Tag: Seur

Seur to invest EUR 40.5 million in new facilities in Barcelona

Seur invests in Barcelona Spanish express company Seur, partly owned by France’s GeoPost (La Poste), is to invest EUR 40.5 million in new facilities in Barcelona to further upgrade its infrastructure.

The new 16,400 sqm facility, which is one of the ten hubs of the Seur network in the Iberian Peninsula, is divided into a 8,400 sqm cross docking bay and the 8,000 sqm Seur franchise Barcino.

The new loading platform incorporates the latest technologies which include a double conveyor worth EUR 6 million with a capacity to sort up to 14,000 parcels per hour.
Furthermore, the goods are controlled by means of a barcode reading system which transfers real-time information according to the position of each parcel.

The Seur franchise Barcino is located next to the hub and is one of the 85 franchises of the Seur network, which has invested EUR 11.5 million of the total EUR 40.5 million in its new facilities. With an extension of 7,994 qm the franchise Barcino employs a workforce of 290 professionals to ensure the best service possible. Barcino has generated a turnover of EUR 32 million in 2006.

Manuell Valle, Seur CEO, pointed out during the inauguration the importance of the new facility for the company. “The new platform is a reference of modernity and is well situated in terms of land, sea and air. These conditions are suitable to enhance the service quality for thousands of customers and follow the path of continuous improvement after the inaugurations of the Seur franchise in Sevilla and the franchise and hub of Lisbon.”

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CPL – Spanish CEP operators seek to add value in changing market

The Spanish courier and parcels market faces vital new challenges over the next few years as margins shrink, the integrators strengthen their market share and a raft of new employment legislation is introduced.

This was the clear message sent out by leading representatives of the Spanish industry when they spoke to delegates at yesterday’s final session of the Courier and Parcels Logistics Summit in Barcelona.

Growth in the courier segment had averaged about 14 pct between 1997 and 2001, but this had fallen to 8.8 pct between 2002 and 2006 in a market “very close to maturity”. Now operators had to increase added value to the client in the face of falling margins, adjusting their prices, improving quality and offering a wider range of services, Boronat explained.

Fernando Rodríguez Sousa, president of the Spanish Association of Couriers, Aecaf, said the country’s EUR 7 billion parcels market was heading for serious consolidation. “Although there are nearly 5,500 registered courier companies, 57 pct of the market is shared by 10 of them and consolidation will continue to increase,” Sousa said. “The challenge is to improve the management model in a more competitive market with pressure on margins.”

Four new laws coming into force over the next couple of years would have a deep impact on the industry, Sousa said. This involved new regulations governing self-employed workers, adoption of a working time directive, legislation concerning contracts in the transport sector and a new law affecting professional driving licences. This was forcing the industry to revise pick-up and delivery models, he said.

Carlos Rosa Maureta, international unit director with Correos, said postal networks across Europe and the world were growing fast. The E-Parcel Group (EPG), for distribution in the EU, increased the volume of items it carried in 2006 by 18 pct and has grown from nine European postal operators to 21 over the past decade. Similarly, the Kahala Postal Group (KPG), for delivery between the US, Asia and Europe, which Correos joined last year, now covered 31 pct of the world population.

Yves Delmas, CEO of leading parcels carrier Seur GeoPost said the French-Spanish venture was developing successfully in the changing market due to a series of factors. The company was gradually purchasing Seur franchises (it now has eight) across the country, but was keeping on staff and giving them a vested interest in the success of the new joint business. “And we have time,” said Delmas. “There is no calendar for the buying up of the franchises.” Seur-GeoPost was achieving double-digit profit growth through exclusive focus on parcels and flexibility. “We are an interfacer, not an integrator,” Delmas added.

Soledad Santiago, commercial vice-president for Iberia Cargo, said Madrid’s Barajas airport was proving Europe’s express gateway to Latin America. Iberia Cargo’s IBExpress service, used by other couriers, was constantly beating records and could now deliver packages and documents in well under 24 hours to most destinations in South and Central America due to the daily or greater frequency of flights between the two continents. “Direct connections also means minimizing the risks of excessive handling,” she pointed out.

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Spain's Seur to invest EUR 270 million by 2010

Seur, partly owned by France’s GeoPost (La Poste), is to invest EUR 270 million in new technology and a new corporate image over the next three years.

President Manuel Valle told the Cinco Días business newspaper in Spain that the company’s vehicles, franchises, uniforms would be given a brand new look; over EUR 70 million would be invested in IT systems and another EUR 50 million improving mail technology.

Seur would grow by about 10 pct this year, said Valle, having had a strong first four months of the year (EUR 200 million of revenues from January to end April). “The image we want to create is one that is modern and trustworthy. And technology is one of the pillars of our business,” he is quoted as saying by the newspaper.

Seur has 85 franchises in Spain and 300 other sales points.

Earlier this year, GeoPost, La Poste’s international express subsidiary, raised its stake in Spain’s Seur group to almost 20 pct through their joint venture, Seur-GeoPost, buying Seur’s Santander franchise. It owns 60 pct of the joint venture.

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Seurs’s sales increased to EUR 619 million in 2006

Seur’s sales rose to EUR 619 million in 2006, up nearly 8% on 2005. After a strong first four months of this year – EUR 200 million of revenues from January to the end of April – the company predicted 10% growth in 2007.

The international activity raised 7.6 pct and represented EUR 47 million sales. The company expects to increase the international sector based in the partnership with the French company Geopost.

The company, the main rival to national public postal operator Correos, employs 8,600 people and has more than 4,200 vehicles. Last year, it completed a record 46 million deliveries.

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GeoPost raises stake in Seur to 19.6%

La Poste’s international express subsidiary GeoPost has raised its stake in Spain’s Seur group through their joint venture, Seur-GeoPost, buying Seur’s Santander franchise.

The acquisition of Seur Santander, which turned over EUR 7 million last year and employs 83 staff, is the seventh franchise bought by Seur-GeoPost, the company 60% owned by GeoPost. According to Seur, quoted in the El País newspaper, the joint venture’s purchase of the Santander operation consolidated the alliance between the two groups and represented a reinforcement of the development of Seur in the Cantabrian region of Spain.

Seur, with turnover of EUR 574 million in 2005, is one of the leading express companies in Spain, where the market is growing at about 8% a year and is currently worth some EUR 6.6 billion in revenues.

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