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Subject: 
LEGO to Boost Capacity at Mexican Factory
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lugnet.mediawatch, lugnet.general, lugnet.lego
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Mon, 23 Jun 2014 17:40:25 GMT
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From WJT.com. June. 20, 2014.

LEGO to Boost Capacity at Mexican Factory

Danish Toy Maker to Increase Head Count by 50% in Move to Serve North and South American Markets

By Clemens Bomsdorf

COPENHAGEN—Lego A/S, the world’s No. 2 toy maker by revenue, is planning a 50% increase in head count at its factory in Mexico to meet demand for its popular interlocking brick toys in North and South America.

The Danish company, which has enjoyed significant momentum in recent years, saw its sales growth moderate in 2013 amid challenging conditions for traditional toy makers around the world. Chief Executive Jørgen Vig Knudstorp has been shifting focus toward emerging markets, such as China, where it has not yet scored the sales success notched in places like the U.S.

The investment in Mexico, however, signals continued optimism about Lego’s prospects in the lucrative U.S. market. An additional 1,000 people will be hired to work in a factory that employs 2,000 and it will “significantly” boost production capacity for the Americas markets, the company said.

LEGO spokesman Roar Rude Trangbaek didn’t give details on total output or future expectations. The extra capacity at the plant north of Monterrey will be in place in September, he said.

“When planning expansions we want to secure that factories’ capacities can meet demand in the longer run, meaning capacity is not necessarily utilized fully straight away,” he said, adding that the same strategy is in place for other expansions, such as into China, where a factory is envisioned by 2017.

Mr. Rude said LEGO is moving toward a manufacturing strategy of building toys close to where they are sold. “Our setup is built in a way that the Americas shall be served from the Mexico factory and production sites in Asia and Europe serve those markets.”

The U.S. is LEGO biggest market, but the company doesn’t disclose detailed sales figures by country. The company, which had revenue of about $4.6 billion last year, is second only to Mattel Inc. in global toy sales.

Mr. Knudstorp in a recent interview said LEGO quadrupled its business just in the U.S. market over the past several years, and the company’s success has stood out in an otherwise struggling industry. “We have done so by not focusing on the competition,” he said, noting that while the U.S. toy market has declined by 9%, without LEGO the decline would have been 16%.

LEGO recorded a 9% rise in profit last year on 10% revenue growth. In 2012, its profit rose 35% while revenue grew 23%.

From: wsj.com

-end of report-



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