Bangkok Post

Philips enjoys 15% jump in second-quarter profit

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THE HAGUE: Dutch electronic­s giant Royal Philips NV posted a 15% hike in net profit for the second quarter yesterday, just months after listing its lighting division separately on the Amsterdam bourse.

Net profit from its continuing operations leaped to €186 million ($218 million) from April to June, compared to €161 million in the same period in 2017, the company reported.

Sales reached €4.3 billion, up some 4% on last year, Philips said, highlighti­ng orders had also risen by 9%.

Best known for the manufactur­e of light bulbs, electrical appliances and television sets, the Amsterdam-based company has gradually pulled out of these activities in face of fierce competitio­n from Asia.

It focuses now more on high-end medical and health technology, such as computer tomography and molecular imaging, as well as household appliances.

“I am pleased with the continued strong performanc­e improvemen­t of the diagnosis and treatment businesses, driven by the breadth of our innovative product portfolio,” chief executive Frans van Houten said in a statement.

The group, which sold its first light bulb a few years after it was founded in 1891, moved to list its Philips Lighting division, now known as Signify, in mid-2016 which joined the Amsterdam Stock Exchange, the top-tier AEX, in March this year.

Van Houten added the company, which employs more than 75,000 people in some 100 countries, stood by “our targets for the 2017-2020 period of 4-6% comparable sales growth.”

Earlier this month he warned Philips was closely watching the outcome of the negotiatio­ns to govern Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union in March 2019.

The group employs some 1,500 people in Britain, most notably at its baby care products-for-export factory at Glemsford in Suffolk.

“We estimate that the cost of the exported products will increase substantia­lly under any scenario that is not maintainin­g the single customs union,” Van Houten said in a statement emailed to AFP in early July.

“Any changes in current free trade agreements, the single customs union and current EU product certificat­ions is a serious threat to the competitiv­eness of this factory,” he added, warning “we need to do worst case scenario planning.”

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