Thursday,
January 13, 2005
Farmer
Bros. stock soars
Speculation that
the company will be sold leads to a price increase following suicide of
the CEO.
By Muhammed El-Hasan
Daily Breeze
In the three days
since Torrance coffee roaster Farmer Bros. Co. announced the death of its
chairman, CEO and president, the company's stock price has spiked nearly
30 percent on heavy trading.
The price increase
was driven by speculation that the company will be sold, and a general
uncertainty about who will control the Farmer family's giant stake in the
company they founded in 1912.
"I think the market's
reacting as if they're expecting a sale of the company," said Gregory E.
Bylinsky, managing director of Lime Capital Management, which has a stake
in the coffee company. "When interest in the family business is spread out
over many generations, not everybody may have an interest in running it."
Roy E. Farmer, 52,
who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound Friday morning in his
Huntington Beach house, had no children, was unmarried and lived alone. He
is survived by his mother, brother, two sisters and several nieces and
nephews.
Farmer was the
trustee of Farmer family trusts. The trusts and the personal holdings of
his late father, who died in March 2004, accounted for about a 39 percent
stake in the company, according to a company press release from February
2004.
It's unclear who
inherited his father's holdings last year. And it's unclear who would
become trustee of the family trusts.
Previously, the
family trusts' shares had voted with the company's management since Farmer
-- and his father before him -- controlled those stocks. It's now unclear
whether that will continue, Bylinsky said.
None of the Farmer
family members occupy a senior management position at the company.
"Any discussion about
the future direction that may be taken, given this early stage, can only
be considered as pure speculation," said Farmer Bros. spokesman Jim Lucas.
When asked about the
family trusts' new trustee, Lucas said, "That's a private matter."
For the past few
years, a group of dissident investors has complained about the company's
direction. Farmer Bros. has seen declining profits for the past
12 quarters. Some investors have called for the company's sale.
"I'm surprised it's
moved up to this level in such a short period of time because there's no
signal that there's going to be any major change in the short term," Jack
Norberg, chairman of Standard Investment Chartered in Costa Mesa, said of
the stock price.
One possible scenario
for the company's future involves senior management buying out the Farmer
family, Norberg said.
Another possible
scenario involves an outside buyout, possibly from a company in the food
industry such as Houston-based Sysco Corp., Bylinsky said.
"I can't see how it
will be resolved without the sale of the company," Bylinsky said. "I think
it's definitely a takeover target."
"It just seems
premature to speculate on anything," said Bradley Takahashi, vice
president of Franklin Mutual Advisers, the largest outside investor.
Gary Lutin, who runs
an investor forum that has criticized the company's management, said
Farmer's death will not affect the "path we were already taking, that is
to explore strategic alternatives," such as a sale.
Franklin Mutual
Advisers was the investor forum's initial sponsor when it began in 2002. A
possible scenario that may disappoint some shareholders is if a buyer
seeking company control buys only the Farmer family's shares, and not
those of other investors.
"The one problem that
you have to analyze here is that even if there was a buyer, this is not
necessarily anything more than just a control position," Norberg said.
Farmer Bros.' stock
price rose $1.35 on Wednesday, up 4.91 percent for the day and up 28.23
percent since Friday's close. The shares are traded on Nasdaq.
Find
this article at:
http://www.dailybreeze.com/business/articles/1345666.html
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