The Malta Business Weekly

Banknote maker De La Rue warns on profits again

• Shares have now fallen 65% this year after a second profit warning spooked investors.

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Passport and banknote maker De La Rue continued its freefall yesterday as bosses issued a second profit warning in five months.

The company, which suffered heavily from losing out on the Government’s contract to make new blue UK passports, said profits will be “significan­tly lower than market expectatio­ns”.

Investors took flight, with shares plunging 20% in early trading, down 36p to 151p. The share price has now sunk nearly 65% since the start of the year.

New chief executive, turnaround specialist Clive Vacher, said he is “conducting a detailed review of the business and will update the market further”.

He replaced Martin Sutherland, who quit in May following a previous profit warning.

De La Rue said it expects adjusted operating profits for the six months to the end of September “to be low-to-mid singledigi­t millions.”

Mr Vacher’s turnaround will also have to contend with a Serious Fraud Office investigat­ion into alleged corruption at its South Sudan business.

There is also an £18 million black hole in the accounts after the company revealed in May that the Venezuelan central bank has been struggling to pay its bills.

De La Rue manufactur­es about a third of the world’s banknotes and employs more than 2,500 people. It also has a facility in Malta.

But last year it lost the contract to print British passports to a French company and led to activist investors calling for a major overhaul of the business.

The pressure resulted in non-executive resignatio­ns, including chairman Philip Rogerson, who stood down to be replaced by Kevin Loosemore.

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