DHL Express Ireland records sixth consecutive year of profit

Profit driven by continued improvement in international air express volumes and revenue

The Irish arm of global courier DHL  recorded a  pre-tax profit of €2.4m  for 2016. Photograph: Ralph Orlowski/Bloomberg
The Irish arm of global courier DHL recorded a pre-tax profit of €2.4m for 2016. Photograph: Ralph Orlowski/Bloomberg

DHL Express Ireland has recorded its sixth consecutive year of profit driven by a continued improvement in international air express volumes and revenue.

Pre-tax profit for the 12 months to the end of December 2016 was €2.4 million, an increase of 53.7 per cent on the previous year.

Newly-filed accounts show the firm’s turnover increased 4.9 per cent to €88.5 million for the period despite a “continued increase in business-to-customer deliveries into Ireland,” which, the company says, have impacted on the group’s cost position in 2016.

However, the directors’ report notes that improvements in productivity and efficiency have offset the cost impact.

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The company, whose income derives from express parcels, goods, courier and logistics services, initiated a strategy during the height of the downturn to move away from domestic deliveries and to refocus on its core international air and road express business. The plan, which involved the closure of five service centres and 300 redundancies, enabled the company to turnaround from losses of €23 million in 2009.

Competition

As the company, whose ultimate parent company is Deutsche Post, has continuously recorded growth it downplays risks to the business. It suggests it is able to withstand any competition in the market, can cope with business interruptions, is not heavily exposed to exchange rate fluctuations, and it on top of its IT systems.

Staff costs for the company increased in 2016 by just over 1 per cent to €18.4 million, with wages and salaries making up the bulk of that cost at €15.1 million. The delivery company employed an average of 335 staff per month in the period, down by two staff members on the previous year.

“The business strategy for 2017 remains unchanged, which is to continue to focus on the core international air and road express market,” the directors wrote in their statement.

Peter Hamilton

Peter Hamilton

Peter Hamilton is a contributor to The Irish Times specialising in business