Fisher & Paykel Appliances, the Auckland-based manufacturer and consumer credit company owned by China's Haier Group, narrowed its full-year loss in 2014 after sales growth across all its markets drove a 46 percent gain in revenue.
The loss narrowed to $12.6 million in calendar 2014, from a loss of about $31 million a year earlier, according to the accounts of Haier New Zealand Investment Holding Co. Sales rose to $1.13 billion from $772 million.
Haier effectively rescued F&P Appliances in 2009 when it acquired a 20 per cent stake as part of a capital raising that let the company refinance its debt. The local manufacturer secured distribution into China as a result of a reciprocal agreement, the ability to further licence its technology and toll manufacturing opportunities. The Chinese company took full control in 2012 and F&P Appliances was delisted from the NZX.
Operating expenses rose almost as fast as sales, growing 42 per cent to $1.12 billion last year. Within that, cost of goods sold rose 44 per cent to $716 million, selling, marketing and distribution climbed 31 per cent to $124 million and administration expenses jumped 37 per cent to $229 million.
The company's wage bill climbed 52 per cent to $247 million, while research and development spending rose 56 per cent to $27.9 million. Notes to the accounts show that the company recognised grant funding of $5.3 million for research and development from Callaghan Innovation during the latest year, up from $1.3 million in 2013. The details were commercially sensitive, it said.