Quincy, Illinois —Titan International Inc. suffered net and operating losses last year on 12.4 percent lower sales, but Maurice Taylor Jr., chairman, CEO and president, is confident the leaner firm will be back in the black in 2015 as key markets recover.
Titan’s loss from operations reached $97.6 million (€87.1 million) in fiscal 2014, versus a profit of $102.4 million in 2013, and the net loss hit $130.4 million versus earnings of $29.7 million.
Sales fell to $1.9 billion.
Taylor cited drops in demand in all of Titan’s major sales categories, currency exchange rate impacts, impairment charges related to asset writedowns and union-led production slowdowns for the company’s swing to operating and net losses.
In response, Titan cut its workforce by 1,900 to match the reduced production. Most cuts were in Russia, where Titan let 1,300 workers go. The company cut 400 in the US and 100 each in Europe and Brazil to end the year with 6,500 employees.
Titan’s sales plunged in the fourth quarter, falling 34.7 percent to $383.3 million, and the loss from operations hit $66.6 million.
Taylor noted that both the agricultural and earthmoving/construction sectors had weak years in 2014, especially in the higher value-added, higher horsepower equipment categories.
During the year, Titan took $23.2 million in asset impairment and $16.7 million in inventory writedowns, reflecting the accelerated deterioration of the company’s business in the large mining sector and overstocked inventories of those products.
By business category, Titan’s agricultural and earthmoving/construction segments reported 14 and 18.5 percent drops in sales, while the smaller consumer segment registered a sales gain of 15.4 percent, reflecting the addition of revenue from the Voltyre-Prom acquisition in Russia.
Looking forward, Taylor said: “Titan is lean and ready to go in 2015. There will be pure cutting and a lot of surprises because that’s the way it is here.”
Taylor listed a number of developments that he said should help the company turn it around, including the ramping-up of production of Titan’s LSW (low sidewall) farm tires and wheels, which should yield more manufacturing efficiencies; the first original equipment fitments of LSW products; a more efficient manufacturing operation in Russia, which when combined with the rouble-dollar exchange rate changes should improve Voltyre-Prom’s ability to export;
Taken altogether, Taylor said Titan expects pretax earnings to rebound this year to about $115 million and ultimately get back to $200 million or more once revenue recovers to $2 billion-plus.
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