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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Seafood firms see cost of living bite as sales soften slightly

Northcoast and Flatfish file results for 2022

Goujons produced by Flatfish. (Image: Grimsby Telegraph)

Two Grimsby seafood operations in separate Japanese ownership saw sales slow slightly as the cost of living crisis bit.

Both Northcoast Seafoods Ltd and Flatfish are now under Far East control, with the former’s buy-out completing in the past year. Both have filed their results for the calendar-aligned periods this past week.

Seafood Connection Holdings BV, a subsidiary of Maruha Nichiro, bought Northcoast from founder Fridrik Thorsteinsson, while Flatfish, with founding chief executive Steven Stansfield remaining at the helm, sold a 75 per cent controlling interest to Nissui in 2019.

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At Northcoast, on South Humberside Industrial Estate, turnover was down 2.7 per cent from £121.4 million to £118.1 million, reflecting “global market trading conditions due to the impact of coronavirus, the war in the Ukraine and increased inflation costs”. Pre-tax profits were, however, up from £2.3 million to £3.5 million.

“The first three quarters of the year were adversely impacted by high logistics costs due to both coronavirus and the Ukrainian war, however these started to decline quickly in quarter four which will be welcome news for 2023,” managing director Adrian Crookes said in the strategic report accompanying the results. “The Ukrainian war also had an adverse impact on global raw material costs as customers and consumers moved away from Russian sourced raw materials. Northcoast Seafoods continues, as always, to adapt quickly to challenging trading conditions.”

Highs of £148 million had been seen in 2020, but the business sold a Danish subsidiary, with º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sales now at a higher level than recorded then. Launched almost a quarter of a century ago by Mr Thorsteinsson, initially to trade in Atlantic prawns, it swooped for Stallingborough-based Ambassador Seafoods, before setting up a new base on Estate Road One, yards from Hilton Seafood and what will become Espersen, the former Iceland Seafood º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and Five Star Fish operation.

Mr Thorsteinsson was diagnosed with a rare brain condition in 2021, leading to last year's sale. Staff numbers were up from 137 to 141 in the period.