
Ellies bets big on home solar as it eyes turnaround
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Ellies Holdings is a 41-year-old JSE-listed company whose products, from television aerials to electrical cables and LED lighting, are well known to most South Africans.
What many people don't know is the company has been through enormous difficulty in recent years -- to the extent that its auditors raised a red flag around its 2020 annual financial results, saying there were "material concerns" about its ability to continue as a going concern.
But recently appointed CEO Shaun Prithivirajh said the big pain is already behind Ellies and he, and his management team, are focused on future growth opportunities after a big clean-up of the business last year.
Though the share price is still languishing at just 6c (from a peak of about R10 in 2013), Prithivirajh is convinced better days are ahead.
One of the key focus areas for Ellies is a planned launch, in the next six weeks, of solutions that will take it into the home solar market.
With a network of 3 500 installers who can be trained to help Ellies go to market with its solar solutions, and a South African household sector keen find to solutions to Eskom's ongoing power cuts, Prithivirajh believes this will prove to be a key pillar of the business in future.
Listen to the interview to find out more about Ellies' plans in this regard as well as the work that has done to clean up the legacy problems that have bedevilled the company.
What many people don't know is the company has been through enormous difficulty in recent years -- to the extent that its auditors raised a red flag around its 2020 annual financial results, saying there were "material concerns" about its ability to continue as a going concern.
But recently appointed CEO Shaun Prithivirajh said the big pain is already behind Ellies and he, and his management team, are focused on future growth opportunities after a big clean-up of the business last year.
Though the share price is still languishing at just 6c (from a peak of about R10 in 2013), Prithivirajh is convinced better days are ahead.
One of the key focus areas for Ellies is a planned launch, in the next six weeks, of solutions that will take it into the home solar market.
With a network of 3 500 installers who can be trained to help Ellies go to market with its solar solutions, and a South African household sector keen find to solutions to Eskom's ongoing power cuts, Prithivirajh believes this will prove to be a key pillar of the business in future.
Listen to the interview to find out more about Ellies' plans in this regard as well as the work that has done to clean up the legacy problems that have bedevilled the company.