Top Glove Q1 profit surges more than 600% as costs fall

The glove maker reports a drop in operating expenses to RM842.9 million for the quarter

Shikhar Gupta
Published Wed, Dec 17, 2025 · 03:36 PM
    • Earnings per share stood at RM0.48, a 586% increase from the previous corresponding period’s RM0.07.
    • Earnings per share stood at RM0.48, a 586% increase from the previous corresponding period’s RM0.07. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

    [SINGAPORE] Malaysian glove maker Top Glove on Wednesday (Dec 17) reported a 605 per cent jump in net profit for the first quarter of its 2026 financial year, driven by higher plant utilisation and cost optimisations.

    Net profit weighed in at about RM38.6 million (S$12.2 million), dwarfing Q1 2025’s net profit of RM5.5 million. This came as operating expenses fell to RM842.9 million from RM882.2 million.

    Earnings per share stood at RM0.48, a 586 per cent increase from the previous corresponding period’s RM0.07.

    Top Glove suffered losses throughout the 2024 financial year and only reversed that trend in the first quarter FY2025. Its latest figures continued its FY2025 year momentum and restored earnings before interest, depreciation and amortisation margins to pre-pandemic levels.

    “Our vastly improved performance is testament to our unwavering focus on optimising quality and cost efficiency, while meeting our customers’ needs even as glove demand continues to recover steadily,” said Lim Cheong Guan, managing director of Top Glove.

    “We will keep pursuing strategic enhancement initiatives and are confident of maintaining our upward trajectory.”

    Sales volume rises, revenue dips

    The jump in net profit was despite a 0.3 per cent reduction in revenue to RM883.6 million from RM885.9 million. This was attributed to lower average selling prices, in line with declining raw material costs as well as the impact of a stronger ringgit versus the US dollar.

    Still, sales volume rose 17 per cent compared with the corresponding period in FY2025. This was largely propelled by returning glove demand and the group’s “ongoing strategic improvement initiatives”, said Top Glove.

    Higher plant utilisation also contributed to improved cost efficiency and economies of scale. This was further supported by “ongoing quality enhancement and cost optimisation measures”, on top of strategic marketing initiatives and organisational realignment efforts.

    “While raw material prices declined, Top Glove shared part of the cost savings with customers,” said the group. “Additionally, foreign exchange impacts were offset by lower raw material costs.”

    Looking ahead

    Top Glove said it will continue to hedge forward its US dollar requirements towards mitigating foreign exchange volatility risks, reflecting how the ringgit was the best performing Asian currency in the year to date.

    It added that prospects for the glove industry “remain promising” thanks to gloves’ essential utility in the healthcare sector. It expects glove demand to continue growing “across key geographies”, supported by steady replenishment cycles and new opportunities.

    To meet rising demand, Top Glove said it will continue to reactivate more production lines as lead times and utilisation increase.

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