PPG Layoffs
Fore Note: Back in
May, PPG Paints, announced they would be building a
facility in Loudon in the Center 75 Business park.
Currently, the Loudon Utilities Board is looking to
build a new multi-million dollar power substation to
provide power for the new plant. Back in October, PPG
announced the layoff of 1,800 employees and other cuts
to their businesses. LUB may want to get some assurances
from PPG before they invest millions in a new
substation.
PPG Will Lay off 1,800 Employees as Paints and Coatings Maker Aims to Cut Costs PPG Industries plans to lay off about 1,800 employees amid efforts to cut costs, with the paints and coatings maker also inking a deal to sell a sizeable chunk of its architectural business NEW YORK (AP) — PPG Industries plans to lay off about 1,800 employees amid efforts to cut costs, with the paints and coatings maker also inking a deal to sell a sizeable chunk of its architectural business.
Pittsburgh-based PPG said
Thursday that the job cuts would primarily
impact positions in the U.S. and Europe. The
timing of the layoffs was not immediately
disclosed, but the company said the cuts were
part of a larger multiyear program aimed at
reducing structural worldwide — noting that this
will also include “various facility closures,"
without specifying further.
“While these
decisions are difficult, they are necessary to
adjust our fixed cost base and to right-size our
company,” Tim Knavish, PPG chairman and CEO,
said in a prepared statement — pointing to two
recently-announced business divestitures.
Also on Thursday, PPG announced that it had
agreed to sell all of its U.S. and Canadian
architectural coatings business — which
houses brands like Liquid Nails, Glidden and
Olympic and made up $2 billion in net sales
for PPG last year — to private equity firm
American Industrial Partners. The sale,
expected to close in late 2024 or early
2025, is valued at $550 million. And in
August, PPG agreed to sell its silicas
products business to Poland-based QEMETICA
S.A. for about $310 million. That
transaction is also still pending.
Thursday's announcement
of layoffs and its latest business
divestiture arrives shortly after a
disappointing earnings report for PPG.
The company on Wednesday reported
third-quarter net income of $468
million, or $2.13 per share, on revenue
of $4.58 billion. Results fell short of
Wall Street expectations.
PPG's recent cuts also arrive amid an environment of poor home sales. Existing U.S. home sales slipped 2.5% in August, the latest month with data available, as prices increased on an annual basis for the 14th consecutive month. And the average rate on a 30-year mortgage surged to 6.32% last week, although that's still well below 2024's peak of 7.22% in May. Both PPG and AIP struck an optimistic note about Thursday's agreement. Rick Hoffman, partner at AIP, said that the firm was “thrilled to be acquiring a storied business with a heritage dating back 125 years.” And Knavish said such divestitures “further optimize” PPG's portfolio by aiding growth in the company's strongest areas.
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12/2/24