MSA [MSA] recently said it has signed a non-binding letter of intent to sell its North America ballistic helmet business.
Terms of the deal and the potential purchaser’s name are not being disclosed. MSA expects to complete the transaction within the next 45 days.
The company has been considering the potential sale of this business for some time, said Joseph Bigler, president of MSA North America. “The decision to move in this direction came down to two factors: alignment with MSA’s long-term business strategy and pursuing a course of action that provides our associates who work on our North American ballistic helmet line the best opportunity for future success.”
MSA entered the ballistic helmet market in 2003 following the company’s 2002 acquisition of French helmet manufacturer CFG Gallet, and subsequent contract awards from the U.S. Army to produce Advanced Combat Helmets (ACH), the current standard of issue for the U.S. Army, the company said in a statement. The company currently manufactures ballistic helmets at its Newport, Vt., manufacturing plant, which employs approximately 40 people.
Over the past five years, MSA’s product strategy has increasingly focused on its core safety equipment product lines where the company has strong expertise, global R&D resources and vast market presence.
MSA’s core product focus emphasizes industrial head protection, respiratory protective equipment, fall protection products, portable gas detection instruments and sensors, and fixed gas- and flame-detection systems.
“The competitive landscape for ballistic helmets has undergone tremendous change over the past several years, with multiple suppliers now intensely competing with MSA for this business,” Bigler said. “Quite simply, the manufacture of ballistic helmets for North American customers has become an increasingly challenging business for MSA and this drove our decision to explore alternative strategies for the business.”