The Playmobil plant in Onil invoices 12% less but maintains the profit in 2020
05/13/2021 -
ALICANTE. The Playmobil plant in Onil, where the German multinational has its Spanish subsidiary, completed a good year in the year that closed in March 2020, just in the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic, despite the fact that the previous Christmas had already been complicated by the general drop in sales. Playmobil Ibérica's annual accounts reflect a 12% drop in its business volume , which fell to 62.3 million euros (compared to 71.9 million the previous year).
However, the Spanish subsidiary of the multinational maintained a positive operating result and the financial operations carried out by the parent company allowed it to close the year prior to the pandemic with a profit of 2.5 million euros after taxes, with only a slight decline compared to the 3 million of the previous year. During the fiscal year closed in March 2020, in addition, Playmobil Ibérica made the majority of its workforce permanent (a year earlier it was only half): 33 men and 38 women, according to the accounts memory.
The Onil factory produces in Spain the well-known toys of the German brand, which has recovered its verve thanks to the licenses. Thus, Spirit and Ghostbusters products worked especially well , and the Onil-based firm decided last year to incorporate new licenses, such as Back to the Future or Heidi , which have also been well received. Despite everything, the weak 2019 Christmas campaign already impacted the accounts of the Alicante firm before the pandemic broke out, in the last two weeks of its fiscal year.
During the state of alarm, the company continued to operate normally in its production plant, at the entrance to Onil, but nevertheless applied an ERTE to the five employees of the own store that it manages in Madrid (the FunStore in the Plaza shopping center Norte, San Sebastián de los Reyes) and several members of his commercial team, who rejoined their positions with the end of the restrictions of this first stage. The 2020 accounts anticipate the possible impact of the pandemic in the current year, but do not quantify it.