Let investors in acquiring firms have a say

The minority shareholders of the target firm enjoy favourable exit options while their counterparts do not

As mergers go, there couldn’t have been a more perfect ‘made in corporate heaven’ match than the one between multinationals Monsanto and Bayer that has recently been announced.

The former is primarily known for its genetically modified seeds (Bt Cotton) business while the latter is into crop protection chemicals. In other words, the combined entity would be telling the farming community that if their seeds don’t kill germs, their pesticides surely will.

In Bayer’s case, it also has the added advantage of being in the pharmaceuticals business as well. So then, that would take the concept of hedging against business risks altogether to a new and higher level.

Look at it this way. If the output of genetically modified seeds and plants doused in weed-killing chemicals can harm a consumer in any way, they have the capacity to complete the loop by coming up with the perfect medicine for his quick recovery back to health.

Yet for all the obvious advantages, the merger hasn’t quite stirred the market with the Monsanto stock nowhere near the bid price that Bayer is offering. So, why aren’t investors queuing up to buy the Monsanto stock at current prices and pocket the difference? For that matter, why hasn’t the Bayer stock reacted positively if there are synergies to be had from such a combination?

The only plausible explanation could be that perhaps the market doesn’t think that the two companies are quite up to jumping through the many regulatory hurdles that lie in their paths.

As such it may well end up as a non-event. Which is just as well. Synergy gains from mergers are more often in the minds of managers behind the merger than in the real world.

A recent New York Times report quoted a Standard & Poor’s research study to say that companies making acquisitions underperform not only their competitors but also the broader market as well. The S&P research team offers many explanations — some accounting and others strategic.

The accounting explanation is that acquisitions are financed by debt which carries interest costs and savings in costs (synergy gains) are often over-estimated. The amortisation of one-time costs and write-offs add to the problem of profits that are already stressed. From a strategic perspective, acquisitions happen when markets are at their peaks and an inflexion point downwards may just be around the corner. Also, acquisitions feed off a frenzy of growth in asset size of the acquiring firm. This implies that companies are already growing too fast for their own good and acquisition only compounds their woes.

Exit option, at a cost

If acquisitions are more often than not ‘value-destructive’ as literature suggests, minority shareholders have a right to subject the management to a higher degree of due-diligence than what the market can impose. Conventional wisdom has it that minority shareholders always have the option of exiting the stock through a secondary market operation. But this is far from satisfactory. If the market has already given a thumbs-down to the acquisition, it responds by marking the stock price down, sooner than the minority shareholder can exit from the stock. In other words, from a minority shareholder perspective, the ‘exit’ option comes at a cost, namely, a potential loss of investment value.

On the other hand, restraining the management outright, merely because there is a possibility that the acquisition may backfire, is also not an ideal solution. A balance has to be struck between managerial freedom to execute a strategic vision of its choice and minority shareholder aspirations to preserving investment value. The issue acquires added significance because in all cases of corporate acquisitions/business divestitures, minority shareholders of target firms are relatively better placed.

The Board of Directors of target firms are enjoined by law to advise the shareholders as to whether the terms of the acquisition are in the best interests of company. The shareholder has the advantage of exercising an exit option through the ‘open offer’ route that the acquirer company offers. While acquisitions can be a win-win for shareholders of both companies, there is a possibility that it can well be a zero-sum game with gains for one set of shareholders offset by losses to the other.

In fairness, therefore, minority shareholders of the acquiring firm who remain unpersuaded by the synergy gains should have the privilege of a management sponsored buyout similar to that enjoyed by minority shareholders of the target firm.

If the management is so convinced that a buyout is in the interests of the company perhaps they can put a little more money where their mouths are. No doubt, it makes the process of acquiring companies and sustaining a vibrant market for takeovers and acquisitions just that bit more expensive.

A clause for ‘open offers’

But much the same argument was trotted out when the ‘open offer’ requirement in favour of minority shareholders of target firms was first proposed. It was argued that such a requirement would kill the market for ‘corporate control’.

But subsequent events clearly demonstrated that these fears were vastly exaggerated with acquisitions and takeovers continuing to be a facet of corporate India.

It is time to push the envelope of a healthier corporate governance a little further by incorporating a clause for ‘open offers’ for minority shareholders of acquiring firms at a price that is at least not lower than the average price in the market before an acquisition announcement is made.

(This article was published on September 25, 2016)

Please enter your email. Thank You.

Newsletter has been successfully subscribed.

Go to Source

US court bins verdict against 2 Chinese firms

US court bins verdict against 2 Chinese firms

Updated: 2016-09-26 07:45

(China Daily)

US court bins verdict against 2 Chinese firms

An employee (second from left) of North China Pharmaceutical Group Corp explains its products to a potential buyer (right) at the 74th Drug Expo in Xiamen. [Photo/Xinhua]

Two Chinese drug companies won dismissal of a $147-million antitrust verdict after a federal appeals court in the United States ruled they were acting under Chinese law and couldn’t be held liable in the US for fixing prices.

North China Pharmaceutical Group Corp and its manufacturing unit, Hebei Welcome Pharmaceutical Co, shouldn’t have been forced to defend against claims that they conspired to coordinate prices to create a supply shortage for vitamin C sold outside China, the appeals court in Manhattan ruled Tuesday.

A lower court failed to give enough deference to the Chinese government’s interpretation of its own laws and should have declined to consider the case, the appeals panel said.

The Shijiazhuang, China-based companies “were required by Chinese law to set prices and reduce quantities of vitamin C sold abroad and doing so posed a true conflict between China’s regulatory scheme and US antitrust laws,” US Circuit Judge Peter Hall wrote in the opinion.

The lower-court’s decision to disbelieve China’s claim that its laws required the companies to violate US antitrust law was “highly inappropriate,” said Jonathan Jacobson, who represented North China Pharmaceutical and Hebei Welcome. Tuesday’s decision requires courts to “respect the formal submissions of foreign sovereigns” on the meaning of their laws, he said.

William Isaacson, a lawyer for vitamin C purchasers Animal Science Products Inc and Ranis Co, didn’t immediately return phone and email messages seeking comment on the ruling.

US purchasers of vitamin C filed suit in 2005 over claims they were forced to pay artificially inflated prices for the food additive, which is used in products ranging from energy drinks to livestock feed. In March 2013, a Brooklyn, New York, jury found the companies liable for violating US antitrust law. The judge awarded $147 million in damages and issued an order barring the companies from violating the law in future.

The ruling prompted the Chinese government to file briefs in support of the companies’ claim, in what the court called a “historic” first.

Go to Source

European firms offer Britain scant support in divorce talks

By Tom Bergin
| LONDON

LONDON More than 20 European business associations and companies interviewed by Reuters say they back their governments’ position that Britain’s banking sector can only enjoy EU market access post-Brexit if the country still follows the bloc’s rules.

Britain wants a trade deal that gives London’s financial district, known as the City, access to EU clients while allowing the government to restrict migration from the bloc – something at odds with the basic rules of the European Union.

Senior lawmakers in the British government have said they expect European business groups to support their position because they need access to the financial services the City provides.

But interviews with companies and trade bodies across Europe suggest the most important thing for business leaders is maintaining a single market with a single set of rules that includes the four freedoms: free movement of workers, capital, goods and services.

They are less concerned about losing access to the City of London.

Companies including Deutsche Post, Daimler and Fiat Chrysler said they did not see significant disruption if the City loses free access to the EU market.

“We have taken a very clear line that the integrity of the four freedoms must be observed and that there is no cherry picking,” said Markus Beyrer, Director General of BusinessEurope, the umbrella body for the biggest EU business federations.

“This is a very clear message we get from our constituency.”

The conflict of views gives an early indication of the difficulties facing both Britain and the European Union in the divorce negotiations to come, with both sides having little room for concessions.

Britons chose to leave the EU in a vote driven in part by a desire to curb immigration. The government, which has pledged to respect the people’s will, will face an outcry – among both the general public and eurosceptics in its own ranks – if it allows free movement from the bloc.

The EU is also in a tight spot. Continental businesses, despite their opposition to a UK exemption, rely on London to help arrange share sales, bond issuances and M&A deals. But officials fear if Britain is allowed a special deal, then other members states might demand bespoke relationships, putting the single market and the Union itself at risk.

ECONOMIC INTEREST

Britain exports more financial services than any other country and hosts the highest number of headquarters of financial services companies, and firms in related professional services such as law, than anywhere else in the world, according to a report from lobby group TheCityUK last month.

But some analysts said that by taking an overly optimistic perspective of support for its arguments in Europe, the British government risked leaving the EU with no agreement on market access.

A spokesman for the Treasury said: “Our position is absolutely clear, we want the best deal for trade in UK goods and services.” He declined to comment on previous government comments about the stance of European corporate leaders.

British lawmakers including finance minister Philip Hammond and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson have said it is in European companies’ interests to allow an exception from normal EU rules for Britain’s financial sector – which generates around a tenth of national economic output.

“European confederations of industrial producers, trade bodies and associations and financial sector regulators will be talking with governments about the impacts of possible different outcomes, and I would expect those people … to be arguing for following rational economic interest,” Hammond said in parliament this month.

European business groups say they benefit from barrier-free trade with the City of London, using it for fundraising, repackaging receivables like car loans and mergers advice. They acknowledge shifting to financial services providers in Frankfurt and Paris could push up costs.

“We do not exclude the possibility that funding costs might be more volatile in future,” said Silke Walters, a spokeswoman for German carmaker Daimler.

Yet, the impact is seen as manageable. UK-based banks, some of which are subsidiaries of European and U.S. groups, can easily shift trading desks to continental centers, said Anders Ladefoged, deputy director of business lobby Danish Industry.

Some businesses may experience no impact, according to German engineering association VDMA, which said many of its members relied on German banks for borrowing rather than London-issued bonds.

London is the most important center for bond issuance in Europe but, unlike in the United States, European companies largely use banks for financing rather than the bond market.

SPECIAL DEAL

In the days after Britain voted to leave the EU in June, the largest French and German business associations – MEDEF, BDI and BDA – said their governments should be clear with Britain that the decision meant the City would lose access to the EU market.

Business associations in Italy, Sweden, Denmark, Lithuania and fourteen other countries told Reuters they also did not support Britain retaining market access if it restricts the free movement of EU workers.

Reuters contacted over 100 of the biggest continental companies to ask whether they were prepared to lobby for a special deal for Britain.

Most of those who responded said they would not get involved in the debate, at least until after a deal was agreed, but that they were not worried that a deal which cut off City banks would significantly impact their businesses.

However, companies do fear that if Britain was allowed to secure access to the EU market, without following all the four freedoms, it would set a dangerous precedent.

Some countries may seek dispensations to protect certain industries or sidestep competition rules, said Luca Paolazzi, Chief Economist at Italy’s Confindustria business confederation. This could see the single market becoming an inefficient patchwork of trading rules, making cross-border business more difficult.

“Cherry-picking would mean you are making the rules a la carte and that creates opportunities for unfair competition so it’s not something that is good for a competitive market,” he added.

Some business associations and companies said it could even lead to the collapse of the whole Union, and that concern about the stability of the bloc would cause volatility in the Euro.

“It would be tempting to say ‘let Britain take three (of the freedoms) but not the fourth’. But if you take that forward, that would create a lot of problems down the road that would be even worse for Swedish industry,” said Carola Lemne, Director General of the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise.

Some analysts said the British government’s misinterpretation of EU business leaders’ thinking reflected a broader misunderstanding about what concessions EU members were prepared to make.

Simon Tilford, deputy director of the Centre for European Reform think-tank, said that if Britain better understood the thinking of EU governments and businesses, it could secure a deal allowing tariff-free trade in goods with Europe.

If it didn’t, the two-year period between notifying Brussels of its intention to leave, and membership expiring, could pass without any deal at all, he said.

“If the UK wants controls on labor movement from the EU it will have to concede membership of the EU’s single market for services. I think that’s obvious.”

(Additional reporting by Helena Soderpalm in Stockholm; Editing by Pravin Char)


Go to Source

INSIGHT-European firms offer Britain scant support in divorce talks

By Tom Bergin
| LONDON

More than 20 European business associations and companies interviewed by Reuters say they back their governments’ position that Britain’s banking sector can only enjoy EU market access post-Brexit if the country still follows the bloc’s rules.

Britain wants a trade deal that gives London’s financial district, known as the City, access to EU clients while allowing the government to restrict migration from the bloc – something at odds with the basic rules of the European Union.

Senior lawmakers in the British government have said they expect European business groups to support their position because they need access to the financial services the City provides.

But interviews with companies and trade bodies across Europe suggest the most important thing for business leaders is maintaining a single market with a single set of rules that includes the four freedoms: free movement of workers, capital, goods and services.

They are less concerned about losing access to the City of London.

Companies including Deutsche Post, Daimler and Fiat Chrysler said they did not see significant disruption if the City loses free access to the EU market.

“We have taken a very clear line that the integrity of the four freedoms must be observed and that there is no cherry picking,” said Markus Beyrer, Director General of BusinessEurope, the umbrella body for the biggest EU business federations.

“This is a very clear message we get from our constituency.”

The conflict of views gives an early indication of the difficulties facing both Britain and the European Union in the divorce negotiations to come, with both sides having little room for concessions.

Britons chose to leave the EU in a vote driven in part by a desire to curb immigration. The government, which has pledged to respect the people’s will, will face an outcry – among both the general public and eurosceptics in its own ranks – if it allows free movement from the bloc.

The EU is also in a tight spot. Continental businesses, despite their opposition to a UK exemption, rely on London to help arrange share sales, bond issuances and M&A deals. But officials fear if Britain is allowed a special deal, then other members states might demand bespoke relationships, putting the single market and the Union itself at risk.

ECONOMIC INTEREST

Britain exports more financial services than any other country and hosts the highest number of headquarters of financial services companies, and firms in related professional services such as law, than anywhere else in the world, according to a report from lobby group TheCityUK last month.

But some analysts said that by taking an overly optimistic perspective of support for its arguments in Europe, the British government risked leaving the EU with no agreement on market access.

A spokesman for the Treasury said: “Our position is absolutely clear, we want the best deal for trade in UK goods and services.” He declined to comment on previous government comments about the stance of European corporate leaders.

British lawmakers including finance minister Philip Hammond and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson have said it is in European companies’ interests to allow an exception from normal EU rules for Britain’s financial sector – which generates around a tenth of national economic output.

“European confederations of industrial producers, trade bodies and associations and financial sector regulators will be talking with governments about the impacts of possible different outcomes, and I would expect those people … to be arguing for following rational economic interest,” Hammond said in parliament this month.

European business groups say they benefit from barrier-free trade with the City of London, using it for fundraising, repackaging receivables like car loans and mergers advice. They acknowledge shifting to financial services providers in Frankfurt and Paris could push up costs.

“We do not exclude the possibility that funding costs might be more volatile in future,” said Silke Walters, a spokeswoman for German carmaker Daimler.

Yet, the impact is seen as manageable. UK-based banks, some of which are subsidiaries of European and U.S. groups, can easily shift trading desks to continental centers, said Anders Ladefoged, deputy director of business lobby Danish Industry.

Some businesses may experience no impact, according to German engineering association VDMA, which said many of its members relied on German banks for borrowing rather than London-issued bonds.

London is the most important center for bond issuance in Europe but, unlike in the United States, European companies largely use banks for financing rather than the bond market.

SPECIAL DEAL

In the days after Britain voted to leave the EU in June, the largest French and German business associations – MEDEF, BDI and BDA – said their governments should be clear with Britain that the decision meant the City would lose access to the EU market.

Business associations in Italy, Sweden, Denmark, Lithuania and fourteen other countries told Reuters they also did not support Britain retaining market access if it restricts the free movement of EU workers.

Reuters contacted over 100 of the biggest continental companies to ask whether they were prepared to lobby for a special deal for Britain.

Most of those who responded said they would not get involved in the debate, at least until after a deal was agreed, but that they were not worried that a deal which cut off City banks would significantly impact their businesses.

However, companies do fear that if Britain was allowed to secure access to the EU market, without following all the four freedoms, it would set a dangerous precedent.

Some countries may seek dispensations to protect certain industries or sidestep competition rules, said Luca Paolazzi, Chief Economist at Italy’s Confindustria business confederation. This could see the single market becoming an inefficient patchwork of trading rules, making cross-border business more difficult.

“Cherry-picking would mean you are making the rules a la carte and that creates opportunities for unfair competition so it’s not something that is good for a competitive market,” he added.

Some business associations and companies said it could even lead to the collapse of the whole Union, and that concern about the stability of the bloc would cause volatility in the Euro.

“It would be tempting to say ‘let Britain take three (of the freedoms) but not the fourth’. But if you take that forward, that would create a lot of problems down the road that would be even worse for Swedish industry,” said Carola Lemne, Director General of the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise.

Some analysts said the British government’s misinterpretation of EU business leaders’ thinking reflected a broader misunderstanding about what concessions EU members were prepared to make.

Simon Tilford, deputy director of the Centre for European Reform think-tank, said that if Britain better understood the thinking of EU governments and businesses, it could secure a deal allowing tariff-free trade in goods with Europe.

If it didn’t, the two-year period between notifying Brussels of its intention to leave, and membership expiring, could pass without any deal at all, he said.

“If the UK wants controls on labor movement from the EU it will have to concede membership of the EU’s single market for services. I think that’s obvious.”

(Additional reporting by Helena Soderpalm in Stockholm; Editing by Pravin Char)


Go to Source

Federal lands lawsuit firms sometimes charged state too much, or too little







Law firms pursuing a lawsuit for Utah demanding that the federal government turn over 30 million acres to the state charged $5,500 for travel expenses not allowed by their contracts — such as first class airfare, alcohol and luxury hotels.

However, the Davillier Law Group and Strata also chose not to charge the state for about $5,900 in other allowable travel expenses.

“So we’re actually $400 to the benefit,” said Rep. Keven Stratton, R-Orem, co-chairman of the Commission for the Stewardship of Public Lands.

He said lawmakers asked the Office of the Legislative Fiscal Analyst to look at travel spending by the law firms working for the state after questions were raised about them by the Campaign for Accountability, a group opposing Utah’s proposed lawsuit.







That office sent a letter Wednesday with the findings.

It found $5,551 in expenses that were not allowed by contract — including $2,441 for a trip to Salt Lake City that included staying at the Grand America Hotel; $2,308 for the difference between first class and coach airfare; $21 for alcohol; $744 for duplicate billing of lodging; and $56 for a hotel room that exceeded the allowable $140 a night.

The review also said, however, that “total combined potential travel charges that the providers did not invoice, but could have under the contracts’ terms, sum to approximately $5,900.”

Stratton told the House Republican Caucus that Utah has spent about $950,000 so far preparing for the potential lawsuit out of the $6.5 million appropriated to date toward that effort.

Stratton said initial “worst case” predictions that the lawsuit could cost $14 million were likely far too high, and predicted that it will cost “far less.”

He said law firms have spent “less than half” what was expected to this point of preparation.

“We’re pleased with the outcome,” Stratton said. “The analysis [on proceeding with the lawsuit] is constitutionally anchored in very, very important principles related to state sovereignty and equal footing, and we are on very solid and firm ground.”

However, Democrats and other critics have said pursuing the lawsuit is likely a waste of millions of dollars, and has little chance of success based on court rulings.








































Go to Source

Rwanda insurance firms accuse pharmacies of hoarding drugs

A Rwandan renews medical insurance policy at the RSSB office. PHOTO | CYRIL NDEGEYA 

Lack of common pricing by pharmacies and a number of health insurance companies is forcing patients to pay more for drugs.

Pharmacies have now resorted to not selling drugs to members of some insurance schemes, saying the prices set by the companies are too low.

According to pharmacists, some insurance companies are too selfish, leading to losses to the pharmaceutical companies. This, they said, has forced patients to pay for drugs from their pockets.

“For insurance companies to set the prices of different drugs, they consult the distributors or wholesaler pharmacies whose prices are mostly low and vary depending on the dollar exchange rate,” said Habyarimana Flandrie, president of Rwanda Community Pharmacists Union, (RCPU).

“Pharmacists either withhold the lowly priced drugs especially from insurance card holders or simply explain the situation to the patients and ask them to pay some extra amount for the drugs or have their prescriptions changed,” he added.

“I have gone round different pharmacies looking for a prescribed drug but I was told that it’s not available. When I enquired further, I was told that the drug is available, but I will have to pay an extra Rwf1,000 to get it,” a patient, who asked not be named said.

The affected policy holders are mostly members of the Rwanda Health Insurance Association including RSSB, Soras, MMI, Saham and Radiant, who review their price lists every six months.

A list of reimbursable costs of drugs from the Rwanda Health Insurers Association seen by Rwanda Today include drugs that pharmacies said are lowly priced.

“We have tried to explain to the insurance companies that the low prices are hurting both the pharmacies, which are in business for profit as well as the patients who need the drugs, but all these have fallen on deaf ears. The insurance companies simply won’t negotiate,” said Mr Habyarimana.

Rwanda Health Insurers Association executive secretary Dr Blaise Uhagaze, however, refuted the claims, saying that pharmacists are always involved in the price reviews.

“We always do a price review after every six months, which is approved by the Ministry of Health. Different stakeholders, including pharmacists’ associations, are always invited to take part in the process,” said Dr Uhagaze.

“We consult widely with wholesalers and drug-manufacturing companies abroad to know the current market prices. Before setting the new prices, all the stakeholders have to be in agreement and they even append their signatures to prove it,” he added.

Dr Uhagaze expressed his disappointment with pharmacies that require patients to pay extra amounts in order to purchase prescribed drugs.

“Under no circumstance should patients be required to top-up on prescribed drugs. This is against the law and punitive measures should be taken against any pharmacists practising this,” he said.

The establishment of the National Health Insurance Council by the government is expected to bring sanity in the industry.

Go to Source

Alcohol sector drinks in impact of 'sin' tax law

THE effect of the ‘sin’ tax law has been more evident in alcoholic-beverage consumption as volumes dropped in the industry since 2013, the first year higher taxes were first implemented.

Unlike in the tobacco sector, where players continue to claim the increase in tax rates result to illicit trade, alcoholic-beverage manufacturers admitt the hike in taxes affected them on the first year that Republic Act (RA) 9334 took effect.

Based on their financials, most firms manufacturing alcohol products and listed in the Philippine Stock Exchange have shown a drop in sales, as prices went up as RA 9334 was applied. San Miguel Brewery Inc. reported a 9-percent drop in the volume of sales in 2013 to 204 million cases, from 225 million cases in 2012. Sales, meanwhile, fell 1 percent to P75.05 billion, from P75.58 billion in 2012, disclosures by the country’s largest beer manufacturer revealed.

Stiff competition

SAN Miguel claims to corner a commanding 90 percent of the beer market, with no other company coming close except for Lucio Tan’sAsia Brewery Inc., which continued the introduction of products into the market.

Ironically, Filipino consumers who have long-supported San Miguel have become the company’s stiff competitor. The changing drinking habits of these consumers eroded the already shrinking beer market to other products, such as the alcohol-laced pop drinks, the so-called ‘alcopop’, of Asia Brewery under the Tanduay Ice brand.

However, the industry-wide slump at the end of 2013 did not spare Asia Brewery.

‘The beer and alcopop segments of the company’s portfolio experienced significant drops in volumes and revenues as the industry and market reacted to the severe increases in specific taxes imposed during the year,’ the company said in its report on its 2013 performance.

While the company supplies the beer and alcopop segment of Tan’s business, it also sells other non-alcoholic products, such as water and energy drink.

Possible downshifting

FERMENTED liquor, such as beer, has a two-tier tax structure-one for the lower-priced and another for the higher-priced segment.

Like in cigarette products, both tiers will be taxed at the same rate starting in 2017 in order to prevent possible downshifting to cheaper products.

Alcohol products priced P50.60 per liter and below were slapped P15 beginning 2013. Every year, the tax imposed on these products increased by P2. By next year, taxes on these products P2017 will only increase by P1.50 to reach P23.50.

For those priced above P50.60 per liter, the tax started at P20 per liter in 2013 and an additional P1 per year. By 2017 products at this price will be slapped with an additional P1.50 to reach P23.50, the same tax structure of the lower-tiered products.

Distilled spirits

THE 2004 revision of an alcohol and tobacco tax law followed a three-tier tax structure. The amount of tax started at P8.27 per liter to P16.33 per liter of alcohol products, like beer.

It is, however, another story for the distilled spirits sector, which also experienced industry-wide decline.

Unlike in fermented liquor, distilled spirits, such as ‘hard’ liquor, like gin, whiskey, brandy and rum, are taxed on a per-proof basis, or the amount of alcohol a beverage contains.

Many brands catering to the mid-market were able to launch products with lower alcohol content than regular products and then increased their prices, further widening margins. These products are those that have added the ‘light’ tag beside the product name, such as Emperador Light and Fundador Light.

Despite the decline experienced by players in the distilled-spirits sector, Andrew Tan’sEmperador Inc. still managed to post an increase despite fizzling of sector revenues.

Yolanda, quake

UNDER the new tax scheme, distilled spirits will be slapped a P20 per specific proof per liter, plus a 15-percent ad-valorem tax for 2013 through 2015. The rates were subsequently increased this year but will have a slight decrease by next year.

Emperador brandy, however, managed to increase its cases sold to 33.1 million in 2013, from 31.2 million cases in the previous year.

As a result, its revenues rose 26 percent to P 29.86 billion for 2013, from P23.59 billion in the previous year. The company admitted it increased the prices of its products to cushion the impact of the new excise-tax hike.

The increase, however, came at the expense of its competitor, mainly of Lucio Tan’sTanduay Distillers Inc., which distills its iconic rum products, sold primarily to the lower-income bracket.

The distiller said that, for 2013, its market share in terms of volume dropped to an average of 25 percent from 29 percent in 2012 ‘largely due to the penetration of brandy in the Visayas and Mindanao or VisMin region,’ the company’s stronghold. This was exacerbated by Super-typhoon Yolanda (international code name Haiyan) and a 7.2-magnitude earthquake that devastated parts of the Visayas.

Alcohol content

LIKE Tanduay, Ginebra San Miguel Inc., also caters to the lower market segment who is composed of consumers seen to prefer products with higher alcohol content.

The volume of Ginebra’s gin sales fell by 12 percent in 2013 to just 21 million cases from the 24 million cases the company sold the previous year. Still net sales actually grew 3 percent to P14.39 billion in 2013 from the previous year’s P14.02 billion.

Ginebra’s market have already shrunk over the years as its ‘white’ liquor is seen as being ignored for the ‘red’ liquor-rum and brandy-of the two Tans.

The company has been struggling to make a profit, as it has been reporting net losses since 2011.

Still small

MOST of the firms that experienced a decline in consumption have since recovered from the initial fall in consumption, starting as early as 2014. These companies have implemented measures to increase profitability.

‘To mitigate the effects of higher taxes arising from the ad valorem portion of the excise tax, we sought to further improve efficiencies in our operation,’ Ginebra said in a report. ‘We worked to extract higher yield from distillery, driving alcohol costs down 3 percent from the previous year.’

Ginebra added that ‘vigilance in monitoring sources of used bottles was also key, allowing us to maintain container cost efficiencies.’ The company said it saw a slight increase in volume at 22.1 million cases in 2014.

Emperador, meanwhile, has acquired scotch whiskey maker Whyte and Mackay and a number of vineyards and wine and brandy companies in Spain, including its competitor that makes Fundador.

The firm, which now claims to be the world’s largest brandy firm by volume, said it would bring all those premium brands at home as the ‘taste’ of Filipino consumers improves.

Bernard Marquez, Ginebra’s president, however, said there may be a ‘premiumization’ of the market, or the selling of higher-end products. Marquez, nonetheless, said he does not see the latter grabbing a bigger share of the overall consumer market.

‘The mass market right now is 90 percent of the total volume of liquor in the Philippines,’ Marquez said. ‘The Philippines is still mass and economy brands.’

According to him, the premium segment is ‘still very small at the moment.’

Same path

GINEBRA is seen as taking the same path of Emperador on foreign acquisitions to further grow market share.

Ramon Ang, San Miguel’s president and COO, said the company is in talks with three foreign hard-liquor producers for possible overseas acquisitions or investments, using Ginebra as the main vehicle.

‘There are brokers handling the acquisition deals for hard liquor,’ Ang said, adding that San Miguel is interested in pursuing every opportunity to expand its businesses.

Ang said, there is an element of luck in foreign acquisitions.

‘If you notice we have a lot of acquisitions for the last eight years. We have a success rate of 80 percent,’ Ang said. ‘I hope we will be lucky again with these planned acquisitions.’

Ginebra said both its flagship brand Ginebra gin and its other heritage brand, Vino Kulafu, already reclaimed its lost market share, which now stood at almost 30 percent last year, according to Nielsen’s annual Retail Audit.

(c) 2016 Business Mirror Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info)., source Middle East & North African Newspapers


Go to Source

Huntington, WV law office looks traditional, boasts latest technology

Most Huntington lawyers have offices located just a quick walk from the Cabell County Courthouse. Now, the firm of Duffield, Lovejoy, Stemple & Boggs has closed its downtown office and built a new, $1.5 million building on 16th Street Road, beyond the city limits. 

“Our practice is not predicated on being able to make a quick trip to the Cabell County Courthouse,” explained L. David Duffield, the firm’s founding partner. “If you do criminal cases, you have to go to the courthouse regularly. 

“If you do divorces and other domestic cases, you’re there a lot. But we don’t handle those kinds of cases.”

Duffield and his partners operate primarily as personal injury attorneys, representing clients in damage suits throughout West Virginia, Eastern Kentucky and Southern Ohio. 

“With multi-million-dollar insurance cases and the like, you don’t find yourself in a courtroom every little bit,” he said. “So our practice doesn’t require us to be that close to the courthouse.”  

The firm’s new, two-story building is traditional in its design. The lobby is dominated by a curved, sweeping staircase that looks like something out of “Gone with the Wind.” But Duffield notes the building boasts the latest technology — including two large conference rooms, each equipped with an 80-inch electronic screen. In addition to being used to show videos, do tele-conferences and link to the internet, the office also can display and freely annotate a wide variety of documents. As many as four people are able to write on the screen at the same time.

A native of Lincoln County, Duffield earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature and his law degree at West Virginia University, where he was president of the Law School Council from 1985-1986. He practiced with two Huntington law firms before setting up his own firm in 1997.

In a twist that proves truth often is stranger than fiction, Duffield and Chad S. Lovejoy share a birth date. Duffield recalled the first day they met. 

“It was at the law school on our mutual birthday,” Dufield said. “I was 19 years older than him. I was 40 that day. He was 21. 

“We didn’t know each other before that. And here we are, long-time partners.”

A native of Huntington, Lovejoy, like Duffield, earned a WVU bachelor’s degree in English. At the law school, he was editor-in-chief of the Law Review and was named by the faculty as the Outstanding Graduate in the school’s Class of 1997. He’s practiced with Duffield ever since, first as an associate lawyer and later as a partner. He served as president of the Cabell County Bar Association from 2008-2009.

Duffield notes that the firm’s other two partners, Jason J. Stemple and Thomas P. Boggs, initially joined the farm as paralegals. They became associate lawyers after earning their law degrees from WVU and later were named partners.

“As each of them went away to law school, we let them work some online and in the summers,” Duffield said. “You might say we don’t hire lawyers, we grow our own. 

“And we’re very proud of that.”

A fifth WVU Law School graduate, Kenneth R. Bannon, now is an associate lawyer with the firm. 

“And we’re in the process of growing another lawyer for us,” Duffield said. “Paralegal Whitney Davis is on full scholarship at the law school.”

In 2007, the firm was located in the Ratcliff Building on the corner of Huntington’s 5th Avenue and 10th Street when the building was destroyed by fire. 

“We didn’t miss a single day of working for our clients — even meeting them the very next morning,” Duffield said.

After the fire, the firm moved to a historic building at 522 9th St. Built originally as a bank, the structure was long home to the Huntington Regional Chamber of Commerce. Unlike the firm’s new building, both the Ratcliff Building and the former Chamber building were located just minutes from the nearby courthouse.

Related Story: Huntington Regional Chamber of Commerce

“We started talking about building this building maybe 10 years ago,” Duffield said, “Then that talk became serious about four years ago.” 

Detailed planning and then construction took about 18 months, he said.

Without the necessity of remaining close to the downtown courthouse, the firm could have located its new office virtually anywhere. But the 16th Street Road location presented a particular appeal.

Seated in his office, Duffield explained that he, Lovejoy and Boggs all live little more than a stone’s throw from the firm’s new building, 

“That was a powerful incentive for building here,” he said. “Some days you can see Chad in his dress shirt and tie riding his bicycle to work. Now that’s close.”

This story first appeared in the print edition of The State Journal. Click HERE to subscribe.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter!

Go to Source

American LegalNet Releases Risk Management Survey Results, Revealing Law Firms’ Concerns:Rising Cyber Threats, Malpractice Suits and Outdated Technology

LOS ANGELES, Sep 23, 2016 (BUSINESS WIRE) —
Today, American
LegalNet, Inc. (ALN) announced the results of its second
annual Risk Management Survey, conducted during ILTACON 2016 in
August/September. The Survey aimed to benchmark which risks were most
pressing for ILTA members and gauge their readiness to address them. The
2016 Survey showed that ILTA members – a mixture of law firm and
corporate legal department IT, compliance, risk management, legal and
support professionals – had major risk management concerns and expressed
lesser degrees of confidence than last year in their capabilities to
address the threats.

The 2016 Survey respondents worked for law firms of all sizes with the
largest contingent (45%) from firms of 101-500 attorneys. The majority
(71.8%) of respondents were law firm IT professionals including CIOs,
CTOs and IT.

Highlights of the 2016 American LegalNet Risk Management Survey
results:

  • More General Counsels Now Bearing Risk Management Burden
    Compared to the 2015 Survey’s results, the 2016 Survey respondents
    indicated a definite shift in risk management responsibility to the
    General Counsel’s shoulders rather than IT executives or heads of
    risk/compliance. In 2016, 38.16% of respondents said their firm’s
    General Counsel bore the responsibility for their firm’s risk
    management function, an 8.94% increase from the 2015 number (29.22%).
    CIO/CTO responsibility for risk management dropped 17.26% from 38.31%
    in 2015 to 21.05% in 2016.
  • Biggest Risk Management Challenge is Cyber Threats – 55.88% of
    2016 respondents ranked cyber threats as their #1 biggest risk
    management challenge – a 36.6% increase from 2015. This makes sense
    given the year’s Panama Papers and DNC hacking scandals, among others.
  • Changing Confidence Levels in Capability to Address and Mitigate
    Risk
    – When asked to rate their firm’s overall capability to
    address/mitigate risk, 55% of respondents said they were “Capable” to
    deal with risk, a 14.72% increase from 2015. However, the “Minimal”
    and “We have work to do” responses increased from last year and the
    “More than capable” and “Extremely capable” responses both decreased,
    showing that respondents were less likely to express more than
    basic-level confidence for risk management preparedness. 85% of firms
    saw the need for further investment in risk management, though only
    46.67% had budget to make the changes now.
  • Risk of Legal Malpractice Suits Is Rising – 39.71% agreed with
    the statement “The risk of legal malpractice suits has gone up
    significantly in recent years.” 5.88% disagreed and 54.51% said “not
    sure.” Respondents said the biggest underlying causes of their firm’s
    malpractice claims were: Negligence (23.53%), Conflicts of Interest
    (22.06%), Calendaring Errors (11.76%) and Missed Case Notifications
    (8.82%).
  • Outdated Docketing Technology Creates Significant Risk – Since
    American LegalNet provides powerful docketing solutions for law firms,
    the survey drilled down to capture more detail about calendaring and
    docketing technology. More than half of responding firms (55.8%) said
    that a decentralized or outdated docketing system created significant
    risk. When asked whether their firm had a centralized
    docketing/calendaring solution, 60.66% of firms said “Yes” and 21.31%
    said “No, we have decentralized tools”. Only 27.87% of respondents
    said their current docketing solution was built on the latest
    technology, indicating that many were using outdated software.

According to Erez Bustan, CEO and Founder of ALN, the 2016 American
LegalNet Risk Management Survey clearly shows that law firm IT
professionals are facing significant challenges protecting their firm
from outside threats as well as internal liabilities. “We at American
LegalNet feel strongly that technology can be the answer to bolstering
law firms’ confidence and strength to combat risk and prevent
malpractice suits,” says Bustan. “Ideally, this Survey will show law
firm management how important risk management is, so they will authorize
their IT leaders to invest in responsibly protecting the firm and its
clients.”

American LegalNet will be exhibiting at the National
Docketing Association’s Annual Conference in Las Vegas next week on
September 25-27.

About American LegalNet, Inc.

American LegalNet (ALN) was founded in 1996 and is a trusted partner to
law firms, empowering them with innovative workflow management
technologies that help mitigate risks, increase operational
efficiencies, and reduce costs so they can focus on their core
competencies. Today American LegalNet is the premier provider of Desktop
to Courthouse workflow solutions that include eDockets, Docket Direct,
Forms WorkFlow, Smart Dockets and Docket Alerts. For more information,
visit http://www.alncorp.com
or email sales@alncorp.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160923005611/en/

SOURCE: American LegalNet, Inc.”>
<Property FormalName=”PrimaryTwitterHandle” Value=”@aln3

Burke & Company LLC
Christy Burke, 917-623-5096
cburke@burke-company.com

Copyright Business Wire 2016



















Go to Source