The past five years at Top Glove have followed the same dramatic boom-to-bust-to-recovery path that has defined the entire glove industry, and the accompanying numbers clearly trace every twist in that journey.
1. The Five‑Year Annual Performance (FY2021 to FY2025)
The data begins at the very peak of the pandemic boom. In FY2021, Top Glove’s revenue soared to an extraordinary RM16.36 billion, driven by a 326% surge as global demand for gloves exploded and average selling prices (ASPs) skyrocketed. Net profit hit RM7.71 billion, with a gross profit margin of 67.8% and a net margin of 47.1%. That was the high‑water mark.
As the world moved past the pandemic, the descent was sharp. Revenue collapsed by 66% to RM5.57 billion in FY2022 and then more than halved again to RM2.26 billion in FY2023 as the industry was flooded with excess supply and ASPs crashed to historic lows. The company swung from huge profits to a net loss of RM925 million in FY2023 – its first full‑year loss in many years.
FY2024 was a year of stabilisation at the bottom. Revenue recovered slightly to RM2.51 billion, but net losses narrowed dramatically to RM65 million. The company was adjusting to a new, lower‑demand reality, but the worst was clearly over.
FY2025 marked the long‑awaited turning point. Revenue jumped 39% year‑on‑year to RM3.49 billion, and the company returned to net profitability with a RM105 million net profit. The recovery was driven by a 55% surge in sales volume, especially a 150% jump in the critical U.S. market, while ASPs stabilised and management implemented tighter cost controls. The improvement was broad‑based: the EBITDA margin climbed back into double digits at 11.25%, and the Group posted its first annual dividend since 2021.
From a strategic perspective, the five‑year arc is a textbook case of how an entire industry can be transformed by an exogenous shock, then left to grapple with the aftermath. Top Glove has navigated the bust by aggressively cutting costs, decommissioning unprofitable lines, and focusing on regaining market share as demand normalises.
2. The Latest Five Quarters (Q3 FY2025 to Q2 FY2026)
The quarterly data provides a more granular view of the recovery, showing sustained momentum as the company enters FY2026.
In Q3 FY2025, revenue was RM830 million, with net profit of RM34.8 million. Although this was down sequentially from Q2, the year‑on‑year performance was solid: net profit reversed a loss of RM60 million in Q3 FY2024, driven by a 78% quarter‑on‑quarter improvement in core earnings. The improvement came despite a temporary dip in U.S. demand and intensified competition in Europe.
The recovery then accelerated sharply in Q1 FY2026. Net profit surged more than 600% year‑on‑year to RM38.6 million, with revenue holding steady at RM884 million. The standout driver was a 17% increase in sales volume, particularly in the U.S., while operating expenses fell from RM882 million to RM843 million, helping to expand margins. The company announced it would reactivate four factories that had been idled during the downturn, a clear vote of confidence in demand.
That positive momentum carried into Q2 FY2026. Revenue rose 14% year‑on‑year to RM1.01 billion, and net profit grew to RM30.8 million. Sales volume jumped 57% year‑on‑year and 23% quarter‑on‑quarter, underscoring the strengthening demand backdrop. For the first half of FY2026 as a whole, net profit nearly doubled to RM69.3 million from RM35.8 million in the same period a year earlier, while revenue increased 6.8% to RM1.89 billion.
However, the recovery is not without headwinds. The strengthening Malaysian ringgit – which climbed more than 10% against the U.S. dollar in 2025 – has squeezed the earnings of export‑reliant glove makers, including Top Glove, in the first quarter of 2026. Additionally, analysts have warned that the sector remains fragile, with persistent oversupply, competition from Chinese producers, and tariff uncertainties continuing to weigh on margins. Some research houses have cut their core net profit estimates for 2025–2027, though Top Glove’s FY2025 performance still came in above both internal and consensus expectations.
3. Industry Context and Outlook
The broader Malaysian rubber glove sector remains under pressure from an oversupply that is only slowly being absorbed. Even with an 80% tariff on Chinese imports, PublicInvest cautioned in mid‑2025 that oversupply, cautious customer sentiment, and intense price competition continue to stall recovery. Other analysts note that China‑led capacity additions – especially from a major producer expanding in Vietnam and Indonesia – will keep ASPs under pressure. CIMB Securities warned that Malaysian glove makers are still not “out of the woods,” with flat volumes and stagnant ASPs expected in the second half of 2025.
Nevertheless, there are reasons for cautious optimism. The industry is projected to see 12% demand growth in 2025 to 368 billion pieces, and Top Glove has already shown it can capture that growth. The company has guided to a 70% utilisation rate by the end of FY2025, and has a pipeline of efficiency improvements and new product launches that could support further margin expansion. Management has publicly said it expects a return to near pre‑pandemic performance by 2027, and the reactivation of four factories is a concrete step in that direction.
Conclusion
Top Glove’s financial performance over the past five years – from the giddy heights of the pandemic boom to the crushing lows of the industry bust and now to a sustained, though still cautious, recovery – mirrors the journey of the entire rubber glove sector. The company has demonstrated resilience by slashing costs, regaining market share, and returning to profitability. Quarterly results for the first half of FY2026 show that recovery is gathering pace, supported by surging sales volumes and operational discipline. However, persistent oversupply, currency pressures, and fierce price competition mean the path ahead is not without risks. Investors will be watching closely to see whether Top Glove can maintain its momentum and deliver on its ambitious long‑term targets.
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