Forum for Shareholders of Farmer Bros. Co.

Forum Home Page

2007 Conclusion

Forum activities relating to Farmer Bros. Co. were suspended in 2007, following the second year of new management.

Farmer Bros. Home Page

 

Farmer Bros. Reference

 

Relevant sections of the Glass Lewis & Co. report on National Presto cited in the article below have been made available, with permission.  Reference is also made to disclosures of SEC and auditor positions regarding illegal acts in required public filings by National Presto on April 19, April 25, and April 28, 2006, and to the New York Society of Security Analyst Forum's July 1999 "Discussion Papers Regarding National Presto Industries, Inc."

 

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Online
 
Original Story URL:
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=421317

Presto's cash a siren call for investors

Some betting SEC crackdown will force firm to issue dividend

By DORIS HAJEWSKI
dhajewski@journalsentinel.com
Posted: May 6, 2006

A losing battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission has turned out to be the best thing for National Presto Industries Inc. shareholders since the Salad Shooter.

Late last month, shares of the Eau Claire small appliance manufacturer soared over $60 for the first time since 1992, when the company's hand-held electric vegetable slicer was the hot new kitchen accessory. Shares closed Friday up 5 cents at $57.60.

Presto shares hit their all-time high of $82.50 in March 1992 but slid later that year to around $50. They had continued to bump along in the $30 to $40 range ever since.

But now, with Presto's SEC woes coming to a head, it appears that some investors see an opportunity to get their hands on the cash horde that is the source of the company's legal troubles.

"I believe nearly all of the speculation is related to speculation over a breakup or a sale of the company," said Bruce Laning, a partner at Marietta Investment Partners in Milwaukee, which owns Presto shares.

For nearly 20 years, Presto's cash pile has been the subject of financial stories about the company. In 1988, for example, a story in Barron's called the company's balance sheet "a thing of beauty," noting the $165 million in cash and short-term investments that Presto held.

Presto had accumulated the money by selling off businesses and closing plants, and the Barron's writer suggested that the cash, rather than the company's product line, was the reason to buy the stock.

Presto's then-chairman, Melvin Cohen, said he was looking for investment opportunities to make use of the cash but said he would be careful in seeking businesses that met his criteria for a good return.

Some analysts joked that Presto was the bank that made Salad Shooters.

In the mid-1990s, Cohen's daughter, Maryjo, who had succeeded him as chief executive officer, acknowledged those jibes with a good-natured chuckle.

'Unwelcome' scrutiny

But after years of waiting for the conservative Cohens to make an acquisition, and with the stock price mired in the $40s, investors became less amused. Institutional fund managers who bought Presto shares because the stock is part of an index were frustrated at the Cohens' lack of response to their concerns.

John Hull, then-deputy state comptroller for New York, wrote to Melvin Cohen in 1996 of his concern for the lack of return that the New York pension funds were getting from their investment in Presto. Hull also noted the lack of independent directors on Presto's board.

Cohen wrote back to Hull and suggested that he could sell the shares if he was unhappy with the state's investment.

"Your study of our company should have revealed that the family, of which I am the patriarch, holds approximately 30% of its stock. It should be obvious, therefore, that prodding from the outside is totally unnecessary. Try as I might, I can see no advantage to either of us by your proposed monitoring. It is unneeded, distracting and hence most unwelcome," Cohen wrote.

Things came to a head in 1999 when the New York Society of Security Analysts decided to make Presto a case study for a corporate governance project.

The ensuing publicity drew the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission, which launched an investigation into allegations that Presto's huge longstanding cash holdings qualified the company as an investment company. The Investment Company Act of 1940 says that companies investing securities worth more than 40% of its total assets are classified as investment companies.

The SEC sued Presto in 2002 claiming that the company met the standard for an investment company. A federal court judge in Chicago agreed and in December ordered Presto to register as an investment company and comply with regulatory reporting requirements.

Presto has appealed the ruling and has filed to deregister as an investment company.

Betting on a payout

Despite its new status as an investment company, Presto filed its annual report to the SEC as an operating company. Presto's auditor, Grant Thornton, gave the company an unqualified opinion on the report, meaning they found no fault with it.

In mid-April, the SEC told Presto the report was inaccurate and misleading in its characterization of the SEC's position on the report. The SEC said Presto should have included investment company information in a footnote, and said that Grant Thornton should not have issued an unqualified opinion.

With that disclosure, Presto shares took off. People familiar with the company's situation believe that investors are hoping that Presto will attempt to get out of its investment company status by paying a dividend to reduce its cash and short-term investments, which most recently were reported at $173.6 million.

"Somebody's betting on a one-time distribution," said Tom Harenburg, president of the Carl M. Hennig Inc. brokerage in Oshkosh.

Earlier, Presto's shares had moved from the mid-$40 range to around $50 after the company announced a new $80 million multiyear defense contract at the end of March.

But people who are familiar with Presto and the Cohens doubt that they will resort to a distribution to bring down the cash reserve. And they say that the company now is in jeopardy of being delisted from the New York Stock Exchange because of the irregularities in the way Presto filed its annual report.

Presto shares dropped back from the recent $60 high after the company disclosed on April 28 that Grant Thornton had quit, alleging that Presto had acted illegally in the way it filed its 2005 annual report.

Len Rosenthal, a professor of finance at Bentley College, bought the stock a few years ago in the $40 range. He sold at $60 because he's worried that the stock will be delisted.

If the delisting happens, the shares could trade over the counter or in pink sheets. But those transactions typically involve a larger spread between bid and ask prices, which depresses the share price.

Rosenthal doesn't expect Presto to distribute its cash unless a court orders it.

"Constitutionally, she's not capable of doing that," Rosenthal said of Maryjo Cohen. "That's why I didn't want to be part of it anymore."

Gary Lutin, a New York investment banker who headed the study project on Presto, said Presto's defiance of the court order also could cause the company to lose its defense contract.

Lutin attributes the decline in Presto shares last week to fears of delisting.

Presto shareholders will meet May 15 to vote on a proposal from the company that would allow it to take unspecified actions to cease being an investment company. In its proxy statement, Presto said it needs the authorization to ensure that it can continue to operate its manufacturing businesses.

Institutional Shareholder Services, a proxy advisory service for investors, has endorsed the proposal as well as Maryjo Cohen's re-election to the board of directors. The report was issued the day before Grant Thornton's resignation was disclosed.

But Glass Lewis & Co., another proxy advisory service, is recommending that shareholders withhold a vote for Cohen and vote against the authorization to stop being an investment company.

"We believe that the company is subverting the intent of the (1940) act's mandatory obligation to seek shareholder approval of a specific fundamental change in the nature of the business," Glass Lewis said.

 

From the May 7, 2006 editions of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

© 2006, Journal Sentinel Inc. All rights reserved. | Produced by Journal Interactive | Privacy Policy
Journal Sentinel Inc. is a subsidiary of Journal Communications.

 

 

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.