Status Report and Situation Analysis
January 5, 2004
The public shareholders of
Farmer Bros. Co. may be justifiably encouraged by some very meaningful
changes during the past year, but much more change will be needed before
shareholders can benefit from the reasonable value of their investments.
What’s been accomplished
Responding to shareholder
proposals, information demands and litigation, management has implemented or
committed to the following changes:
·
Communications: An investor relations firm was hired
and, breaking a fifty year tradition, management has been issuing public
statements and responding to press inquiries.
·
Independent board: The board was restructured, two
years ahead of regulatory deadlines, to require a majority of independent
directors and establish committees for key responsibilities.
·
Strategic options: The board engaged an investment
banking firm and has publicly committed itself to considering strategic
options in the best interests of shareholders, specifically including the
possible alternatives of “potential acquisitions, additional share
repurchases and extraordinary dividends.”
·
Stock split: The board stated its intent to implement
a 10-for-1 stock split, if and as permitted by shareholder approval of the
required increase in authorized shares.
·
End of family dispute: The potentially destabilizing
23% stock positions of dissident Crowe family members were acquired by the
corporation at a 20% discount to current market prices, reducing both
directly held and Farmer-controlled trust positions so that the relative
voting positions of Farmer family interests and public shareholders (now
without the unpredictable Crowe votes) will remain roughly equal.
These changes are a
significant, nonreversible departure from management’s past practices and
policies. For the first time in fifty years, management has not only
responded to its shareholders but has also taken steps to conduct Farmer
Bros. more like a publicly traded company. This is real progress.
Unfortunately, though, it is not enough.
What remains to
be done
The
recent responses of the company’s board of directors to asserted shareholder
interests appear to be more defensive than accommodating. Their
concessions, though meaningful, must be viewed in the context of board
actions such as the
proposal of a reincorporation plan which are clearly intended to
entrench and otherwise benefit management at the expense of public
shareholders. These conditions must be satisfactorily addressed to provide
shareholders with the fair value of their investment in Farmer Bros.:
·
Proposal for reincorporation: Management’s
proposed plan for reincorporation appears to be designed to entrench
management control and insulate them from any oversight or legal liability
for their conduct.
Particularly for Farmer Bros., this is clearly undesirable and the
implementation of such a plan would seriously impair shareholder value.
Stopping the plan will depend on timely SEC action to enforce its laws under
the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (“ICA”).
·
Fund management: The management of the company’s
investment funds, which continue to constitute more than half the corporate
assets and account for more than half the company’s income, does not meet
the standards of other funds or of federal regulations. To assure investors
that these funds will be properly managed, the company should conform with
accepted practices for the engagement of professionally qualified advisers
and for financial reporting.
·
Use of corporate funds for ESOP: The board recently
acted to give the ESOP another $31 million of corporate funds to buy control
of more voting stock, adding to the $24 million given in 2003 after
shareholders challenged management’s conduct. In the latest transaction,
management also gave their ESOP a 20% discount to the stock’s current
trading price, costing the company approximately $8 million. The use of
corporate funds to give the ESOP an 18% block of voting stock clearly
benefits management at the expense of public shareholders, and management
evidently knew that the transactions would violate securities laws
applicable to investment companies.
Shareholder interests, and possibly also the interests of employees whose
pensions have been burdened with more than $60 million debt and a
non-diversified stock investment, require a reversal of these transactions.
·
Tax benefits: By failing to register as an “investment
company” as permitted under the ICA, Farmer Bros. has been paying corporate
income taxes on investment earnings which otherwise could have been
distributed pre-tax to shareholders. Though the specific amounts of taxes
attributable to investment earnings cannot be determined from the company’s
financial statements, an indication of the amount involved can be found by
observing what was reported just for interest income, excluding the more
complicated earnings from dividends and net gains on derivatives or other
positions. The amount of interest income reported for the five years from
1999 to 2003 was $36.1 million. Applying the stated 35% statutory federal
tax rate suggests a $12.6 million cost associated with only the interest
income, and only for that five year period, resulting from management’s
failure to register as an investment company. Shareholder interests require
action to stop these unjustified tax payments, and to recover what has been
unnecessarily paid during the past decade.
·
Director responsibility to public shareholders: The
company’s existing board of directors does not appear to be responsive to
the interests of public shareholders. Correction of this condition will
require either a change in the composition of the board or the enlightenment
of its existing members.
These conditions, with the uncertainties of correcting them, are reflected
in the heavily discounted $315 trading range of a stock that many of its
shareholders believe should be valued well in excess of $400 per share.
Prospects for
value enhancement
The
value of your investment in Farmer Bros., more than for most companies, will
depend on how its corporate governance is defined.
Currently, in the absence of more effective oversight, investors cannot
confidently rely upon the company’s management to use corporate resources
for the benefit of public shareholders. The necessary improvement in
management oversight can come from three possible sources:
·
Shareholder litigation: Shareholders can initiate
legal actions such as the
class action recently commenced by Professor Rosenthal to protect
investor rights. Claims against directors, for example, could seek recovery
from them of the $60 million given to the ESOP, the $8 million discount on
the pricing of stock to the ESOP, and the income taxes that would not have
been paid by an ICA registered investment company during the past decade, as
well as other costs or value impairment for which they may be held
responsible. Perhaps more importantly, though, shareholder litigation could
result in a settlement or court order to establish more effective governance
conditions. In any event, demonstrating that shareholders are able and
willing to hold directors accountable should encourage more enlightened
board responses to investor interests.
·
SEC enforcement: The SEC could take action to enforce
ICA and other securities laws that would prevent management’s proceeding
with their proposed reincorporation plan. Based on management’s report of
the SEC’s existing concern about Farmer Bros. being an unregistered
investment company, it should be possible for the SEC to quickly consider
the regulatory implications of the
voting now scheduled for January 21st. The recent federal
court decision that nobody other than the SEC can enforce the relevant
regulations may also encourage their timely enforcement action.
·
Shareholder representation: If either shareholder or
SEC actions succeed in limiting the obstructions of entrenchment bylaws and
ESOP purchases of voting stock, the rights of Farmer Bros. shareholders to
vote and obtain information should be sufficient to stimulate responsive,
dutiful oversight by the independent directors who will in the future
constitute a majority of the company’s board.
In
summary, the value of your Farmer Bros. shares will depend on what the SEC
and shareholders themselves do to protect investor rights.
The
company’s management is not likely to revert to its past practices, but the
recent board actions do not encourage reliance on management’s understanding
of its duties to public investors. Effectively, in its use of corporate
funds and proposal of a reincorporation plan, management has asserted its
intent to pursue its own interests over those of the company’s
non-management shareholders. And, finally, unconstrained by oversight,
management is openly disregarding acknowledged shareholder and SEC concerns
about compliance with laws intended to protect investors. This must be
taken as a challenge.
GL – 1/5/04
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