Press Association

Press Association

Homepage

 
SIG is the latest firm in the construction sector to announce job losses

900 jobs to go at insulation firm

Insulation specialist SIG has become the latest firm in the construction sector to announce job losses after confirming it is axing 900 positions.

SIG is cutting 7% of its workforce and shutting 65 trading sites after warning that annual profits will be at the bottom end of market forecasts.

The announcement comes a day after building supplies firm Wolseley said it is cutting 2,000 UK jobs. Sheffield-based SIG said its UK and Ireland operation, which traded from 500 sites in the summer, would take the bulk of the cost-saving measures. It has a further 370 trading outlets in mainland Europe.

SIG said the measures, which should produce £25 million of annual cost savings in 2009, would realign resources to current and anticipated trading levels.

The company said: "It will be some time before the implications of the tighter liquidity and credit conditions now set to prevail well into 2009 become clear, but it is logical that these will not be without consequence for SIG's markets and customers."

SIG, which stands for Sheffield Insulations Group, opened its first branch in 1956 and listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1989.

The company said like-for-like sales for the UK and Ireland division were down 5.3% in the second half of the year to date, compared with growth of 3.3% in the first half of the year.

SIG said those parts of its operations most heavily exposed to residential construction and repair and maintenance had found trading increasingly challenging, with new housing most affected.

The notable exception has been its Miller Pattison business, which specialises in the fitting of insulation in existing dwellings and has continued to see strong sales.

Press Association news

  • More rail misery as wires come down

    Rail travellers face delays after overhead wires came down
    Rail passengers' journeys have been disrupted when overhead wires came down and stopped trains from moving, in the third railway incident in a week.
  • Skills plan 'won't help low-paid'

    Gordon Brown's plan to boost skills will not help the low-paid, a report warns.
    Gordon Brown's efforts to turn Britain into a high-skill, high-wage economy are failing and will come under further pressure as recession bites, a report has warned.
  • Tax allowance 'may rise to to £10,000'

    Gordon Brown is reportedly considering raising the tax-free allowance to £10,000
    Gordon Brown is considering raising the tax-free allowance to £10,000 as part of measures to help families struggling with the credit crunch, a close ally has claimed.