ME Group

Vending machine operator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ME Group International plc, formerly Photo-Me International plc, (LSE: MEGP) based in Epsom, Surrey is a vending machine operator. The company is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.[2]

IndustryVending
Founded1946
Quick facts Company type, Traded as ...
ME Group International plc
Company typePublic limited company
LSE: MEGP
IndustryVending
Founded1946
HeadquartersEpsom, Surrey, England
Key people
Sir John Lewis (Chairman)
Serge Crasnianski, (CEO)
RevenueIncrease £307.9 million (2024)[1]
Increase £74.4 million (2024)[1]
Increase £54.1 million (2024)[1]
Total assetsDecrease £312.6 million (2024)[1]
Total equityIncrease £179.9 million (2024)[1]
Websiteme-group.com
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History

Photo-Me equipment in CastleCourt, Belfast, Northern Ireland

The company has its origins in a compact photograph developing process discovered by Gupp Allen and Ignatius Dunlap Baker in California in 1946.[3] They brought the process to the UK as a business named "Photo-Me" in 1952 and the company was first listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1962.[4]

Serge Crasnianski became chief executive in 1998 and, under his leadership, the company saw a significant increase in its share price as investors were led to believe that photo booths would ultimately provide internet services on the go.[5]

Three directors caused the company embarrassment in February 2007, when they cashed out their share options shortly before the company issued a profit warning: the Financial Services Authority subsequently fined the company £500,000 for not informing the markets in a timely manner.[6] In September 2007, a shareholder revolt over plans to sell off the vending division forced Serge Crasnianski and Vernon Sankey to resign.[7]

Serge Crasnianski was reappointed to the board as a non-executive director in May 2009. He was re-appointed chief executive in May 2010 and immediately implemented the disposal of the company's loss-making wholesale photo-processing labs business.[8]

Revolution Laundry/Wash.ME self-service laundry

In November 2016, the company announced that the company had bought the photo division of Asda stores, taking over the supermarket's 191 photo centres and 172 self-service kiosks,[9] and, in December 2019, the company diversified into the laundry business, with a division called "Revolution" providing 24/7 outdoor self-service launderettes.[10]

The company was criticised in the satirical magazine, Private Eye, after it was disclosed that its chairman, John Lewis, had donated approximately £390,000 to the Conservative Party before being appointed a Knight Bachelor in the 2019 New Year Honours.[11]

The company changed its name from Photo-Me to ME Group in August 2022 to reflect its reduced dependence on the photo booth business.[12]

References

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