Stanley Thai, executive chairman of Supermax Corp., the world’s second-largest maker of rubber gloves, comments on the company’s share price, raw material costs, profit margins and earnings outlook. He made the remarks in an interview in Kuala Lumpur today.
On Supermax’s falling share price: “We have a high percentage of institutional shareholdings. Foreign funds are investing in the rubber-gloves industry. When they exit or take profit, our counter gets hit. This is a good time where there is good bargain for people who understand our industry.”
On the ringgit’s strength: “So long as the ringgit appreciation is in tandem with regional currencies, we should be able to compete globally. We are in a recession-proof industry. We are pretty much resilient.”
On European and U.S. glove-market outlook: “We can grow at least 50 percent in terms of earnings and revenue in European market, and at least 25 percent growth in our American market. We see tremendous growth potential in emerging economies.”
“We’re looking at new emerging economies such as the BRICs nations and South Africa.” (Bloomberg News, September 14, 2011)
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