Being an exporting manufacturing company involves a lot of risk and toil, but it becomes rewarding when the business can now be seen as a foreign exchange earner.
The Sunday Business Guardian spoke to several big exporters about their journey to becoming foreign exchange earners at the T&T Manufacturers’ Association (TTMA) awards dinner last Tuesday.
Nicholas Lok Jack, chairman of Associated Brands Industries Ltd (ABIL), said from the early years of existence, the founder of the group, his father Arthur, saw the opportunity and importance of the export market and became foreign exchange earners a short while after.
ABIL manufactures chocolates, biscuits, and cereals. It celebrated its 50th anniversary years earlier this month and is in several regional and international markets.
Lok Jack said exporting may sound nice and sexy, but it is a tough road.
“It is traveling all over into different places where you don’t know the language or the geographies. Sometimes, like right now, we are making a heavy push into Latin America.”
However, the businessman noted that being a net foreign exchange earner does not mean the company will always be flush with forex.
“It means that there are cyclical times in our business. Sometimes you have cash, sometimes you don’t. But in the main, we have enough to cover our raw material supplies. Our sales are probably 67 per cent export at this stage.
“Sometimes we sell back into the market. I think that we are contributing better to the economy because we are selling foreign exchange back. We continue to press hard against our export markets.”
Lol Jack highlighted that a trip is scheduled to Taiwan for next year to explore opportunities in that market.
Asked about Finance Minister Colm Imbert’s statement last Sunday during a blogger live that while manufacturing is playing its role in ramping up exports it still has a long way to go, the executive said he agreed with the statements.
“An economy of our size, an energy-based economy, it’s such a dominant factor that you can’t stop the diversification process either. We have to take a long-term view and make sure our manufacturers are well-facilitated,” he mentioned.
On whether the manufacturing sector can become the main foreign exchange earner as opposed to T&T depending on oil and gas, Lok Jack said “I believe there’s no silver bullet. We have to build all the different aspects of foreign exchange to a capacity. The country’s tourism products need to be looked at. How do we encourage investment in tourism?”
Looking at House of Angostura and how its legacy started in the export business, the company’s chief operating officer, Ian Forbes said the rum and bitters manufacturer, which has been in existence for 200 years, started exporting its products from early as the founders saw the volumes being created were beyond what T&T needed.
Forbes noted that the company exports bitters to up to 170 markets and rums which are in 60 markets.
“There’s the opportunity to grow that further because while we have done a lot with bitters, there is still so much more we can do with rum. The rum market globally, especially the market for premium rums, and aged rums, is massive. It’s worth billions of US dollars.”
Asked how much of Angostura’s revenue comes from exports, Forbes said 40 per cent.
Giving advice to upcoming export manufacturers, Forbes said the first thing is the company must be confident and focus on its strategy to penetrate new markets.
“We need to be confident about what we can create. We can create solid brands. You’re seeing it in the marketplace, you’re seeing it in the supermarkets,” he added.
Angostura received the 2023 Innovator of the Year at the TTMA function.
The winner of the 2023 small business prize at the TTMA function was Christle Ltd, a company whose manufactures include household cleaning products.
Christle deputy managing director Jonathan Garcia said the chemical company started exporting over a year and a half ago, as a result of the forex crunch.
“We needed it so badly to purchase the raw materials on the outside. Special mention to Eximbank that assists us, but we also need much more,” Garcia said.
He pointed out that exporting is not easy as there are delays to deal with.
Further, he said the company is in ten regional countries, and penetrating international markets is a priority for 2025.
Data sent by the Ministry of Trade and Industry to Sunday Business Guardian said exports from the manufacturing sector have demonstrated remarkable performance accounting for over 90 per cent of total non-energy exports annually over the last five years (2019-2023).
The ministry said to quantify this, between 2019 and 2023, over $72.4 billion worth of T&T’s non-energy products were exported with $68.8 billion generated from the non-energy manufacturing sector alone.