How Packages’ ill-fated South African adventure led to billions in losses

The company saw its investment in South Africa turn to dust. What were the reasons?

When new ownership came to Flexible Packages Convertors in 2015, the change barely registered beyond the South African packaging industry. The buyer, after all, was a company few in the region had heard of. Packages Limited has always been the towering giant of Pakistan’s corporate landscape and its owner, Syed Babar Ali, the country’s most well-known business personality. 

Founded in 1957 the company has become a household name and their product portfolio, mostly packaging solutions, has grown and spread all over Pakistan. It is also the company that became a major reason behind the creation of the Lahore University of Management Sciences, the country’s foremost business school. For decades Packages has been a benchmark. It has been a rare example of a clean, well-run, company that has grown and done so with gusto.

Its acquisition of Flexible Packages Convertors, however, marked something new. This was not just an investment; it was an attempt to push beyond borders and establish itself as a multinational player. But even with decades of experience behind it, the move to South Africa meant entering uncharted territory—and, for all its prestige back home, Packages still had a lot to prove over in Pretoria.

 

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Zain Naeem
Zain Naeem
Zain is a business journalist at Profit, and can be reached at [email protected]

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