Ferrovial reported its 2015 results, with revenues increasing 10.2% to €9.7 billion and EBITDA rising 4.5% to €1.027 billion. Key highlights included strong operating growth across all business divisions, a record order backlog of €31.5 billion, and operating cash flow of €889 million. Ferrovial also increased shareholder remuneration by 4.4% while maintaining a solid financial position with €1.5 billion in net cash excluding infrastructure projects.
2. 2
Human Resources
Ferrovial spent 0.22% of revenues on
employee training
22Hours per employee
84% employees would recommend
Ferrovial as a good company to work for
-43.7
Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions
2009 - 2015
Employee education commitment
Environment
19Of electricity consumed by ferrovial came
from renewable sources
100 in the case of Amey
FY2015 figures
Spain
51%
America
3%
UK
28%
Poland
6%
RoW
12%
70%
MALE
30%
FEMALE
41.9 42.8AVERAGE AGE
8.5 8.4YEARS OF SENIORITY
77% 81%PERMANENT CONTRACT
87% 13%MANAGEMENT
2.5% 0.7%ROTATION INDEX
67% 33%NEW RECRUITMENTS
Present in 24countries
74,032
Workforce
4. 4
World leading private infrastructure provider present in toll roads, airports and cities
AIRPORTS CONSTRUCTIONTOLL ROADS SERVICES
Design Financing OperatingBuilding Maintaining
CANADA
UK
IRELAND
SPAIN
POLAND
USA
Construction
Airports
Toll Roads
Services
AUSTRALIA
GROUP REVENUES
Note:Airports & 407ETR are Equity
Consolidated
COLOMBIA
CHILE
FERROVIAL IN THE WORLDMAIN FIGURES
€9.7bn Revenues
€1.0bn EBITDA
10.6% EBITDA Margin
€31.5bnBacklog*
€0.9bn OCF
2015 Results
* Combined Construction & Services,incl. JVs
• Civil engineering
• Industrial construction
• Water treatment
• Largest airport private investor
• Owns & operates key UK airports (incl.
Heathrow) with a combined 89mn
passengers a year
• Leading sponsor of toll roads
development worldwide
• 407ETR in Canada & 26 other
concessions in 8 different countries
• Leading provider of infrast. Services, such
as mgmt & maintenance
• Urban services & waste management
• Focus on intelligent cities, waste
treatment & energy efficiency
What is ?
EX-INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTSINFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
Listed since 1999
Market Cap €13.8bn
* 22 March 2016
28%
36%
16%
13%
7%
Spain UK
US &Canada Poland
Restofthe world
50%
5%
44%
Services Toll Roads
Construction Airports
5. 5
PARENT COMPANY
INFRASTRUCTURE
PROJECTS
EX-INFRASTRUCTURE
PROJECTS
Capital intensive / Inflation protected / LT duration & financing
Non capital intensive / Backlog visibility / EPS accretive
Ring fenced debt
Net cash position
1.Cash Flow Generation
€267mn
Dividends from Toll roads
€132mn
Dividends from Airports
€312mn
€393mn
EBITDA from Construction
EBITDA from Services
€ million 2015 figures
65% Institutional & Retail Investors
35% Founder’s family members
(Chairman controls 20%)
…
6. 6
SOURCES & USES
BALANCED CONTRIBUTION
Excluding Infrastructure Projects
42% DIVIDENDS FROM INFRA PROJECTS CONSTRUCTION SERVICES
* Includes Divestments & Financing
1.Strong cash flow generation
€ million
30%28%28%14%
Dividends
OperatingCF
Investments
Other*
Interest Taxes &others
OPERATING CASH FLOW 2015
Construction 272
Services 289
TollRoads (dividends) 267
Airports (dividends) 132
Others (70)
TOTAL 889
7. 7
34 10
502
9 12
837
2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 >2021
-3,064
-1,987
-1,547
-1,172
31
907
1,484 1,663 1,632 1,514
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
PARENT COMPANY
2.Profitable growth.Solid Financial Situation
Net debt evolution ex-infrastructure projects
EX–INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
TOLL ROADS*
€5,518mn
* €351mn related to NTE 35W & I77, toll roads under construction.
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
Debt maturities ex-infrastructure projects
NET CASH
€1,514mn
€mn
€mn
NET DEBT
€6,057mn
€ million 2015 figures
8. 8
3.Shareholder remuneration (CF Criteria)
282 308
367
917
477 510 532
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
+4.4%
20142015
€510mn€532mn
+89%
2016 SHAREHOLDER REMUNERATION PROPOSAL
Scrip dividend (€/share)
First scrip dividend(equivalent to 2015 complementary dividend)* 0.311 0.304
Second scrip dividend(equivalent to 2016 interim dividend)* 0.408 0.398
TOTAL 0.719 0.702
Share buyback of up to €275mn
or up to 19m shares
2015
€265mn
12.5m shares
* Calculation based on Ferrovial shares closing price of 23rd February 2016: €18.35
10. 10
Traffic growth across the board
New awards in core markets
€31.5bn record order book
Strong operating growth
Balanced cash generation €889mn Operating Cash Flow
42% from infra projects dividends
Shareholder remuneration +4.4%
Corporate transactions Broadspectrum bid ongoing
Toll road asset rotation post de-risking
• Indiana Toll Road (US)
• Chicago Skyway (US)
• M3 & M4 stakes (Ireland)
Solid financial position
Ex-infra projects
€1.5bn net cash position
2015 Highlights
11. 11
Revenue
EBITDA
Net Income
Construction order book
Services order book
€ million
Strength & visibility
% var.vs 2014
2015 Results & order book
9,701 +10%
1,027 +4%
720 +79%
8,731 +8%
22,800 +2%
2015
12. 12
Self-financing expansion in the toll road business
• €267mn dividends from projects
ETR €242mn,other assets €25mn
• €120mn invested in equity of new projects
Significant and steady traffic growth in all markets
Openings:
• LBJ: (Sept. 2015) 3 months ahead of calendar
• 407ext I: expected in 2016
New projects awarded:
• Toowoomba (Australia) & Ruta del Cacao (Colombia)
Financial closing :
• I-77 (US)
• 407 East Ext.II (Canada)
• Toowoomba (Australia)
• A-66 (Spain)
TRAFFIC EVOLUTION
DIVIDENDS FROM PROJECTS
FY 2015 RESULTS TOLL ROADS
Canada
407ETR
+3.3% USA
NTE +28.8%
SH130 +15.7%
Ireland
M4
+7.2% Portugal
Algarve
+11.7%
Spain
Ausol I
+12.4%
Toll roads
€ million
159
220 242 255 267
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
2015 %
Revenues 513 +18.9%
EBITDA 333 +29.6%
13. 13
Equity method, Ferrovial stake 43%
407ETR FY 2015 RESULTS (CAD mn)
407ETR Regions includes: Durham, Peel, Halton & York
Source: National Household Survey and United States Census Bureau (2011)
POPULATION GROWTH
HOUSEHOLD INCOME REVENUE / EXPENSE PER TRIP
407ETR
2015 %
Revenues 1,002 +12.9%
EBITDA 840 +14.2%
1,959,985
2,243,462
2,600,332
3,052,631
3,439,131
1991 1996 2001 2006 2011
1991-2011
CAGR +2.9%
115,448
72,240
51,914
$40,000 $60,000 $80,000 $100,000 $120,000
407ETR
Regions
Canadian
Avg.U.SAvg.
2.2x U.S Avg.
1.6x Canadian Avg.
1.0x
1.3x
4.1x
8.3x
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
OPEX/Trip Revenue/Trip
CAGR 2005-2015
3.0%
CAGR 2005-2015
7.4%
14. 14
HIGH APPROVAL RATING
CORRIDOR TRAFFIC RECOVERY
TOLL RATES
DECREASE IN CONGESTION LEVELS
Averagespeed
55
75
95
115
135
M A R-10 M A R-11 M A R-12 M A R-13 M A R-14 M A R-15
Construction
begins
Construction
ends
INDEXEDVOLUME
100=MARCH2010
*morning peak hour (7:00 am)*+25% segment 1
NTE
Global Consolidation, Ferrovial stake 57%
0:00
2:00
4:00
6:00
8:00
10:00
12:00
14:00
16:00
18:00
20:00
22:00
46% 48%
70%
2013 2014 2015
Favourable& very favourable
15. 15
€ 289mn operating cash flow (OCF)
All-time high order book
€22,800mn (Including JV)
Largest division by OCF contribution
Positive evolution in Spain
Profitability remains stable with EBITDA margin at 10.7%
EBITDA includes -€110mn negative impact from
Birmingham contract.
• €34mn losses incurred in the year
• €76mn provision for potential litigation outcome and review
of margins going forward.
Broadspectrum bid
SPAINUK
Revenues
EBITDA
Order book
PERFORMANCE BY GEOGRAPHY
OPERATING CASH FLOW
Services
€ million
164
491
359
302 289
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
2015 %
Revenues 4,897 +11.3%
EBITDA 312 -19.4%
EBITDA % 6.4% -243 bp
Orderbook 22,800 +1.9%
+14%
-42%
+7%
+5%
+4%
-9%
16. 16
€272mn operation cash flow (OCF)
Improved profitability (EBITDA margin 9.2%)
Driven by Budimex (Poland) and Webber (US)
Strong growth in Budimex
• Revenues +6.4%
• EBITDA+23.5%
• Order book +38.5%
OPERATING CASH FLOW
ORDER BOOK BY COUNTRYBUDIMEX ORDER BOOK (PLNbn)
Construction
€ million
2015 %
Revenues 4,287 +8.8%
EBITDA 393 +12.8%
EBITDA % 9.18% +33 bps
Orderbook 8,731 +7.9%
298
100
304
236
272
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
4.3
6.1
8.4
2013 2014 2015
+94%
19% 23% 26% 13% 19%
Spain Poland US UK RotW
17. 17
100% GBP million
GBP300mn ordinary dividend to shareholders
(GBP270mn in 2014 )
Record year in passenger number
(75mn of passenger; +2.2% vs. 2014)
Improving service quality and user satisfaction
AGS (Equity method, FERROVIAL stake 50.0%):
Traffic reached 14mn of passengers (+5.1%)
Glasgow +13%, the highest growth in its history
EBITDA increased by +10.1% thanks to cost controls
GBP60mn dividend to shareholders
(PAX million)
AIRPORTS TRAFFIC
OPERATING IMPROVEMENT AT HEATHROW
* Including a positive non-recurring effect on HAH expenses of GBP 237mn, with no cash impact, related to changes of pension plan conditions.
(Equity method, FERROVIAL stake 25.0%)
82
Countries
32%
Transfer
Share
2.2%
Growth
93%
International
472k
Flights75.0m
Passengers
183
Destinations
HAH
HAH P&L 2015 %
Revenues 2,767 +2.8%
EBITDA 1,845 +19.7%
EBITDA % 66.7% +942bp
Net debt 13,437 +3.5%
FY'15 %
Heathrow 75.0 +2.2%
Glasgow 8.7 +13.0%
Aberdeen 3.5 -7.0%
Southampton 1.8 -3.0%
63%
78%
2007 2015
Punctuality
48%
81%
2007 2015
% Passengers ratingHeathrowas
Excellent orVery Good
18. 18
Heathrow: Best ever passenger service levels
Passenger satisfaction European ranking
2015 figures
Quarterly passenger satisfaction
Q4 2006 - Q4 2015
European competitors European comparators
Baggage performanceDepartures
misconnect rate per 1,000 passengerswithin 15 minutes of schedule
Q4 2015
Best Airport in Western Europe
World’s Best Airport Shopping
Terminal 5 – World’s Best Airport Terminal
•2015 Europe’s Best Airport
•(over25millionpassengers)
2015 Eco-innovation award: Heathrow
3.20
3.40
3.60
3.80
4.00
4.20
Q4-06
Q2-07
Q4-07
Q2-08
Q4-08
Q2-09
Q4-09
Q2-10
Q4-10
Q2-11
Q4-11
Q2-12
Q4-12
Q2-13
Q4-13
Q2-14
Q4-14
Q2-15
Q4-15
ASQscore(outof5)
European Average Heathrow European top quartile
4.13
3.30
3.60
3.90
4.20
4.50
LHR
63%
78% 78%
2007 2014 2015
40
19 17
2007 2014 2015
19. 19
€ million
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
EXCLUDING INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
* Including-€111 provision release,-€118mn factoring, -€19mn UK pensions and other WC.
Net debt evolution
1,632
580
113
-280
477
-300
-532
-176
1,514
Net cash Dec'14 EBITDA ex infra
projects
WC Construction &
Services
Provision release,
factoring & Other*
Dividends from Toll
Roads,Airports &
Services (projects)
Net Investment Shareholder
remuneration
Interest, taxes &
others
Net cash Dec'15
-7,862
447
-67 -556 -392
212
2,859
-697
-6,057
Net debt Dec'14 EBITDA Working Capital Investment Dividends & Interest Capital Perimeter
changes/Divestments
Taxes, Forex & Other Net debt Dec'15
22. 22
Appendix
Introduction to 407ETR Toll road
Managed Lanes Toll roads
407ETR vs Managed Lanes
Diversified porftolio
Historic consolidated & business units figures
23. 23
High density population area
Ring road of Toronto
108 km
407
407
East extension
Area of expansion
407 ETR
Location
24. 24
407 ETR
All Electronic Roadside Tolling System
Sophisticated electronic toll highway
NO toll-booths,“closed ticket” tolling scheme (on/off ramps)
NO stopping or slow-downs to pay
ALL vehicles able to use highway
Transponder not required. If valid transponder is not detected, digital
images are taken at entry and exit and invoices posted to registered
car owner
Tolls billed monthly
25. 25
407 ETR
LOCATION
Greater Toronto Area
23% of Canada population
TRAFFIC
Alternatives routes
are highly congested
HIGH
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
46% higher
than Canada average
NO REGULATORY
REVIEWS
During concession life (99
years)
SPEED
Alternativesroutes 40kph
vs 100kph at 407
NON-STOP TOLL FACILITY
Fully electronic with
interchanges
every 3km
TOLL RATE HIGH FLEXIBILITY
Including segment,
direction,time of
the day
FAST
Reliable travel times
Fast
Safe
Reliable
26. 26
525
14,577
1999 2015
Strong dividendflow
Equity valuation sharp increase
2098
100% pay-back
in first 10 years
Valuation x28
* December 2015 analysts consensus
407 ETR
82 years to maturity
407 ETR
Cash flow and valuation overview
€ million
Cash Generation
(1999-2015)
Valuation
(100%)
€ million
Maturity
28x
Cash Generation
Initialequityinvest.(62%) -326 mn
dividends 1,517 mn
10%Disposal 640 mn
NET CASH IN 1,831 mn
29. 29
Appendix
Introduction to 407ETR Toll road
Managed Lanes Toll roads
407ETR vs Managed Lanes
Diversified porftolio
Historic consolidated & business units figures
30. 30
A solution to congestion on “existing urban corridors”
Active management of “newly added capacity” through tolling
by means of
Free
Lanes
Free
Lanes
Tolled Lanes
Speed >50mph
“Express Tollway within an Existing Highway”
Managed Lanes
New assets landmark
31. 31
Time of the day
Eastbound
Westbound
00.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 14.00 16.00 18.00 20.00 22.00 24.00 12.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00 2.00 4.00 6.00 8.00 10.00 12.00
Time of the day
Peak period
Managed Lanes
Level of demand
NTE (untolled) 407ETR (tolled)
33. 33
Toll rates – tariff threshold
Toll Rate Cap 0.75 c/mi
Demand threshold 3300 pce/h
2-lane sections
Speed Threshold 50 mi/h
12:00 1:00 2:00 3:00 4:00 5:00 6:00 7:00 8:00 9:00 10:00 11:00 12:00
Hour starting
Analysis by segment and direction
Freedom under the cap TOTAL FREEDOM Freedom under the cap
Speed
Demand
Toll Rate
Tariff threshold
0.84
34. 34
CINTRA MERIDIAM
DALLAS
FIRE&POLICE
PENSION SCHEME
DESCRIPTION:
LENGTH:
CONCESSION PERIOD:
TARIFF POLICY:
Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, Major thoroughfares
between Fort Worth and DFW Airport
13 mile section (IH 820 & SH 183 in Tarrant County)
52 years
Open Road Tolling System (no toll booths) with a dynamic tolling
regime (every 5 minutes) to maintain at all times a minimum speed of
50 mph
● No toll-booths, fully electronic free flow tolling system
● Tollway within a freeway: Motorists will be provided with a choice of
driving in non-tolled GP lanes or paying a toll to bypass such GP
lanes
● Tolls setting to ensure minimum speed on new lanes
● As demand grows and capacity becomes scarce, pricing power
increases
● Physically separated from the GP lanes with controlled access
EQUITY DEBT PUBLIC FUNDS
Managed Lanes
North Tarrant Express
Opened on October 2014, 9 months ahead of schedule
Key characteristics
Shareholder structure
Financial structure
57% 33% 10%
21% 52% 27%
35. 35
CINTRA MERIDIAM DALLAS
FIRE&POLICE
PENSION SCHEME
Key characteristics
108Km
Electronic toll
DESCRIPTION:
LENGTH:
CONCESSION PERIOD:
TARIFF POLICY:
IH 635 (Dallas County), the most populous county in Texas
13 mile section of the IH 635 and IH 35E
52 years
Open Road Tolling System (no toll booths) with a dynamic tolling
regime (every 5 minutes) to maintain at all times a minimum speed of
50 mph
● No toll-booths, fully electronic free flow tolling system
● Tollway within a freeway: Motorists will be provided with a choice of
driving in non-tolled GP lanes or paying a toll to bypass such GP
lanes
● Tolls setting to ensure minimum speed on new lanes
● As demand grows and capacity becomes scarce, pricing power
increases
● Physically separated from the GP lanes with controlled access
EQUITY DEBT PUBLIC FUNDS
Managed Lanes
Lyndon B Johnson
Opened on September 10th 2015, 3 months ahead of schedule
Shareholder structure
Financial structure
APG
51% 26% 16% 7%
24% 56% 19%
36. 36
CINTRA MERIDIAM
DALLAS
FIRE&POLICE
PENSION SCHEME
DESCRIPTION:
LENGTH:
CONCESSION PERIOD:
TARIFF POLICY:
2 “managed lanes” in each direction of the IH-35W, segments 3A and
3B (3B segment to be built by TxDOT)
10.2 mile section (segments 3A 6.2 miles and 3B 4 miles)
48 years
Open Road Tolling System (no toll booths) with a dynamic tolling
regime (every 5 minutes) to maintain at all times a minimum speed of
50 mph
● The corridor south to the 3A segment is currently ranked as the most
congested roadway in Texas.
● No toll-booths, fully electronic free flow system
● Tollway within a freeway: Motorists will be provided with a choice of
driving in non-tolled GP lanes or paying a toll to bypass such GP
lanes
● Tolls setting to ensure minimum speed on new lanes
● As demand grows and capacity becomes scarce, pricing power
increases
● Physically separated from the GP lanes with controlled access EQUITY DEBT PUBLIC FUNDS
APG
Managed Lanes
North Tarrant Express 35W
Expected to open in mid-2018
Key characteristics
Shareholder structure
Financial structure
50% 26% 14% 10%
32% 59% 9%
37. 37
• First privately-financed road
development project of its kind to reach
financial close in 2010.
• Texas’ third big recent road project to
reach financial close since 2008.
• First combination of TIFIA and tax exempt
PABs.
• First private activity bond issuance for a
toll road.
• First time that a U.S.-based pension fund
made a direct investment in a highway
concession.
21%
52%
27%
24%
56%
19%
Figures in US Dollars
Managed Lanes
Financial Overview
31%
60%
9%
• Very competitive capital structure in
spite of the difficult market conditions.
• Strong portion of the debt from TIFIA
program with its flexible amortizing
structure during the first 25 years.
2.10 bn
427 m
243 m (57%)
141 m (33%)
43 m (10%)
1,102 m
398 m
704 m
573 m
2.6 bn
672 m
343 m (51%)
107 m (16%)
44 m (7%)
177 m (26%)
1,456 m
606m
850 m
490 m
1.41 bn
430 m
216 m (50%)
60 m (14%)
43 m (10%)
112 m (26%)
847 m
274 m
573m
126 m
Total Investment:
Private Equity:
Cintra:
Meridiam:
DPFPS:
APG:
Total Debt:
PABs:
TIFIA:
Public Funds:
2015 figures
38. 38
Appendix
Introduction to 407ETR Toll road
Managed Lanes Toll roads
407ETR vs Managed Lanes
Diversified porftolio
Historic consolidated & business units figures
39. 39
How does the 407ETR compare to the new Managed Lanes?
407ETR Managed Lanes (NTE1-2)
• 56.7%. Global consolidation
• Meridiam (33%), Dallas fire & police pension scheme (10%)
• 52 years
Opened October 2014 (45 years remaining)
• Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, between Fort Worth & DFW Airport
• 13 miles. 2 segments.
2 lanes per direction
Tollway within a freeway
• Predictability & reliable travel times (minimum speed 50m/hr)
Higher speed allowed on NTE (60mph in free lanes, 70mph NTE)
Safety & comfort
• Yes. No toll booths, fully electronic, free flow system
• Freedom to set tariffs up to cap ($0.84, updated with inflation)
Cap is lifted if av. speed <50m/hr of cars >3,300pce/h (2 lanes)
Dynamic tolling (tariffs can be changed every 5 minutes)
Different tariffs depending on segment, direction, time, day..
• Not a regulated activity, but a contractual agreement
• From TxDOT (who charges the drivers). No collection risk
• 5 initial years lock-up
• 43%. Equity consolidated
• SNC Lavalin (17%), CPPIB (40%)
• 99 years
Opened 1999 (82 years remaining)
• Greater Toronto Area (Ontario province)
• 108kms. 24 segments
From 2+2 lanes up to 5+5 lanes per direction (dep on segment)
Separate toll road
• Predictability & reliable travel times
Alternative routes are highly congested
Average speed: 100km/h vs 40km/h on the alternative
Safety & comfort
• Yes. No toll booths, fully electronic, free flow system
• Freedom to set tariffs
Penalty paid if traffic falls below threshold
Tariffs can be changed every 30 days
Different tariffs depending on segment, direction, time, day..
• Not a regulated activity, but a contractual agreement
• From drivers. Licence plate not renewed if tolls not paid.
• Strong growth (from CAD85mn 2005 to 750mn 2015)
Participation:
Partners:
Concession period:
Location:
Length:
Benefits:
Open tolling?
Tariff Policy:
Regulatory risk?
Collection:
Dividends:
40. 40
Appendix
Introduction to 407ETR Toll road
Managed Lanes Toll roads
407ETR vs Managed Lanes
Diversified porftolio
Historic consolidated & business units figures
41. 41
18%
18%
29%
36%
(1) Proportional: All EBITDA figures are aggregated in a proportional basis to the Ferrovial equity stake in each company or project (mainly ETR 407 toll road in Canada and UK airports).
Diversified portfolio
Services Construction Toll Roads Airports
Non Capital Intensive
PROFIT GENERATION
CASH GENERATION
Fully consolidated Method
€1,027Mn
Proportional (1)
€1,893Mn
Capital Intensive
LONG DURATION
LONG TERM VALUE
EBITDA
Services
Toll Roads
Construction
Airports
Spain UK US & Canada RoW Spain UK US & Canada RoW
€ million 2015 figures
Ex – Infrastructure Projects Infrastructure Projects
38%
30%
32%
-1%
39% 9% 39% 13% 20% 43% 32% 5%
42. 42
Appendix
Introduction to 407ETR Toll road
Managed Lanes Toll roads
407ETR vs Managed Lanes
Diversified porftolio
Historic consolidated & business units figures
48. 48
Disclaimer
This document may contain statements that constitute forward looking statements about the Company. These statements are
based on financial projections and estimates and their underlying assumptions, statements regarding plans, objectives and
expectations, which refer to estimates regarding, among others, future growth in the different business lines and the global
business, market share, financial results and other aspects of the activity and situation relating to the Company.
Such forward looking statements, by its nature, are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties, and
other important factors that could cause actual developments or results to differ from those expressed in these forward looking
statements.
Analysts and investors, and any other person or entity that may need to take decisions, or prepare or release opinions about the
securities issued by the Company, are cautioned not to place undue reliance on those forward looking statements which speak only
as of the date of this communication. They are all encouraged to consult the Company’s communications and periodic filings made
with the relevant securities markets regulators and, in particular, with the Spanish Securities Markets Regulator.