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Resilient performance from JCB

A JCB backhoe comes off the production line

Equipment manufacturer remained profitable in 2020 despite Covid turbulence

STAFFORDSHIRE-based JCB remained profitable in 2020 despite the severe impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the company’s global manufacturing operations.

Last year sales turnover fell to £3.1 billion (2019: £4.2 billion), while machine sales decreased to 74,590 (2019: 92,216). Earnings on an EBITDA basis stood at £228 million (2019: £414 million).

 

‘In March 2020, £1 billion worth of orders disappeared overnight with the onset of COVID-19 and JCB was forced to close its 21 manufacturing plants around the world for around two months,’ said JCB’s chief executive officer, Graeme Macdonald.

‘Despite the severe impact on its business, JCB remained profitable in 2020 as it has done for the past 76 years. The turnaround in 2021 has been dramatic: we are sitting here now in September with four times the usual order bank we had in normal times two to three years ago. As a result, we are ramping up production to levels we have not had before.’

JCB chairman Lord Bamford added: ‘The past is the past and, while 2020 was undoubtedly one of the most difficult years in our history, our focus is now very firmly on the future. We continue to lead the way in zero emissions technology, particularly with the development of the construction equipment industry’s first internal combustion engine powered by hydrogen, which is already being tested in JCB machines. This is a great British breakthrough, and we will be producing these engines by the end of next year.’

 

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