Tiger Brands Explained

Tiger Brands
Type:Public company
Predecessor:Tiger Oats
Area Served:South Africa and Selected Emerging Markets
Key People:Khotso Mokhele (Chair)
Tjaart Kruger CEO
Thushen Govender CFO
Industry:Consumer Goods
Products:Over one hundred covering a variety of packaged goods and foodstuffs.
Revenue: R28.5 Billion (FY 2018)[1]
Operating Income: R3.3 Billion (FY 2018)
Assets: R23.928 Billion (FY 2018)[2]
Equity: R17.465 Billion (FY 2018)
Num Employees:20 591
Subsid:41
Location City:Bryanston, Gauteng
Location Country:South Africa

Tiger Brands Limited is a South African packaged goods company.[3] In addition to the company's South African operations, Tiger Brands has direct and indirect interests in international food businesses in Chile, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Nigeria, Kenya, Lesotho and Cameroon.[4] Tiger Brands is South Africa's largest food company.[5]

History

Jacob Frankel with help from Joffe Marks founded Tiger Oats Limited in 1921. Tiger Brands Limited was formerly known as Tiger Oats Limited and began as a family business.

Originally known as Tiger Oats, Tiger Brand's first product was a breakfast oatmeal brand called Jungle Oats. Jungle Oats are still produced by the brand. It was first conceived by Frankel towards the end of the 19th century and was finally launched in 1925. Tiger Oat's first mill was opened in Moorreesburg, Western Cape. A second mill was opened in Maitland, Cape Town when demand outgrew the Moorreesburg mill's capacity in 1930. The Moorreesburg mill was abandoned in about 1987.[6] In March 1982 Barlow bought a considerable share of Tiger Oats.[7]

In 1988 SPAR South Africa became a wholly owned subsidiary of Tiger Oats, however it was unbundled and listed as a separate company in 2004.[8] During the late 1990s Tiger Oats went through a period of rapid expansion. It bought out other large companies and competitors such as Imperial Cold Storage and Supply Company, a food packaging company (in October 1998)[7] and pharmaceutical company Adcock Ingram for R3.4bn in 1999.[9] After the buyouts Tiger Oats was renamed Tiger Brands. In July 2008 Adcock Ingram was unbundled from Tiger Brands.

Tiger Brands Limited's subcompany, Tiger Food Brands Ltd merged with Bromor Foods (Pty) Ltd, which owns the Super Juice carbonated drink.[10] On 1 October 2009, the company acquired Crosse & Blackwell's mayonnaise business for an undisclosed amount.[11] [12]

In 2008 Tiger Brands launched an aggressive expansion program into the rest of Africa. In the process the company bought a controlling stake in a number of food processing businesses in Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia, and Cameroon.[13]

This included a R1.5 billion purchase of 65.7% in Dangote Flour Mills in October 2012, Nigeria's second largest milling operation. This and other investments in Africa proved to be costly and unproductive. Over capacity in the Nigerian market led to an operating loss of R2.7 billion by the time Tiger sold back the operation to Dangote for a token one US dollar three years later in 2015. Management issues in Tiger's Kenya operations and the collapse of its Mozambican distributor and Deli Foods subsidiary also negatively impacted the company in this period. This led to then CEO Peter Matlare to resign in November 2015 and a reorganisation of its non-South African operations.

Current leadership

Noel Doyle was appointed chief executive officer with effect from 1 February 2020. Pamela Padayachee was appointed acting Chief Financial Officer with effect from 1 February 2020.

Scandals

Listeriosis outbreak

See also: 2017–18 South African listeriosis outbreak. Tiger Brands was implicated in the world's largest listeriosis outbreak in March 2017 when polony produced at a factory in PolokwaneLimpopo by its subsidiary company, Enterprise Foods, was found to be the source of the outbreak by the South African National Institute for Communicable Diseases and announced by the Minister of Health.[14] The outbreak caused the deaths of 164 people and infected a further 872 people by 24 February 2018.[15] By 5 March 2018 a total of 180 people were thought to have died from the outbreak. Tiger Brands stated that they had been presented with no evidence of their facility being the cause of the outbreak.[16] Following the announcement by the Minister of Health the company's stock price dropped by 7% resulting in R5.7bn (US$438.69 million) reduction in market capitalisation.[15]

Price-fixing Scandals

Bread

In mid-November 2007 Tiger Brands was fined R98.8 million (roughly equivalent to US$12.8 million at the immediate spot exchange rate at the time)[17] by the South African Competition Commission for colluding with other bread producers to raise the price of bread by between 30c and 35c per loaf.[18]

According to the commission the four companies involved (Premier Foods, Tiger Brands, Foodcorp and Pioneer Foods) controlled more than 90 percent of the wheat flour market at the time. Facilitating their pricing activities through secret meetings and telephone calls between employees of these firms at various venues, including churches, stadiums and hotels. The commission also found that the price-fixing activities had a negative effect on both consumers as a whole as well as inhibiting smaller bakeries from being effective competitors.[19]

The fine reflected 5.7% of Tiger Brand's bread sales, coming mostly from its Albany brand, for the 2006 financial year. Tiger Brands took full responsibility and then CEO Nick Dennis resigned.[20]

Adcock Ingram Critical Care

In May 2008 Tiger Brands agreed to pay a R53.5 million fine for alleged anti-competitive practices in its health care subsidiary Adcock Ingram Critical Care (AICC). AICC executive Arthur Barnett was suspended until the investigation was concluded.[21] [22] In July 2008 Tiger Brands stated that it was going to unbundle its entire Adcock Ingram subsidiary with each Tiger Brands shareholder receiving one share in Adcock Ingram for every Tiger Brands share they owned.[23]

Subsidiaries

Over the years Tiger brands has acquired various subsidiary organisations:

· Designer Group
· Durban Confectionery Works Proprietary Limited
· Enterprise Foods Proprietary Limited
· Langeberg Holdings Limited
· Langeberg & Ashton Foods Proprietary Limited
· Tiger Food Brands Intellectual Property Holding Company Proprietary Limited
· Tiger Consumer Brands Limited
· Tiger Brands (Mauritius) Limited
· Haco Industries Kenya Limited
· Chocolaterie Confiserie Camerounaise
· Deli Foods Nigeria Limited
· East Africa Tiger Brands Industries
· Davita Trading Proprietary Limited
· Pharma I Investment Holdings Limited
· Tiger Branded Consumer Goods plc
· Other miscellaneous, property, investment and dormant companies

Brands

Brand (country if not in South Africa, year of acquisition and/or launch)[24] [25]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: INTEGRATED ANNUAL REPORT 2018 . Tiger Brands . 7 August 2019.
  2. Web site: Tiger Brands Annual 2018. 30 September 2018. Tiger Brands. 7 August 2018.
  3. Web site: These are the biggest consumer goods companies in Africa . 2022-04-10 . en-US.
  4. Web site: JNB:TBS – Google Finance Search. https://web.archive.org/web/20090311071949/http://www.google.com/finance?q=JNB:TBS. dead. 11 March 2009. google.com. 2017-08-31.
  5. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-06-20/remgro-telkom-tiger-brands-may-move-south-africa-stock-market-preview.html BHP, Blue Financial, Remgro, Telkom, Tiger: South African Equity Preview
  6. http://www.tigerbrands.co.za/Brands/DomesticFood/Grains/jungle/Information.htm Jungle Oats brand history
  7. Book: Brooke Simons, Phillida . Ice Cold in Africa: The History of Imperial Cold Storage & Supply Company Limited . 2000 . Fernwood Press . Cape Town . 1-874950-50-4 . 237–246 .
  8. http://www.tradeintelligence.co.za/TradeProfiles/SPAR.aspx Trade Intelligence – SPAR
  9. http://allafrica.com/stories/199910070054.html Business Day: Tiger Oats Bids For All
  10. Competition Tribunal of South Africa article on the merger and details. (PDF file) http://www.comptrib.co.za/%5Ccomptrib%5Ccomptribdocs%5C488%5C33LMApr06.pdf
  11. http://www.alacrastore.com/company-snapshot/Tiger_Brands_Ltd-1019877 Thomson Reuters Business Description: Tiger Brands
  12. http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/Content.aspx?id=71715 Business Day: Tiger Brands buys Crosse & Blackwell from Nestlé
  13. Web site: Tiger Brands sharpening its claws . Thomas . Stafford. 15 July 2016. Financial Mail. 26 July 2016.
  14. News: Enterprise polony identified as source of listeria outbreak. 2018-03-05. en-US.
  15. News: Tiger Brands, RCL Foods lost R5.7 billion in one day after #ListeriosisOutbreak IOL Business Report. 2018-03-05. en.
  16. News: No evidence yet of link between listeriosis deaths, Tiger Brands products. White. Ray. 2018-03-05. en.
  17. Web site: Trusted Global Currency Exchange & Money Transfer Solutions . www.xe.com . . 16 May 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230516093736/https://www.xe.com/ . May 16, 2023 . en . live.
  18. http://www.moneyweb.co.za/mw/view/mw/en/page1743?oid=170321&sn=Detail MoneyWeb: "Tiger Brands admits to bread price-fixing, pays fine"
  19. http://www.moneyweb.co.za/mw/view/mw/en/page91?oid=474606&sn=Detail&pid=91 MoneyWeb: "Watchdog refers wheat milling cartel to Tribunal"
  20. http://www.busrep.co.za/index.php?fSectionId=552&fArticleId=4163240 Business Report: "Tiger Brands Limited. Price-fixing saga bites Tiger Brands chief"
  21. http://www.tigerbrands.co.za/Brands/Default.htm Adcock Ingram Critical Care (Proprietary) Limited ("AICC")
  22. http://www.moneyweb.co.za/mw/view/mw/en/page295046?oid=206283&sn=2009+Detail&pid=292520 MoneyWeb: "Tiger Brands' Adcock Ingram to pay R53,5m for price fixing"
  23. http://www.fin24.com/Companies/Tiger-to-unbundle-Adcock-Ingram-20080721 "Finance24: Tiger to unbundle Adcock Ingram"
  24. Profiles's Stock Exchange Handbook: October 2010 – January 2011 . Profile's Stock Exchange Handbook. 2010 . . Johannesburg, South Africa . 1680-0036 . 357 .
  25. https://archive.today/20120905022014/http://www.mbendi.com/orgs/cac9.htm Mbendi – Tiger Brands Ltd (TIGBRANDS)