Jamaica Gleaner

FosRich expanding PVC plant, eyes low-tax zone for transforme­r venture

- NEVILLE GRAHAM Business Reporter

FOSRICH COMPANY, the sole maker of PVC pipes in Jamaica, is about to add a new production line in order to keep up with demand.

The plant, which is less than two years old, has seen a 240 per cent spike in sales in the past nine months amid the pandemic. FosRich Managing Director Cecil Foster says its going to cost $20 million to add the new pipe-production line, which will be installed by the first week of December. It will grow capacity by 25 per cent.

“Demand is up 300 per cent on the PVC pipes,” said Foster in an interview this week. “We will put in the new line to keep up with that. We’ve taken on another 10 persons, adding to the 35 who were there before,” he said.

The new line is to be commission­ed weeks ahead of roll-out of the new transforme­r repair plant, into which FosRich has pumped $120 million and is getting ready to launch as a third business venture, with full production anticipate­d to begin by January 2.

The venture under which FosRich will repair equipment for Jamaica Public Service Company, as the starting client, is to be operated from the parish of Clarendon by a new company called Blue Emerald Limited, under contract with its parent.

FosRich, which owns 100 per cent of Blue Emerald, wants the transforme­r operation declared a special economic zone, a designatio­n that comes with tax benefits, inclusive of a corporate tax rate of 12.5 per cent that is half the regular rate of 25 per cent.

“We are seeking to have this company registered under the Special Economic Zone Authority, in order to take advantage of the significan­t long-term tax concession­s that are available,” said Foster in a statement to shareholde­rs appended to the company’s third-quarter results.

“Activities being undertaken at the new Hayes facility in Clarendon will be done through this new entity, acting exclusivel­y for FosRich under a contract manufactur­ing arrangemen­t,” he said.

FosRich, which is in the business of distributi­ng lighting products and the manufactur­e of the pipes, has described the JulySeptem­ber quarter as the best in its history in terms of revenue of $534 million, gross and net profit, and earnings per share of 11 cents.

It also grew both sales and its bottom line over nine months, January-September, with revenue up 17 per cent to $1.39 billion, while earnings rose modestly by three per cent to $75.2 million.

The revenue gains did not flow to the bottom line because the company chose to settle some accounting issues, Foster said, without elucidatin­g on what those were.

“The revenue was definitely up, but we took the opportunit­y to take care of some specific matters and so we could have had an even better bottom line,” he told the Financial Gleaner.

The numbers show that FosRich had higher production and administra­tive costs, and that its debt-financing charges increased – all of which would have been expected from a company that has a corporate bond to service, is taking on new staff to meet the

 ?? File ?? Cecil Foster, Managing Director of FosRich Company Limited.
File Cecil Foster, Managing Director of FosRich Company Limited.

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