The Scotsman

Macfarlane buys English peer in £15.1m swoop

- By SCOTT REID

Macfarlane Group, the Glasgow-headquarte­red protective packaging specialist, has further flexed its muscles south of the Border with a multi-million pound acquisitio­n.

The firm, which last week reported resilient full-year results, has taken over GWP Holdings, the owner of GWP Group, a protective packaging manufactur­ing and distributi­on business based in Wiltshire.

The Scots firm is paying a maximum cash considerat­ion of £15.1 million, including an earn-out of £5.1m based on agreed profit growth targets over two years, and a further adjustment for net assets in excess of £1.6m .

Macfarlane is financing the deal through its recently extended £30m bank facility.

For the year to the end of September 2020, GWP generated sales of £13.2m and reported a pre-tax profit of £1.6m.

GWP supplies customers across the UK but mainly within the south west of England from its manufactur­ing facilities in Salisbury and Swindon.

Macfarlane, which last week flagged fresh acquisitio­ns, said there were “significan­t opportunit­ies” for both firms to benefit from access to their respective ranges of protective packaging products and services.

GWP has a team of 107 employees, including six directors. Five of those directors will remain with the company following the acquisitio­n.

Peter Atkinson, chief executive of Macfarlane, said: “GWP is a profitable, growing, well invested company with an experience­d management team that is fully committed to the business going forward.

“The acquisitio­n will be funded using bank debt and will be earnings enhancing. We look forward to working with the team at GWP to support its continued growth and develop opportunit­ies for us to work together to provide all our customers with a broader portfolio of value-add and sustainabl­e protective packaging solutions.”

Analysts at house brokerage Shore Capital noted: “No sooner have we published numbers on this high quality business, which reported excellent [full-year] 2020 results on February 25, and we are pushing through an upgrade to our forecasts on a strategic acquisitio­n. We see material upside potential for investors as Macfarlane’s strengths and its qualities become increasing­ly recognised – with growth potential leveraging this.”

Last week, Macfarlane said it was well placed to benefit when the UK economy begins to recover after booking a “resilient” full-year performanc­e, sending its shares sharply higher.

During 2020, sales from existing customers benefited from underlying strength in the e-commerce, household essentials and medical sectors as a result of the pandemic, the firm noted.

This was partially offset by weaker demand from those sectors most affected by Covid-19 – automotive, aerospace, high street retail and hospitalit­y. Sales at the group’s core packaging distributi­on business lifted 2.6 per cent, yearon-year, to £201.7m, as part of overall turnover of £230m, marking a rise of 2.1 per cent. Profit before tax rose 9.6 per cent to £13m. Headquarte­red in Glasgow, Macfarlane employs more than 850 people at 31 sites, principall­y in the UK, but also in Ireland, Sweden and Holland. That headcount is down by about 60.

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