Volati AB
F:VOG
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Volati AB
F:VOG
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Volati AB
Volati AB is a Swedish industrial group that owns and develops a portfolio of niche businesses. Through its subsidiaries, it sells products and services in areas such as trade, consumer goods, and industrial parts and equipment. The group is built around established local businesses rather than one single brand or product line. Its customers are mainly companies and organizations that need specialized products for construction, infrastructure, manufacturing, retail, and everyday consumer use. Volati makes money by selling physical goods, often through distributors, wholesalers, and direct business-to-business channels. Some of its businesses also earn fees from related services such as installation, technical support, or maintenance. What sets Volati apart is that it acts as a long-term owner of smaller, focused businesses instead of a traditional centralized manufacturer. It buys companies with strong market positions in narrow niches, lets them keep their local expertise, and helps them grow under the group’s ownership. For investors, that makes Volati less like a single-product company and more like a builder of specialized businesses with recurring customer needs.
Volati AB is a Swedish industrial group that owns and develops a portfolio of niche businesses. Through its subsidiaries, it sells products and services in areas such as trade, consumer goods, and industrial parts and equipment. The group is built around established local businesses rather than one single brand or product line.
Its customers are mainly companies and organizations that need specialized products for construction, infrastructure, manufacturing, retail, and everyday consumer use. Volati makes money by selling physical goods, often through distributors, wholesalers, and direct business-to-business channels. Some of its businesses also earn fees from related services such as installation, technical support, or maintenance.
What sets Volati apart is that it acts as a long-term owner of smaller, focused businesses instead of a traditional centralized manufacturer. It buys companies with strong market positions in narrow niches, lets them keep their local expertise, and helps them grow under the group’s ownership. For investors, that makes Volati less like a single-product company and more like a builder of specialized businesses with recurring customer needs.
Salix drives growth: Volati said Q1 net sales rose 3%, while EBITDA was 3% below last year because of costs tied to the planned separate listing of Salix Group and a seasonally softer quarter.
Adjusted result: Excluding those extraordinary listing costs, EBITDA would have been up 4% year over year.
Salix strength: Salix Group posted another very strong quarter, with 37% EBITDA growth and 3% organic sales growth, helped by better demand, pricing, and mix.
Portfolio split: From this quarter, Salix is reported as discontinued operations, and Volati’s remaining five platforms are now shown separately in segment reporting.
Acquisition pace: Volati completed 2 acquisitions so far this year, adding roughly SEK 930 million of annual turnover, and said it still has room to keep acquiring despite leverage being near the top of its target range.
Outlook and costs: Management said cost measures are being taken in weaker businesses like S:t Eriks and Tornum, with effects expected gradually over the next 6 to 9 months.
Spin-off progress: The separate listing of Salix remains on track and depends on the AGM decision later the same day; management also expects more IPO-related costs in the next quarter if approved.