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Monday July
26, 2010
News & Features
Top Glove adding three plants, more lines
By Mike McNulty
Rubber & Plastics News Staff
KLANG, Malaysia—Top Glove Corp. Bhd. is building three
factories in Malaysia and adding 88 production lines at
new and existing plants in Thailand and Malaysia because
of growing demand for rubber latex and nitrile gloves.
Most of the lines are being installed at the new
production facilities, but 24 are going in at existing
plants, eight at one site and 16 at the other.
The additional plants and lines will boost the glove
maker’s annual production capacity by 25 percent to
about 41.3 billion pieces of gloves by May 2011, when
the expansion project is expected to be completed, and
give it 20 production facilities with 459 lines,
according to Executive Director Lim Cheong Guan.
The cost of Top Glove’s expansion project was estimated
at more than $25 million.
Two of the new plants will be located near Top Glove’s
headquarters in Klang while the other is being built in
Ipoh, Malaysia.
The factories will produce both rubber latex and nitrile
gloves.
Expanding work force
About 2,750 additional production workers are expected
to be hired by May 2011. An assortment of machinery and
other equipment will be purchased, including dipping
lines, thermo oil heaters, steam boilers, tumbler
machines, air compressors and weigh bridges.
The recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has spurred
some of the growing demand for more gloves, Lim said,
but the increased need is the result of a greater
hygiene and cleanliness awareness resulting from the
emergence of pandemics such as the H1N1 flu virus, SARS
and bird flu.
“We expect annual demand for rubber gloves to grow on an
average rate of between 8 percent and 10 percent,” Lim
said. “By the end of this year, rubber gloves
consumption is expected to reach an estimate of 150
billion pieces.”
Key growth drivers now and in the future include the
increasing need for medical gloves as a form of
protection, particularly in the health care industry, he
said. “There is also rising awareness in health care and
hygiene in nonmedical sectors, especially in developed
as well as in developing countries.”
In addition, he said, demand for rubber gloves is also
high in nations with an aging population where it is
common to use gloves in handling those who are more
susceptible to life threatening diseases.
Stricter health regulations in developed nations have
created a greater necessity for gloves “while countries
like Latin America also are moving toward adopting more
stringent health care regulation and hygiene awareness,”
he said. “More importantly, there are opportunities in
large untapped markets such as India and China, which
are embarking on a 10-year health care revamp.”
‘Undisputed global leader’
Top Glove has grown rapidly since it began operating
with one factory and three production lines in 1991. Lim
claimed it “is now the undisputed global leader in the
natural rubber glove market.”
But the firm won’t rest on its laurels, he said, and
will strive even harder to capture a larger share of the
market.
The company, which exports to more than 180 countries,
has a solid base in Asia and is growing in both Latin
America and North America, a spokeswoman said. About 28
percent of its sales are in North America, she said,
while 21 percent are in Latin America. Sales in the U.S.
are growing slowly, principally in the nonmedical
sectors such as food and security, she said.
Lim largely attributed Top Glove’s success “to our
visionary founder and chairman, Tan Sri Dato Sri Lim Wee
Chai, who has built a strong foundation for the group
and has the foresight to bring it to the next level. He
knew the rubber glove industry offers huge growth
opportunities and endless possibilities.”
The glove industry is relatively resilient to economic
downturns, Lim said, and because the company offers
high-quality gloves at affordable prices, it
consistently receives high-volume orders, giving it the
advantage of economies of scale.
Top Glove did not acquire any companies or plants in the
last year, but in the recent past it purchased three
factories in Malaysia and Thailand.
“We prefer to grow organically, via the construction of
new plants and putting in additional lines,” Lim said,
but added the company is constantly on the lookout for
merger and acquisition opportunities.
Reports out of Malaysia said Top Glove is in talks with
several small regional glove companies in Thailand,
Indonesia and Malaysia, but the firm is still evaluating
the prospects.
There are other possible areas of growth, Lim said. “In
order to move upstream, we are also sourcing for rubber
plantations in the region.”
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