Insulation industry news from Global Insulation
Kingspan reports slow start to 2013
10 May 2013Ireland: Kingspan Group has reported a particularly slow start to trading in 2013 in an interim management statement. In the release, issued ahead of its annual general meeting, the insulation and building supplies manufacturer said that group sales had risen by 10% to Euro520m for the first four months of 2013. It added that trading had 'picked-up' during March and April 2013.
Kingspan noted that market conditions were weak in UK and the Netherlands. Improvements have been seen in Germany following the group's acquisition of ThyssenKrupp Construction in 2012, and the Irish market saw improvement. The US has had a good start to 2013, Australasia has slowed from 2012 levels and the Middle East and Gulf Cooperation Council regions have remained buoyant.
In its outlook the company noted that a combination of growing order intake levels, improving acquisition benefits and a more diversified geography should help the company in the second half of 2013.
Ireland: Insulation and building supplies manufacturer Kingspan has reported that its operating profit grew by 15% in 2012 to Euro105m from Euro90.9m in 2011. Revenue for the year rose by 55% to Euro1.63bn.
Kingspan reported strong overall performance in insulated panels with sales revenues up by 11%, particularly strong in Germany, Canada and Australia. The company reported 'robust' performance in insulation boards where revenues were up 2%, stable in the UK and slightly up in Continental Europe.
"We are pleased to report another positive year of progress for Kingspan, one in which we continued to increase our profitability, generate strong cash flows and widen our global footprint," said Kingspan's chief executive Gene Murtagh.
Kingspan H1 profit rises by 19%
20 August 2012Ireland: Kingspan, the insulation and building energy specialists, has reported a 19% increase in trading profits for the first half of 2012. The company made Euro52.7m in 2012 compared to Euro44.2m in the same period in 2011. Revenue remained stable rising by 3%, to Euro757m from Euro736m, but this represented a decrease of 1% on a constant currency basis. Earnings before interest, tax and amortisation rose by 13% to Euro71.9m from Euro63.5m.
By segment both the group's insulated panels and insulation boards businesses revenues remained stable at Euro361.1m and Euro232.1m respectively for the first half of 2012. By region the company's Irish revenue fell by 9.4%, to Euro32.8m from Euro36.2m. Revenue in the UK and the rest of Europe remained stable at Euro303.9m and Euro259.7m respectively despite volumes falling. Revenue in the Americas increased by 10.7% to Euro110.7m and in Australasia it increased by 52% to Euro50.3m.
In its business review the company explained that western Europe was 'hamstrung' by an unusually weak construction environment in the Netherlands, owing in the main to sentiment driven weakness in the residential sector. Germany performed well, as did the core central European markets but sales declined in Russia and Turkey.
"The trading environment across many of our geographies continues to be very uncertain, which is having a moderating impact, albeit with Kingspan continuing to outperform the general markets in which we operate," said chief executive of Kingspan, Gene Murtagh.
Kingspan acquires ThyssenKrupp Construction and Rigida
15 August 2012Ireland: Insulation materials group, Kingspan has bought ThyssenKrupp Construction from its parent group for Euro65m and the Middle East firm Rigidal Industries LLC for Euro31.4m. Both acquisitions are subject to local approval.
Kingspan said that it has entered into an agreement with ThyssenKrupp Steel Europe AG to acquire 100% of the share capital of the various companies which comprise ThyssenKrupp Construction Group, the leading European insulated panels business.
ThyssenKrupp Construction Group, which includes market-leading brands such as Hoesch, Isocab and EMS, has seven well-invested manufacturing plants in Germany, France, Belgium, Austria and Hungary. The business had sales in the year to 31 March 2012 of Euro315m and recorded an operating loss of Euro5.7m in the period. It has gross assets of around Euro101m.
Separately, Kingspan also announced that it has agreed to acquire 100% of the share capital of Rigidal Industries LLC, a leading Middle Eastern manufacturer of composite panels and roofing systems based in Dubai with an extensive route to market in the Gulf region. It had sales of Euro31.8m in the year to 30 June 2012.
"The ThyssenKrupp business will transform our mainland Europe insulated panels market presence in a region where market penetration is growing, rooted in the need for more energy efficient buildings. The Rigidal Industries LLC business is an excellent platform to develop our existing business and market presence in the Gulf region where demand is growing," said Gene Murtagh, Kingspan CEO.
Kingspan raises funds to pay down debt
11 August 2011Ireland: On 11 August 2011 Kingspan Group plc said that it had raised USD200m from a private placement of loan notes, which it will use to pay down bank debt.
The company, which specialises in insulation and energy conservation, said that the notes carry a fixed interest rate of 5.25%. The placement, which was arranged by Royal Bank of Scotland plc, was oversubscribed and increased from USD125m to USD200m, according to Kingspan.
"(The placement) improves our capital structure by lengthening our debt maturity profile at very competitive interest rates and it affords Kingspan significant financing headroom as we seek to develop our business globally," said the group's finance director Geoff Doherty.
SIG warns of renewed slowdown
11 July 2011UK/Ireland: Roofing and insulation materials supplier SIG took the gloss off a strong first-half performance in 2011 by signalling a slowdown for the rest of the year. The company said that it still expects to make progress in 2011, but that growth will 'moderate' in the second half of the year due to a combination of tough comparative numbers and general economic factors.
The Sheffield-based group reported a slump in consumer spending in the UK and Ireland on areas such as home improvements. It said that reduced government spending was also putting pressure on public sector work.
Total revenues rose by 9% year-on-year to Euro1.57bn in the first half of 2011 with underlying profits 84% ahead at Euro38.3m. The company said that the UK and Ireland saw a 'noticeable softening in demand' towards the end of the second quarter of 2011.