Naylor Industries has published its financial report for the year ending on 29 February 2024.

Reporting on a “transformational year” marked by a £10 million restructuring and investment programme, Naylor notes the finalisation of the closure of its clay pipe business, while it invested heavily in its plastic pipe operation, which has grown rapidly since its formation in 1999.

The group restructured immediately after the year end, and now comprises two groups under common ownership but independent from each other in structure: Naylor Drainage, a focused plastic pipe business, and Naylor Industries, a more diverse group of concrete, plastic extrusion and technical construction product businesses.

The company also merged its Yorkshire Flowerpot gardenware business with Welsh-based terracotta pot manufacturer Smith & Jennings to form a 50/50 joint venture, which recently completed construction of a purpose-built manufacturing facility at Cawthorne, Barnsley.

Naylor’s turnover decreased 8% to £72 million (2023: £77.9 million) during the financial year, although most of the reduction related to the discontinuing clay and gardenware businesses, with the core plastic pipe business showing encouraging year-on-year growth.

Naylor again invested heavily in plant and premises, with £10 million of capital additions (2023: £6.1 million) including the construction of additional factories and a new office on the company’s Cawthorne site, and the acquisition of additional extrusion and manufacturing equipment.

An active product development programme resulted in several recent product launches including new cable ducting and sewer pipe systems. Despite the disruption associated with construction works, new equipment commissioning and closure of the clay business, profitability held up well, with underlying profit before tax of £4.6 million (2023: £5.6 million).

Edward Naylor, Naylor Chief Executive, said: “The year has been transformational: we have reshaped the group and undertaken a major investment programme. Despite difficult trading conditions, sales and profitability have held up well.

“We have mixed emotions about the closure of our clay pipe business. Strategically, focusing our pipe business on the growing plastic market is clearly the right thing to do, and there are tremendous growth opportunities in this industry. At the same time, clay pipe production is very much part of our heritage, being the product we started out manufacturing when we were founded in 1890.”

Despite the wider economic uncertainty, the company says it remains optimistic about the future, with business development plans for the coming years, including further significant capital investment and a substantial new product pipeline. An ongoing apprenticeship programme is introducing the next generation of skilled employees into the business, with six apprentices recruited in the last financial year.