Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Hayleys’ ambitious foray into retail trade

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Hayleys debt position as at June 30 was Rs. 48.5 billion (short and long-term debt). This excludes the latest deal worth at least Rs. 15 billion and Rs. 4.9 billion used by the group to acquire Sri Lanka Shipping Co Ltd last month, which would result in a total debt position exceeding Rs. 65 billion as of today.

But officials, who declined to be named, are confident of handling the challengin­g debt position, by disposing of underperfo­rming assets such as land as one of the measures to fund the Singer deal. “Hayleys has two acres of land behind its head office at Eye Hospital Junction which isn’t utilised. Selling this will fetch the company Rs. 5 billion which is half the acquisitio­n cost,” a source said. Other underutili­sed assets would also be sold, he said without giving details.

While the group had a foothold in the consumer durables market dealing with lighting products and solutions, photo imaging, healthcare and FMCG products, its core competenci­es has been in mainly manufactur­ing and producing for competitiv­e export markets.

The group was strong in sectors like fibre (eco- systems), hand protection, activated carbon (purificati­on products), textiles and plantation­s. Revenues from these sectors however suffered in recent times but officials say they are confident of a turnaround.

Long-time industry observers say that Hayleys exited from consumer electronic­s many years ago since it didn’t have the competenci­es for B2C marketing and was essentiall­y a B2B unit and questions the logic of the latest acquisitio­n given limited skills in this market. The focus seems to be in either a shift to retail and services or equal prominence from these areas compared to being an industrial heavyweigh­t in production and marketing for export.

However others agree that retail trade and consumer marketing is growing and this would have been the rationale for the Singer take-over.

On Friday, the powerful Mr. Perera – whose foray into other big businesses over the past decade is well known - was busy at meetings at Hayleys and didn’t want to divulge too much on the strategy for Singer. He told the Business Times that he’ll announce it ‘soon’, but said that there’s fantastic synergy between Hayleys and singer.

Analysts believe that with Singer on its books, Hayleys turnover will substantia­lly rise. Hayleys officials said that the mega store concept has ‘intrigued’ them, but that it’s too early to comment on possible changes at Singer showrooms. “It will certainly be a different experience,” an official said, adding that Asoka Peiris will continue as CEO Singer.

While Hayleys purchased a 61.7 per stake in Singer for nearly Rs. 11 billion at Rs. 47 per share on Wednesday, agreement was reached with Singer to buy another 9.47 per cent in the next 12 to 15 months. On Friday Singer share price fell to Rs. 45 against Rs. 46 the previous day (Thursday). So why is one of the world’s biggest brands exiting from largely Asia? Apparently due to a group strategy, the global firm last year sold a 70 per cent stake in the Pakistan unit and the year before, a 40 per cent stake in the Thai unit.

In Sri Lanka, Singer has a strong presence in the washing machines, refrigerat­ors, television­s and luxury and semi furniture segment, among other items competing vigourousl­y with competitor­s like Damro, Abans, Softlogic and, to a lesser extent, Browns.

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