Losses increase to €42.62m at Glen Dimplex Dublin unit after restructuring charge

The company recorded an operating loss of €10.2m for 2020, which was an increase of 23% on the 2019 loss of €8.3m

Pre-tax losses at a Dublin-based unit of  Glen Dimplex last year increased almost three-fold to €42.62m
Pre-tax losses at a Dublin-based unit of Glen Dimplex last year increased almost three-fold to €42.62m

Pre-tax losses at a Dublin-based unit of heating, cooling and domestic appliance giant Glen Dimplex last year increased almost three-fold to €42.62 million.

According to accounts filed by Glen Dimplex Europe Holdings Ltd, the group recorded the increase in pre-tax losses as revenues declined by 8 per cent from €884.64 million to €793.4 million in the 12 months to the end of September last.

The chief factor behind the 178 per cent increase in pre-tax losses from €15.29 million to €42.62 million was the group incurring €20.17 million in restructuring costs after a spend of €6.5 million under that heading in 2019.

The group’s €22.6 million total cost for non-trading items included a €2.5 million donation for educational purposes and this followed €16,000 under that heading in 2019.

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Glen Dimplex recorded an operating loss of €10.2 million for 2020, which was an increase of 23 per cent on the 2019 loss of €8.3 million.

On the impact of Covid-19, the accounts said that “whilst sales have reduced year on year, they have recovered in Q4 of 2020, and have remained steady post-year end”. However the company said it was confident that it was well placed to manage the impact of Covid-19.

The accounts said a number of sites within the group had to close for a period during the year due to mandatory government restrictions.

“The group availed of wage support/furlough schemes in the jurisdiction that it operates in, and undertook cost-cutting measures where appropriate.”

The accounts confirmed that the group received €8 million in State Covid-19 subsidy schemes across a number of jurisdictions last year.

It was also confirmed that the group made a number of strategic decisions in order to negate the challenges it faced, including undertaking restructuring programmes and it was making a major investment in an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system.

Strong position

The directors’ report said the trading environment in the UK was challenging following Brexit. It said that the group was in a strong position with cash at €229.7 million at the end of September .

The group’s research and development expenditure last year totalled €27.3 million, down from €30.9 million a year earlier.

Last year’s loss takes account of non-cash depreciation costs of €23.97 million. Directors’ pay increased from €996,000 to €1.47 million.

A breakdown of revenues shows that €606 million of sales were recorded in the EU, with €109 million in North America; €46.2 million in "rest of world" and €31.34 million in "rest of Europe".

Numbers employed reduced from 4,696 to 4,505 as staff costs fell from €250 million to €225 million. Some 2,412 staff are employed in production, with 1,063 in selling and distribution, 663 in administration and 366 in research and development.

Shareholder funds at the end of September last totalled €256.8 million.

Gordon Deegan

Gordon Deegan

Gordon Deegan is a contributor to The Irish Times