Top Glove reports improved results as industry starts recovery
10 Oct 2023
Share:
Malaysian group finishes financial year on high note, with earnings improvement in final quarter
Shah Alam, Malaysia – Top Glove Corp. Bhd expects a recovery in the rubber gloves market on the back of encouraging trends in the final quarter of its fiscal 2023, ended 31 Aug.
“We are already seeing an uptick in sales volume month-to-month which indicates our customers’ glove inventory is close to being depleted,” Top Glove reported 6 Oct.
With oversupply now easing, the Malaysian group anticipates global gloves demand to return to a projected growth-path of 8% to 10% in the medium-term.
Nevertheless, for the final quarter of the year, Top Glove reported a year-on-year revenue decline of 52% to RM476 million.
During the fourth quarter, loss-after-tax reached RM454 million, compared to a profit of RM52 million in the same period of last year.
Excluding a RM389-million impairment cost, Top Glove said its quarterly loss would have stood at RM65 million.
The final quarter also saw sales volumes dip slightly quarter-on-quarter, while average selling prices also declined amid lower raw material prices.
On a 12-month basis, the group reported a loss-after-tax of RM887 million, down from a prior-year profit of RM282 million, on sales 59% lower at RM2.25 billion.
For the final quarter, Top Glove attributed the “better performance” compared to previous quarters of 2023, to “ongoing quality and cost optimisation initiatives”.
These included streamlining its production facilities, which saw the group using newer and more efficient factories while temporarily ceasing operations elsewhere.
The efficiency programme, it said, reduced operational, utility and manpower costs significantly, while new orders generated “positive cash flow and better margins.”
Top Glove's ‘turnaround plan’ has included measures such as “decommissioning obsolete production lines and temporarily stopping production at 17 out of its 49 factories."
As previously reported, the move has reduced the overall production capacity by 5 billion pieces, bringing total output capacity to 95 billion pieces of gloves per year.
Overall, managing director Lim Cheong Guan said Top Glove delivered an “encouraging performance in the uncertain environment that continues to impact the gloves industry.”
“Looking ahead, the group believes that inventory build-up from the pandemic is very close to bottoming out following lower glove demand over the past two years,” added Lim.
Furthermore, the official noted that glove consumption had increased post-pandemic on the back of elevated levels of hygiene and health awareness.
“With this, we believe that glove demand will pick up gradually going forward,” Lim added.
On the costs front, Top Glove said the high cost of natural gas rendered Malaysian rubber glove makers less competitive than rivals elsewhere.
The group suggested that rather than exporting natural gas, the resource should be made available “at a competitive price” to Malaysian manufacturers.
This article is only available to subscribers - subscribe today
Subscribe for unlimited access. A subscription to European Rubber Journal includes:
Every issue of European Rubber Journal (6 issues) including Special Reports & Maps.
Unlimited access to ERJ articles online
Daily email newsletter – the latest news direct to your inbox