grant schemes. Deferred taxes are therefore amounting to 14.392 K€. Deferred tax liabilities now appear among the provisions for liabilities and charges to comply with the current practice. The contribution record per company appears under § 2.15. Annual Report 2003 page 62 1.3.9. Retirement benefits Amount on 31.12.2003 MONTUPET SA Retirement benefit commitments MONTUPET UK retirement pension scheme (1) TOTAL 1 380 473 1 853 (1) Pension scheme risks sharing: excess of liabilities over assets at 31.12.03. The group companies have chosen pension schemes with defined contributions, therefore not underwriting any commitment beyond these paid contributions. On another hand, MONTUPET SA pays a retirement indemnity to its employees when they retire and MONTUPET UK partially shares its pension scheme risk. 1.3.10. Capital grants They are apportioned to the profit and loss account as the related fixed assets are depreciated. 1.3.11. Leasing contracts Major leasing contracts have been restated in the accounts. Capitalized leased assets are a building depreciated over 20 years, and lands (not depreciated). The corresponding liability was reported under “other financial borrowings” and amounts to 2.895 K€ at the reporting date. page 63 Annual Report 2003 2. NOTES TO THE BALANCE-SHEET AND INCOME STATEMENT 2.1. FIXED ASSETS (IN K€) Assets Opening balance Increases Decreases Exchange rate variations Closing balance Goodwill 1 620 0 0 0 1 620 Other intangible assets 1 113 214 (23) 0 1 304 385 063 25 281 (10 409) (12 756) 387 179 10 748 0 0 0 10 748 669 1 (100) (14) 556 399 213 25 496 (10 532) (12 770) 401 407 Tangible assets Tangible assets on lease Financial assets TOTAL 2.1.1. Goodwill (in K€) Gross value 31.12.2003 MONTUPET UK Endowments 316 Net value 31.12.2003 316 0 MONTUPET SA 416 416 0 WILLACE UK 398 398 0 BS TOOLING 401 401 0 89 89 0 1 620 1 620 0 MFT SARL TOTAL 2.1.2. Other intangible assets (in K€) Opening balance Endowments Closing balance MONTUPET SA 911 763 148 MONTUPET UK consolidated 387 282 105 MFT SARL 5 4 1 CALCAST 1 0 1 1 304 1 049 255 TOTAL 2.2. DEPRECIATIONS AND PROVISIONS FOR LIABILITIES AND CHARGES RECORD (IN K€) Assets Opening balance Increases Decreases Exchange rate variations Closing balance Intangible assets 2 617 106 (54) 0 2 669 Tangible assets (1) 216 483 34 079 (9 131) (6 050) 235 381 0 0 0 0 0 219 100 34 185 (9 185) (6 050) 238 050 4 816 522 0 0 5 338 Financial assets TOTAL (1) Including fixed assets on lease Annual Report 2003 page 64 2.3. UNCONSOLIDATED PARTICIPATIONS (IN K€) Assets % participation Capital Result MONTUPET Inc 100% 82 5 MONTUPET GmbH 100% 52 1 2.4.RECEIVABLES AND PAYABLES ANALYSIS (IN K€) Accounts are receivable and payable within one year, except those mentioned hereunder. Trade & sundry debtors Trade & sundry liabilities over one year over one year MONTUPET SA 1 312 0 CALCAST MONTUPET LIMITEE TOTAL 0 1 371 31 0 1 343 1371 2.5. DEFERRED CHARGES (IN K€) Assets Gross value Increases 01.01.2003 Decreases Gross value (depr. & exch. 31.12.2003 rate variations) MONTUPET SA: - Extensive maintenance expenses - Expatriation expenses of staff members 2 516 2 792 (2 633) 2 675 101 128 (106) 123 - Expenses related to our Mexican subsidiary MONTIAC 3 887 0 (1 413) 2 474 - Expenses on Laigneville facilities 1 113 0 (342) 771 -New works started 2 837 0 (1 575) 1 262 10 454 2 920 (6 069) 7 305 TOTAL Deferred charges appear in MONTUPET SA accounts only and are mainly made up as follows: - Extensive maintenance expenses over large equipments (excluding breakdowns), amortized over 3 years; ie the average delay between two maintenance operations, - Testing and pre-operating expenses related to our Mexican subsidiary (from October 1st 2000) and to a plant in France, Laigneville, (from January 1st 2001), amortized over 5 years, - Spending on new facilities, amortized over 3 years, computed on the basis of a year production / whole forecasted production (with this equipment). page 65 Annual Report 2003 2.6. VARIATION IN CONSOLIDATED CAPITAL (IN K€) Group Consolidated share capital by 01.01.2002 Euro conversion round-offs MONTUPET SA capital increase (incl.capital surplus) Translation adjustment Outside group Total 131 934 5 561 137 495 (2) 1 (1) 191 0 191 (7 825) 0 (7 825) (2 420) 0 (2 420) 121 878 5 562 127 440 24 507 291 24 798 0 0 0 146 385 5 853 152 238 Impact of Montupet UK deferred taxes upon the opening net worth Equity by 31.12.2002 2002 earnings Distributed dividends Consolidated equity by 01.01.2003 MONTUPET SA capital increase (incl.capital surplus) 9 199 0 9 199 MONTUPET SA buying of own shares (1 160) 0 (1 160) Distributed dividends (5 152) (3 973) (9 125) Translation adjustments (6 194) 0 (6 194) 51 0 51 143 129 1 880 145 009 20 458 (78) 20 380 163 587 1 802 165 389 Miscellanea Consolidated equity by 31.12.2003 2003 earnings TOTAL Called-up and fully paid share capital consists in 10.337.927 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euros each, i.e. a total of 15.713.649 Euros, against 9.453.147 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euros each, i.e. 14.368.783 Euros as per December 31st 2002. This results from: - The issue of 852.980 shares created under the stock-option scheme dated January 20th 1998 authorized by the Extraordinary General Meeting held on January 20th 1998 (On December 31st 2003, 889.547 shares had been created out of 900.000). - The issue of 31.800 shares created under the stock-option scheme dated November 16th 2001 authorized by the Extraordinary General Meeting held on February 29th 2001 (On December 31st 2003, 31.900 shares had been created out of 1.200.000). The corresponding capital surplus amounts to 7.854.077 Euros for year 2003. The 1998 stock-option scheme was closed in 2003. 1.168.100 shares are issuable within the 2001 stock-option scheme. The share capital could therefore be made of 11.506.027 shares. During the year, MONTUPET SA bought shares within the programme authorized by the Annual General Shareholders Meeting on June 30th 2003. On December 31st 2003, MONTUPET SA thus held 83.354 of its own shares, bought at an average price of 13,98 € i.e. 1.160 K€. The consolidation re-treatment of this transaction was to reduce the consolidated stockholders’equity. Annual Report 2003 page 66 2.7. OTHER EQUITY AND CAPITAL GRANTS ON THE BALANCE-SHEET (IN K€) Balance Grants Conditional advances TOTAL Increase Apportionment Exchange rate Closing to profit & loss variations balance 17 691 3 796 (7 583) (1 144) 12 760 1 014 0 (224) 0 790 18 705 3 796 (7 807) (1 144) 13 550 Other equity are made up of non refundable grants. Conditional advances are a financial assistance from ANVAR (innovation incentives) and ADEME. ADEME funds financed a used casting sand regeneration system. 2.8. FINANCIAL LIABILITIES (IN K€) Bank loans Leasing contracts TOTAL Gross amount Current portion Between 1 and 5 years Over five years 45 103 37 108 13 395 0 2 895 586 1 269 1 040 47 998 32 294 14 664 1 040 page 67 Annual Report 2003 2.9. FINANCIAL LIABILITIES ANALYSIS PER CURRENCY (IN K€) Amount in K4 Euro - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 38 510 Sterling Pound - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 250 US Dollar ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 238 Canadian Dollar - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0 Others ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 0 47 998 In compliance with the company policy, all the interests on financial liabilities are payable on the basis of a variable rate. Repayable subsidies were granted without interests. 2.10. PROVISIONS RECORD (IN K€) Assets Opening Increases: Decreases: Exchange rate Closing balance endowments recaptures variations balance MONTUPET SA reserves for risks and charges 25 0 (25) 0 0 consolidated (1) 1 750 0 (219) (129) 1 402 TOTAL 1 775 0 (244) (129) 1 402 MONTUPET UK (1) Provision for equipment maintenance costs. 2.11. PUBLIC GRANTS: 2.11.1. Grants received in Northern Ireland: By year-end, receivable grants reported in the balance-sheet amounted to 1.192 K€. 2.12. GRANTS RECEIVED IN THE P&L ACCOUNT They include training and employment grants (250 K€) and capital expenditures grants (7.583 K€) apportionable to the fiscal year. Annual Report 2003 page 68 2.13. EXTRAORDINARY INCOME & EXPENSES (IN K€) Profits Losses MONTUPET SA 354 1 238 ALUMALSA 243 0 Entity analysis MONTUPET LIMITEE MONTUPET UK CONSOLIDATED 3 816 309 CALCAST 0 279 MONTIAC 0 5 MFT SARL 0 6 1 416 1 837 TOTAL Analysis by nature Extraordinary expenses transfer - Expenses of expatriated staff members 127 Other extraordinary income - Land expropriation in Spain 163 - Indemnity received from a customer 74 - Gain on Cendicor dismantling 41 - Others 162 Other extraordinary expenses - Montupet SA expenses of expatriated staff members 158 - Penalties and indemnities 128 - Others 247 Extraordinary provisions for risks and charges (net) 139 Gains and losses on assets disposals - Supplier dispute settling and several capital transactions - Sales of fixed assets 48 662 - Net accounting value of sold assets TOTAL 1 304 1 416 1 837 page 69 Annual Report 2003 2.14. RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT EXPENSES Research and development expenses were mostly incurred by MONTUPET SA and MONTUPET UK. They amounted to 2 964 K€ and were broken-down as follows: - Personnel expenses ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 282 K€ - Operating expenses (equipment, consumable goods, patents, depreciation) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 682 K€ 2.15. DEFERRED TAXES (IN K€) Temporary Endowments Exchange rates differences (and recaptures) variation MONTUPET SA ALUMALSA MONTUPET UK consolidated MONTUPET LIMITEE CALCAST TOTAL Closing balance 6 088 2 311 0 8 399 450 79 0 529 6 349 (587) (428) 5 334 175 (79) 6 102 0 29 (1) 28 13 062 1 753 (423) 14 392 2.16. TAXES ANALYSIS (IN K€) Consolidated result before taxes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 26 968 Mother-company tax rate Theorical tax ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 34,33% -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9 257 Impact of: - foreign companies tax rate difference - permanent differences - discounting (508) (2 758) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 297 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (35) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 336 - un-activated losses - tax credits ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - other differences --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (3) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 587 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 834 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1 753 Actual corporation tax Of which: - payable tax - deferred tax 3. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS AND OTHER DATA 3.1. COMMITMENTS GIVEN (IN K€) MONTUPET SA - Guarantees and securities ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 880 - Other commitments - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 283 MONTUPET UK consolidated - Guarantees and securities ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 068 MONTUPET LIMITEE - Other commitments - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 351 TOTAL COMMITMENTS GIVEN - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 582 Annual Report 2003 page 70 3.2. COMMITMENTS RECEIVED (IN K€) MONTUPET SA - Guarantees and securities received - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 290 TOTAL COMMITMENTS RECEIVED ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 290 3.3. HEDGING TRANSACTIONS There was not any hedging transaction in year 2003. 3.4. EMPLOYEES Directors and executives Foremen, technicians, and employees 2003 2002 2001 182 185 175 800 808 873 Workers 3 158 3 237 3 311 TOTAL 4 140 4 230 4 359 3.5. DIRECTORS FEES Salaries and advantages granted to the directors in view of their duties in the controlled subsidiaries globally amount to 1.526.010,32 Euros. page 71 Annual Report 2003 3.6. MONTUPET GROUP STATEMENT OF SOURCES AND APPLICATION OF FUNDS (IN K4) Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 20 458 24 507 (78) 291 I - Cash-flow from operating activities: A. Net income before minority interests - Minority interests B. Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities - Gross depreciations and changes in reserves for risks and charges 40 013 35 734 - Capital grants apportioned to profit and loss (7 583) (4 263) - Changes in deferred taxes 1 808 7 063 594 (2 471) - Increase in deferred charges (2 921) (2 737) C. Gross cash-flow of consolidated companies A+B (1) 52 291 58 124 deferred taxes) 26 866 1 763 CASH-FLOW PROVIDED BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES C+D 79 157 59 887 - Additions to fixed assets (25 495) (23 366) - Additions to investments (1) - Net capital gains on disposals of assets D. Net change in working capital (except variation in II - Cash-flow from investing activities: - Proceeds from disposals of tangible or intangible assets 709 4 003 (692) 178 (25 479) (19 185) - Capital increase in cash (incl. capital surplus) 9 199 191 - Loans variations (new loans less repayments) (54 795) (59 226) 3 796 4 806 (279) (183) - Proceeds from disposals of investments CASH-FLOW (USED) BY INVESTING ACTIVITIES III - Cash-flow from financing activities: - Grants variation (grant received less repayments) - Conditional advances variation (new advances less repayments) - Buying of own shares (1 160) - Dividends paid to parent company shareholders (5 152) - Dividends paid to minority interests shareholders (3 973) - Others 5 NET (USED) CASH PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES (52 359) (54 412) - Impact of exchange rate variations (615) (196) NET CURRENT CASH VARIATION (615) (196) Current cash variation before exchange rates variation 1 319 (13 710) - Impact of exchange rate variations (615) (196) 704 (13 906) Cash variation: TOTAL CASH-FLOWS (1) The gross cash-flow defined in the above table does not include the capital grants apportioned to profit and loss (7 583 K€) and changes in assets reserves (- 74 K€). This table is calculated at average exchange rates. Annual Report 2003 page 72 4. DATA PER GEOGRAPHICAL AREA Turnovers Year 2003 Year 2002 210,68 212,59 France and Belgium Mexico United-Kingdom (1) Variation (0,90%) 21,61 22,34 (3,27%) 139,43 160,75 (13,26%) Spain 48,7 47,16 3,27% Canada 18,05 30,88 (41,55%) TOTAL 438,47 473,72 (1) (7,44%) Operating result Net fixed assets Year 2003 Year 2002 Year 2003 Year 2002 France & Belgium 8,47 12,49 59,10 68,47 Mexico 3,2 1,7 14,00 15,92 11,6 United-Kingdom (1) 15,06 67,10 71,12 Spain 4,23 3,72 14,10 13,94 Canada (1) (1,6) 8,30 9,88 TOTAL 26,5 31,37 162,60 179,33 (1) 1 million € were reclassified between turnover / other operating income for CALCAST, to improve the comparability of the fiscal years. page 73 Annual Report 2003 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Annual Report 2003 page 74 MONTUPET SA BALANCE SHEET AS PER DECEMBER 31st 2003 Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 Gross value Accumulated Net value Net value (Euros) write downs (Euros) (Euros) (Euros) Intangible assets Patents 895 831 Goodwill 127 461 Other intangible assets TOTAL 748 251 147 580 9 171 127 461 127 461 15 245 15 245 0 0 1 038 537 763 496 275 041 136 632 2 321 402 2 321 402 Fixed assets Land 2 321 402 Buildings 8 004 315 5 223 240 2 781 075 3 188 755 Technical equipment & machines 83 988 178 41 625 257 42 362 921 49 151 263 Other equipment 33 361 098 19 301 949 14 059 149 16 184 004 410 248 231 851 Assets under construction Payments on account 410 248 35 689 TOTAL 128 120 930 66 150 446 35 689 186 631 61 970 484 71 263 906 39 939 497 39 939 497 Financial assets Shares in affiliated Cies 39 939 497 Loans to affiliated Cies 1 377 342 1 377 342 1 074 705 Other participations 1 184 523 1 184 523 23 773 416 689 416 689 469 283 69 690 69 690 71 847 Loans Deposits and mortgages TOTAL 42 987 741 0 42 987 741 41 579 105 172 147 208 66 913 942 105 233 266 112 979 643 15 455 213 1 422 007 14 033 206 17 402 810 9 191 807 36 298 9 155 509 11 037 615 24 647 020 1 458 305 23 188 715 28 440 425 407 334 709 243 64 051 578 55 917 275 2 786 009 3 084 688 67 244 921 59 711 206 9 693 9 693 2 444 477 Cash 1 338 396 1 338 396 770 217 Prepaid expenses 2 650 787 2 650 787 1 744 775 94 432 512 93 111 100 7 304 149 7 304 149 10 452 903 513 958 513 958 293 829 207 483 885 216 837 475 TOTAL FIXED ASSETS Inventories and work in progress Raw materials & supplies Work in progress & finished goods TOTAL Outstanding debts Advances and deposits on orders Receivables and related 407 334 64 575 547 Others 2 786 009 TOTAL 67 768 890 Marketable securities TOTAL CURRENT ASSET Deferred charges Difference of exchange rates TOTAL ASSETS Annual Report 2003 96 414 786 276 380 101 page 76 523 969 523 969 1 982 274 68 896 216 > Liabilities Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 (Euros) (Euros) Capital Called-up Share Capital 15 713 649 14 368 783 Capital surplus 11 496 388 3 642 310 Legal reserve 1 074 819 1 074 819 Regulated reserves 3 735 281 479 012 Other reserves Retained earnings Grants received 42 364 42 364 10 484 136 14 180 056 5 502 7 835 Regulated provisions 19 704 058 20 150 896 Current year profit 25 430 725 4 711 808 TOTAL CAPITAL STOCK 87 686 922 58 657 883 687 172 974 781 88 374 094 59 632 664 513 958 318 329 Other capital stock Research and development funding TOTAL PERMANENT CAPITAL Provisions for liabilities and charges Provisions for liabilities Provisions for charges TOTAL 0 0 513 958 318 329 28 507 265 53 350 244 Financial liabilities Bank loans and overdrafts Other financial loans and liabilities TOTAL 0 860 419 28 507 265 54 210 663 Outstanding liabilities Payments received on account 4 413 088 5 356 540 Accounts payable and related 64 314 425 57 380 325 Taxation and Social Security 12 662 367 10 993 916 1 458 035 1 462 014 Suppliers of fixed assets Other outstanding liabilities 3 758 938 22 136 441 86 606 853 97 329 236 Deferred income 2 461 401 2 980 568 Difference of exchange rates 1 020 314 2 366 015 207 483 885 216 837 475 TOTAL TOTAL LIABILITIES page 77 Annual Report 2003 MONTUPET SA INCOME STATEMENT AS PER DECEMBER 31st 2003 Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 (Euros) (Euros) Operating income Sales from production 297 707 693 291 972 648 864 069 815 235 298 571 762 292 787 883 Changes in inventory (2 661 935) (1 268 335) Own work capitalized 216 018 211 474 Operating subsidies 103 565 133 265 Services NET SALES Write back of depreciation charges and charges transfers 4 925 701 4 304 179 Others 7 530 949 11 647 693 308 686 060 307 816 159 107 389 091 105 568 167 TOTAL OPERATING INCOME Operating expenses Cost of raw materials and other supplies Changes in inventory Other operating expenses Taxes Salaries and wages 2 635 707 4 224 636 105 821 226 102 178 751 5 459 844 5 746 286 40 258 150 41 361 180 Social security costs 16 418 332 16 378 917 Depreciation charges on fixed assets 19 067 766 18 733 350 Provision charges on current assets 1 803 870 1 504 237 267 255 409 434 299 121 241 296 104 958 9 564 819 11 711 201 Other charges TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES 1. Operating profit Financial income From participations From marketable securities Other interest receivable and similar income 17 026 800 0 0 0 146 602 94 682 293 829 1 176 082 4 033 287 566 765 15 934 28 550 21 516 452 1 866 079 Write back of depreciation charges and charges transfers Positive differences in exchange rates Profits on sales of marketable securities TOTAL FINANCIAL INCOME Financial expenses Depreciations and provisions charges 513 958 293 829 Interest payable and related charges 2 421 875 4 758 799 Negative differences in exchange rates 1 114 296 831 892 0 0 4 050 129 5 884 520 2. Financial profit (loss) 17 466 323 (4 018 441) 3. Profit from ordinary activities 27 031 142 7 692 760 Losses on sales of marketable securities TOTAL FINANCIAL EXPENSES Annual Report 2003 page 78 Extraordinary income Fiscal year 2003 Fiscal year 2002 (Euros) (Euros) > On revenue transactions 39 711 2 001 On capital transactions 47 645 26 003 Write back of depreciations and provisions 1 776 906 384 442 TOTAL EXTRAORDINARY INCOME 1 864 262 412 446 On revenue transactions 479 193 415 047 On capital transactions 645 617 15 102 Depreciations and provisions charges 1 176 996 2 932 759 TOTAL EXTRAORDINARY EXPENSES 2 301 806 3 362 908 4. Extraordinary loss (437 544) (2 950 462) 0 0 1 162 873 30 490 25 430 725 4 711 808 Extraordinary expenses Profit sharing by workers and employees Taxes on income 5. Net profit for the year page 79 Annual Report 2003 NOTES TO MONTUPET SA FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS ON 31.12.2003 The fiscal year includes 12 months, from January 1st to December 31st 2003. Notes and tables hereunder form an integral part of the annual accounts. These annual accounts were drawn up on March 29th 2004 by the Board of Directors. SIGNIFICANT ITEMS IN THE FISCAL YEAR After a customer modified its order programme, MONTUPET claimed an indemnity, payment of which was agreed and which was accounted for 1.811 K€ in 2003 accounts, and has been paid on May 7th 2004. 1. ACCOUNTANCY RULES AND METHODS 1.1. VALUATION METHODS The annual accounts of the fiscal year ending on December 31st 2003 were prepared and presented in compliance with accountancy rules, respecting the prudence and fiscal year independency principles and assuming the continuity of operations. Evaluation methods used for 2003 have not been modified since last year. 1.2. ADDITIONAL DATA 1.2.1. Fixed assets a) Tangibles Fixed assets are valued at purchase costs plus costs to put them in working condition. Procurement costs are not included. Assets are depreciated according to the following durations and methods: Buildings 20 years Straight line method Fixtures and fittings 8 to 10 years Straight line method Machinery and tooling 8 years Declining balance method Office furniture 10 years Straight line method Computers 4 years Straight line method Software 1 year Straight line method b) Financial assets Investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries are valued either at purchase cost, either on the basis of their value in use in view of the future prospects of the subsidiary. Other financial assets are valued at purchase cost. Accruals are set up if applicable (bad debts). Annual Report 2003 page 80 Financial assets are split as follows: Gross value Increases Decreases or Gross value Disposals 31.12.2003 01.01.2003 Shares in affiliated companies Loans to affiliated companies 39 939 497 0 0 39 939 497 1 074 705 8 765 256 (1) (2) 1 377 342 1 160 750 (4) 0 1 184 523 469 283 15 670 68 264 416 689 71 847 1 520 3 677 69 690 41 579 105 9 943 196 8 534 560 42 987 741 Others participations 23 773 8 462 619 Long term loans granted to personnel (3) Deposit and mortgages TOTAL (1) Corresponds to the loans granted to MONTIAC. (2) Corresponds to invoices covering expenses and commissions, issued by MONTIAC in 2003; (3) Long term loans granted to the staff mainly represent the employer contribution towards home building until 1986. They were granted to collecting organisms for 20 years and bear no interest. (4) Corresponds to the acquiring of 83.354 own shares (see § 1.2.4.). 1.2.2. Inventories Raw materials and goods are valued applying the First in - First out (FIFO) method. Storage costs are not included in this valuation. Finished products and in process products are valued at manufacturing cost. Manufacturing expenses are valued on the basis of the normal production capacity of the company, excluding any under-activity or storage costs. Inventories and in process products are reduced by depreciation, if applicable, as follows: • Raw materials, supplies, consumable goods, and packing: a provision is set-up when the turn-over of stocks is low. • In process products and tooling: the depreciation represents the difference between cost and sale price when the latter is lower. Inventories are detailed as follows: Gross value 01.01.2003 Depreciation Net value 31.12.2003 Raw materials 4 097 187 34 422 4 062 765 Other supplies 6 742 861 858 855 5 884 006 In process products 5 208 118 23 205 5 184 913 In process tooling 4 560 054 528 730 4 031 324 Packing Finished products TOTAL 55 111 0 55 111 3 983 689 13 093 3 970 596 24 647 020 1 458 305 23 188 715 1.2.3. Receivables and liabilities Receivables and liabilities are recorded at their nominal value. Those drawn-up in foreign currencies are translated at the exchange rate valid on the reporting date. Doubtful receivables are depreciated by way of provisions. page 81 Annual Report 2003 1.2.4. Securities • Securities Securities are registered at their nominal value, excluding costs incurred for their acquiring. According to the stock option plan authorized by the general extraordinary meeting of December 18th 1987, and opened in 1990, the company bought 20 245 MONTUPET SA shares, corresponding at the number of issued options. 20 005 options have been exercised to date, and the plan is now closed. MONTUPET SA therefore still owns 2 400 MONTUPET SA shares, registered at 9 693 Euros (240 x 10 after operation in capital). • Own shares The annual Ordinary and Extraordinary Shareholders Meeting held on June 30th 2003, pursuant to the provisions of Article L.225-209 of the French Code of Commerce, authorized the Board of Directors to purchase Company shares, representing up to 10% of the share capital on the day of the meeting less 2.400 shares already owned, with the following objectives: • the management of cash-flow or of shareholders fund if it appears that implementation of this programme is appropriate, • the repurchase of a number of shares corresponding to the shares issued or to be issued following exercise of subscription options for the Company’s shares, • the application of programmes for purchasing or selling Company shares within the framework of share purchase option plans, • the purchase and sale in the light of market circumstances, • the price stabilization by systematic intervention against market trends, • any other legally permissible objective, or objective which might become legally permissible by applicable law or regulations then in effect. In such a case, the Company would inform its shareholders by a press release. On December 31st, the company owns 83.354 MONTUPET SA shares within this programme, bought at an average price of 13,93 Euros, ie for a total cost of 1.160.751 Euros. In view of the average December rate at 13,97 Euros, no depreciation provision was set up on these shares. They are registered among the financial assets, under the account nr 2771. 1.2.5. Conditional advances Conditional advance movements are recorded as follows: Opening New loans Repayments balance Closing Current balance portion ANVAR loans 777 780 0 225 772 552 008 80 022 ADEME loans 197 001 0 61 836 135 165 63 163 TOTAL 974 781 0 287 608 687 173 143 185 These advances are refundable financial loans. Anvar advances are innovation incentives. ADEME advances helped to finance a sand regeneration system. Annual Report 2003 page 82 1.2.6. Debenture loans and other loans Loan movements are recorded as follows: Opening Loans sub- Loans Closing Current balance scribed in 2003 Repayments balance portion Other loans 21 886 154 0 6 586 154 15 300 000 2 700 000 TOTAL 21 886 154 0 6 586 154 15 300 000 2 700 000 This table does not include: - bank current loans and overdrafts ------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 187 956 - outstanding interests - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 13 909 Totalling ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ That together with above-mentioned "other loans" ---------------------------------------------- 13 207 265 15 300 000 make-up the "bank loans and overdrafts" disclosed in the balance-sheet - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 28 507 265 page 83 Annual Report 2003 2. DEVELOPMENT AND NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 2.1. FIXED ASSETS RECORD Assets Gross value Purchases Disposals 01.01.2003 Gross value 31.12.2003 Intangible assets 879 747 179 985 21 195 1 038 537 TOTAL 879 747 179 985 21 195 1 038 537 Land 2 321 402 0 0 2 321 402 Buildings 8 031 258 0 26 943 8 004 315 Technical equipment and machines 83 380 565 3 018 644 2 411 031 83 988 178 Fixtures, fittings, tools and equipment 32 670 622 1 134 593 2 543 155 31 262 060 Fixed assets Vehicles 0 0 0 0 2 318 428 127 997 347 388 2 099 037 128 722 275 4 281 234 5 328 517 127 674 992 Assets under construction 231 851 405 675 227 278 410 248 Payments on account 186 631 35 689 186 631 35 689 TOTAL 418 482 441 364 413 909 445 937 Office equipment and furnitures TOTAL Investments - financial assets Shares in affiliated companies and related loans 41 014 202 8 765 256 8 462 619 41 316 839 Loans 469 283 15 670 68 264 416 689 Others 95 620 1 162 271 3 677 1 254 214 TOTAL 41 579 105 9 943 197 8 534 560 42 987 742 171 599 609 14 845 780 14 298 181 172 147 208 Increases Decreases Closing balance TOTAL FIXED ASSETS 2.2. AMORTIZATION AND DEPRECIATION RECORD 2.2.1 Accounting depreciation record Opening balance Intangible assets 743 115 41 576 21 195 763 496 4 842 503 403 869 23 132 5 223 240 Technical equipment and machines 34 229 302 9 651 372 2 255 418 41 625 256 Fixtures, fittings, tools and equipment 16 788 041 2 745 808 2 056 961 17 476 888 Fixed assets: Buildings Vehicles Office equipment and furnitures TOTAL Annual Report 2003 page 84 0 0 0 0 2 017 005 155 445 347 388 1 825 062 58 619 966 12 998 070 4 704 094 66 913 942 2.2.2. Derogatory depreciation record Opening balance Increases Decreases Closing balance Technical equipment and machines 20 150 896 1 176 996 1 623 834 19 704 058 TOTAL 20 150 896 1 176 996 1 623 834 19 704 058 2.3. PROVISIONS RECORD Description Opening balance Increases Decreases Closing balance Regulatory provisions Derogatory depreciation 20 150 896 1 176 996 1 623 834 19 704 058 TOTAL 20 150 896 1 176 996 1 623 834 19 704 058 293 829 513 958 293 829 513 958 24 500 0 24 500 0 318 329 513 958 318 329 513 958 0 0 0 0 Provisions for liabilities and charges Provisions for exchange losses Other provisions TOTAL Provisions on fixed assets and others Intangible assets Tangible assets 0 0 0 0 Financial assets 0 0 0 0 1 504 237 1 458 305 1 504 237 1 458 305 551 627 345 565 373 223 523 969 0 0 0 0 TOTAL 2 055 864 1 803 870 1 877 460 1 982 274 TOTAL 22 525 089 3 494 824 3 819 623 22 200 290 Inventories and work in progress Trade debtors Other depreciation provisions page 85 Annual Report 2003 2.4. TIME ANALYSIS OF RECEIVABLES AND PAYABLES Gross amount Current portion Non-current Receivables 31.12.2003 Loans to affiliated compagnies Other loans (1) (2) Other financial assets Doubtful or bad debts under litigation Other trade receivables (3) Personnel and related Social Security receivable and related portion 1 377 342 1 377 342 0 416 689 65 547 351 142 69 690 0 69 690 6 667 0 6 667 64 568 880 63 684 678 884 202 31 005 31 005 0 184 240 184 240 0 0 0 0 528 629 528 629 0 46 000 46 000 0 1 095 256 671 477 423 779 State and other authorities - Income tax - Value added tax - Sundry taxes Others - Group - Other debtors - Deferred charges TOTAL 900 879 641 316 259 563 2 650 787 2 650 787 0 71 876 064 69 881 021 1 995 043 Over 5 years (1) New loans granted. 15 670 (2) Repayments received. 68 264 Liabilities Bank loans and overdrafts Sundry financial loans and liabilities Accounts payable Gross amount Current Between 1 31.12.2003 portion and 5 years 28 507 265 15 907 265 12 600 000 0 0 0 0 0 64 314 425 64 314 425 0 0 Personnel and related 3 048 791 3 048 791 0 0 Social Security payable and related 6 768 245 6 768 245 0 0 - Corporation tax 1 072 383 1 072 383 0 0 - Value added tax 943 049 943 049 0 0 - Other taxes and related 829 899 829 899 0 0 Suppliers of fixed assets and related accounts 1 458 035 1 458 035 0 0 Other liabilities 3 758 938 3 758 938 0 0 Deferred income 2 461 401 2 461 401 0 0 113 162 431 100 562 431 12 600 000 0 State and other autorities TOTAL Loans subscribed during the year Loans refunded during the year Annual Report 2003 page 86 0 6 586 154 2.5. BILLS OF EXCHANGE PAYABLE OR RECEIVABLE Accounts receivable and related Accounts payable and related ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 30 565 105 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Creditors suppliers of fixed assets and related 9 010 389 -------------------------------------------------------- 151 843 TOTAL - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 9 162 232 2.6. INFORMATION ABOUT RELATED COMPANIES Loans to affiliated companies ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Accounts receivable and related 1 337 342 1 575 594 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1 095 256 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 048 192 Sundry creditors TOTAL -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Suppliers and related Sundry debts --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 26 228 377 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 134 597 2.7. DEFERRED INCOME Trade debtors and related Other debtors TOTAL ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 322 917 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 653 358 7 976 275 2.8. PREPAYMENTS Advance payments on purchases and services ----------------------------------------------------- 2 650 787 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 461 401 2.9. DEFERRED INCOME Deferred invoicing of tooling 2.10. PAYABLE CHARGES Bank loans and overdrafts - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 19 309 Sundry financial loans ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Trade creditors and related Taxation and Social Security -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 952 328 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 408 314 Creditors suppliers of fixed assets and related Creditors (customers, drawable credit-notes) Other creditors TOTAL 0 --------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 170 1 268 203 292 190 9 988 514 page 87 Annual Report 2003 2.11. DEFERRED CHARGES Extensive maintenance expenses (1) Expatriation expenses of staff members (1) Opening balance Increases Decreases Closing balance 2 516 148 2 792 369 2 632 826 2 675 691 100 491 128 572 105 660 123 403 3 887 250 0 1 413 545 2 473 705 2 836 697 0 1 575 413 1 261 284 1 112 317 0 342 251 770 066 10 452 903 2 920 941 6 069 695 7 304 149 Expenses related to our mexican subsidiary MONTIAC (2) Spending on new facilities (3) Spending our Laigneville facility (4) TOTAL (1) Amortized over 3 years. (2) Amortized from October 1st 2000, upon 5 years. (3) Depreciations were computed on the basis of a year production / whole forecasted production ratio (with this equipment). (4) Amortized over 5 years from January 1st 2001. 2.12. DETAILS OF SHARE CAPITAL Called-up and fully paid share capital consists in 10 337 927 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euros each, i.e. a total of 15 713 649 Euros, against 9 453 147 shares with a face value of 1,52 Euros each, i.e. 14 368 783 Euros as per December 31st 2002. This results from: • The issue of 852.980 shares created under the stock-option scheme dated January 20th 1998 authorized by the Extraordinary General Meeting held on January 20th 1998 (On December 31st 2003, 889.547 shares had been created out of 900.000). • The issue of 31.800 shares created under the stock-option scheme dated November 16th 2001 authorized by the Extraordinary General Meeting held on February 29th 2001 (On December 31st 2003, 31.900 shares had been created out of 1.200.000). The corresponding capital surplus amounts to 7.854.077 Euros for year 2003. See 2.15 for more details upon “movements in shareholders equity”. 2.13. DETAILS OF TURNOVER Industrial analysis Automotive sector ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Other sectors (services) Sundry sales 297 707 693 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 815 818 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TOTAL Turnover ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 251 298 571 762 Geographical analysis ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 186 177 950 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 112 393 812 Domestic turnover Foreign turnover TOTAL Turnover - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 298 571 762 Machining equipment sales that remain our customers properties in our plants, up to 6 387 600 Euros, are deducted from the turnover, and appear among the other operating income. Annual Report 2003 page 88 2.14. CORPORATION TAX (IN K3) Profit on ordinary activities Extraordinary loss Corporation tax -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 27 031 142 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ACCOUNTING RESULT ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (437 544) (1 162 873) 25 430 725 2.15. MOVEMENTS IN SHAREHOLDER’S EQUITY Shareholder's equity as of 01.01.2003 ---------------------------------------------------------------- 58 657 883 Increase in Share Capital ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1 344 866 Related share premiums ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 7 854 077 New capital grants --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Grants apportioned to Profit and Loss ---------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Regulated provisions ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2003 Earnings -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Shareholder's equity as of 31.12.2003 ---------------------------------------------------------------- (2 333) (5 151 458) Distributed dividends TOTAL 0 (446 838) 62 256 197 25 430 725 87 686 922 2.16. OTHER TRANSACTIONS IMPACTING THE STOCKHOLDERS’EQUITIES On march 31st 2003, MONTUPET SA merged with GESFITEC SA. In settlement of the transferred assets, MONTUPET SA increased its capital by 5.120.528 € and recorded a merger premium amounting to 42.017.462 €. MONTUPET SA immediately decreased its capital by the same amount, in order to cancel its own shares brought by GESFITEC. MONTUPET SA accounted for the long-term profits special reserve at the reduced 18% rate, built-up at GESFITEC for 3.256.269 €, by transferring it from its “retained earnings”. page 89 Annual Report 2003 3. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS AND OTHER DATA 3.1. LEASING Building Clichy Purchase value Land Fay-aux-Loges 3 827 233 Building Fay-aux-Loges Extension Company of Châteauroux Restaurant Plant in Châteauroux (4) 304 898 3 109 960 2 362 282 457 347 2 100 123 0 2 176 972 1 093 957 86 861 191 362 0 155 498 343 447 39 783 2 291 485 0 2 332 470 1 437 404 126 644 4 221 307 579 755 3 838 353 1 410 904 154 736 400 852 18 530 202 481 378 644 58 924 4 622 159 598 285 4 040 834 1 789 548 213 660 Appropriations: Cumulated previous fiscal years Appropriations during fiscal year 2003 TOTAL Royalties paid: Cumulated previous years Appropriations during fiscal year 2003 TOTAL incl. grants received up to 2 134 286 € (1) (2) (2) (3) 426 209 0 0 380 152 53 820 958 019 0 0 580 431 215 280 TOTAL 1 384 228 0 0 960 583 269 100 Book value 1 029 641 0 0 0 16 769 244 259 18 530 202 481 378 644 58 924 Rentals payable: Current portion (2003) Payable between 1 and 5 years (2005 to 2008) Amount entered in the fiscal year 2003 incl. grants received up to 152 449 € (1) Payable rentals are estimated amounts. They are made of 2 parts: one fixed part, and one varied part, the latter being calculated upon the basis of the quarterly EURIBOR. The rate used to calculate these rentals is the last one known for the period from March 19th 2004 to June 19th 2004, i.e 0,7053%, (2) The leasing contract with “Auxicomi”, relating to land and building at Fay-aux-Loges, expired on December 31st 2003, (3) These payable rentals also are estimated amounts. The interests were calculated on the basis of the quarterly EURIBOR as per December 31st 2003, i.e. 0,690965%, (4) This is the net amount, after deducting grants received up to 686 021 Euros. Annual Report 2003 page 90 3.2. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES (EXCLUDING LEASING) 3.2.1. Commitments given Amount In favour of Bank guarantee covering exchange transactions given to Crédit du Nord up to 82,9 M€ - outstanding amount (1) 0€ MONTUPET UK 0€ MONTUPET UK 0€ MONTUPET UK 30.504 GBP CALCAST LTD 1.999.000 GBP MONTUPET UK 0 CAD MONTUPET LIMITEE 0€ MONTUPET UK 0€ ALUMALSA Bank guarantee to Crédit du Nord covering currency advances up to 15,1 M€ - outstanding amount (1) Bank guarantee to Crédit du Nord covering currency advances up to 6,1 M€, covering loans granted to MONTUPET SA or MONTUPET UK - outstanding amount (1) Letter of intent in favour of Ulster Bank up to 3,5 MGBP including 2,5 MGBP for MONTUPET UK and 1MGBP for Calcast - outstanding amount (1) Guarantee letter given to the Industrial Development Board (refunding commitment of conditional grants in unenforcement case) - covered grants at year end Letter of intent covering an open credit granted by BNP Canada up to 8 MCAD - outstanding amount (1) Bank guarantee to Credit Mutuel up to 12,2 M€ covering currency advances to MONTUPET SA or its subsidiaries - outstanding amount (1) Bank guarantee to CIC up to 4,57 M€ covering loans granted to MONTUPET UK, MONTUPET Ltee or ALUMALSA - outstanding amount (1) (1) Drawings by MONTUPET SA are not mentioned as these are not commitments given. page 91 Annual Report 2003 3.2.2. Other commitments given - Outstanding interests on current loans ------------------------------------------------------------------- 58 668 (excluding outstanding interest on available credit-lines used up to 7.600.000 € at CIC and up to 5.000.000 € at Credit Lyonnais ) - Balance due on current orders of fixed assets ------------------------------------------------------- 224 528 3.2.3. Retirement benefits Benefit pension commitments covering salaried employees amount to 1.379.850 € (social contributions not being taken into account). This computation is based on a formula which considers a retirement age of 65, a 6% discounting rate for year 2003, data from the life-table TV 73/77, a turnover rate varying with age, and wage increases related to age and status. 3.2.4. Commitments received - Commitments received from suppliers of fixed assets - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 35 689 - Commitments received from other suppliers - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 254 194 3.3. INCIDENCE OF TAX ADJUSTMENT The year income is a profit of 25.430.725 €. After allocating the deferred depreciations upon the fiscal year result amounting to 9.063.400 €, the fiscal income is 3.352.922 €. The payable corporation tax amounts to 1.162.873 €. There is no profit sharing in favour of the employees in 2003. 3.4. DEFERRED TAXATION - Deferred income tax liability: relates to the provision for deferred charges registered in 2003: 2 920 941 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 002 857 - Deferred income tax asset: relates to the “Organic” charges registered in 2003: 362 057 Annual Report 2003 page 92 ------------------------------------- 124 306 3.5. DIRECTORS FEES No director fees were paid in 2003. 3.6. EMPLOYEES - Directors and executives - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 99 - Foremen, technicians, and employees - Workers TOTAL ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 369 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 292 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1 760 3.7. FINANCIAL EXPENSES AND INCOME Profits resulting from exchange rate variation derive from customers and suppliers settlements in currencies and bank debts in currencies. Financial income from affiliated companies, amounting to 17.026.800 Euros, are the dividends paid by MONTUPET UK to MONTUPET SA. 3.8. EXTRAORDINARY INCOME AND EXPENSES Extraordinary income - Operating extraordinary income ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 39 711 They correspond to: - Suppliers regulations up to 28.151 €, - Customers regulations up to 7.443 €, - Miscellanea up to 4.117 €. - On capital transactions - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 47 645 They correspond to: - A supplier litigation settlement up to 43.000 €, - Capital grants apportioned to the income up to 2 333 €, - Miscellanea up to 2.312 €. - Provision write-downs and expense transfers ---------------------------------------------------- 1 776 906 They correspond to: - The transfer of expatriation allocations up to 128 572 €, - A provision write-down for derogatory depreciations up to 1 623 834 €, - A dispute provision write-down up to 24 500 €. - Operating extraordinary expenses - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 479 193 They mainly correspond to: - Expatriation allocations and other related costs up to 158 073 €, - The cancellation of interests up to 300.312 €, - Various penalties up to 12.661 €, - Various expenses up to 8.147 €. - Extraordinary expenses on capital transactions --------------------------------------------------- 645 617 Represent the book value of sold fixed assets, up to 645 617 €, - Extraordinary depreciation charges ------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 176 996 They correspond to derogatory depreciation up to 1 176 996 €. page 93 Annual Report 2003 NOTES Annual Report 2003 page 94