Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Cussons to switch soap jobs to Thailand

Rachel Stevenson
Wednesday 09 February 2005 01:00 GMT
Comments

PZ Cussons, the maker of Imperial Leather, is to close its Nottingham factory with the loss of 160 jobs as customers shun old-fashioned bars of soap in favour of liquid varieties.

PZ Cussons, the maker of Imperial Leather, is to close its Nottingham factory with the loss of 160 jobs as customers shun old-fashioned bars of soap in favour of liquid varieties.

The factory, which has been making soap since 1955, will shut in 2007 and production will be switched to Thailand. Soap bars produced in Nottingham now account for only 17 per cent of the group's UK sales, down from more than half of sales in 1995.

Graham Calder, the finance director of PZ Cussons, said: "Bars of soap are becoming less popular in the UK and it is more cost effective for us to move to Thailand, where we are investing in a new state-of-the-art factory. Demand for soap bars in Asia is rising."

The Far East now accounts for two-thirds of the world market for soap bars, and PZ Cussons already has produc-tion centres in Thailand and Indonesia.

The news of the closure came as PZ Cussons, which began trading in Sierra Leone in 1879, announced it was withdrawing from Russia and China.

The group has been hit by the weakening of the rouble, which has made the investment needed to promote its brands expensive, and a new distribution network has failed to improve sales.

It has also failed to succeed in China, blaming competitive pressures. "We have been in China for about 10 years but have been losing money," Mr Calder said. "It is very competitive and we are plagued by counterfeit goods there."

A £3m loss in Russia and losses in China caused the company to report a 4 per cent drop in pre-tax profits for the six months to the end of November. It has also been hit by the weak US dollar, as more than half of its business is in currencies linked to the dollar.

"Rising oil costs have also affected us," Mr Calder said. "That increases the costs of our packaging as well as some of the raw materials used in our products."

The company also owns the Original Source shower gel brand and Charles Worthington hair products.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in