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Shareholder Interests for Board Consideration in Planning Annual Meeting

(November 21, 2002)

Copied below is the text of a letter sent on November 21, 2002 to all of the directors of Farmer Bros., summarizing observations of shareholder interests and suggested responses for the board's consideration in planning the company's annual meeting.

 

[letterhead]

LUTIN & COMPANY

575 Madison Avenue

New York, New York 10022

Telephone (212) 605-0335

Facsimile (212) 605-0325

 

                                                                          November 21, 2002

 

 

By telecopier: 310/320-2436

 

Messrs. John M. Anglin,

Guenter W. Berger,

Lewis A. Coffman,

Roy E. Farmer,

Roy F. Farmer, and

John H. Merrell

c/o Farmer Bros. Co.

20333 South Normandie Avenue

Torrance, California 90502

 

 

To the members of the board of directors of Farmer Bros. Co.:

 

            Assuming the recent SEC response to your arguments about shareholder proposals leaves no other reason to postpone the annual meeting, this letter is intended to summarize certain investor interests for your consideration in planning the meeting's agenda.

 

            First, offering my observations as adviser to the "Forum" for Farmer Bros. shareholders, investors may reasonably view some of management's recent conduct as follows:

 

     •      Use of shareholder assets:  While management certified in September that it continues to assume an 8% expected return on pension assets ‑‑ and uses that 8% assumption as the basis for its accounting of pension assets and expenses in the audited financial statements signed by directors -- the company simultaneously invested $234 million of its shareholders' assets in low‑yield US government securities, reducing the interest return on the non‑equity portion of the corporate investment portfolio to a 1.73% annual rate during the last quarter.  (The preferred stock portion of the portfolio continued to generate a respectable dividend return in the 7% range.)  Management has offered no explanation for this dramatic reallocation of 79% of the company's $295 million investment funds.  While there may be some unrevealed business reason for this new investment policy, investors familiar with regulatory issues may be concerned that the change in the portfolio's proportion of US government securities could be intended to meet a ratio test that would provide management with an arguable basis for their continued opposition to the reporting and oversight requirements of the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("ICA").  In any event, the difference between returns of 8% and 2% on $234 million, without further accumulations, would cost shareholders $14 million annually.

 

     •      Shareholder voting rights:  Management has recently spent significant amounts of the shareholders' money and management resources in an effort to prevent shareholders from exercising their rights to vote on two proposals.  Both proposals would have subjected management to increased oversight.  Management succeeded in getting SEC staff concurrence to block voting on the proposal to establish an independent board this year based on a questionable claim that its provisions could not be legally implemented, even though the company will have to adopt essentially the same independent board provisions within a year or two to comply with new laws and Nasdaq listing requirements.  Management also argued, unsuccessfully, to block shareholder voting on a separate proposal to manage the company's investment funds in compliance with the disclosure and management controls applicable to other fund managers, based on reasons that included a troubling claim that registration under the ICA could subject the company to enforcement relating to current violations of law.

 

     •      Disclosures of information relevant to investors:  Management has continued to defer its legally required response to a major shareholder's July 26, 2002 demand for information that investment companies are obligated to report publicly under SEC regulations.  Even though the company is managing a $295 million fund, representing 70% of total corporate assets, investors cannot obtain the information routinely provided by other fund managers about specific investments, administrative expenses, or even who is responsible for managing the investments.  More generally, management does not report sufficient information about any of its business operations to permit effective evaluation or monitoring, and its executive officers consistently refuse to respond to normal investor and journalist inquiries.

 

            In this context, it is suggested that you consider taking the following or similar actions to assure investors that the current directors of Farmer Bros. can be relied upon to address shareholder interests:

 

1.         Include the Mitchell Partners proposal for an independent board in the proxy statement to allow a shareholder vote on it, even though the SEC staff said they will not initiate an enforcement action if you exclude it.

 

            Or, alternatively, take actions yourselves to nominate a majority of independent directors for election at this year's annual meeting, rather than wait until next year to comply with new laws and Nasdaq listing requirements.

 

2.         In a public SEC filing, report the information about investments and management that is required for funds subject to the ICA.

 

3.         Establish a separate entity to manage the company's investment funds in compliance with the ICA, allowing the coffee processing and distribution operations to be managed independently of the investment fund structure.

 

4.         Commit to the engagement of professionally qualified advisers for an examination of corporate restructuring and strategic alternatives.

 

            Please let me know if you have any questions about these or other shareholder interests.  As previously stated, your participation in Forum communications will always be welcomed.

 

 

                                                                          Very truly yours,

 

 

 

 

                                                                          Gary Lutin

 

 

The Forum is open to all Farmer Bros. shareholders, whether institutional or individual, and to professionals concerned with their investment decisions.  Its purpose is to provide shareholders with access to information and a free exchange of views on issues relating to their evaluations of alternatives.  As stated in the Forum's Conditions of Participation, participants are expected to make independent use of information obtained through the Forum, subject to the privacy rights of other participants.  It is a Forum rule that participants will not be identified or quoted without their explicit permission.

There is no charge for participation.  Franklin Mutual Advisers, LLC, the manager of funds owning approximately 12.6% of Farmer Bros. shares, provided initial sponsorship for the Forum and arranged for it to be chaired by Gary Lutin.  Continuing support and guidance of the Forum is provided by an Advisory Panel of actively interested shareholders.

For additional information or to be included in an email distribution list, send an inquiry to farm@shareholderforum.com.