Federated Co-op sees record profit – again

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Published: March 14, 2002

Preparing annual report comments is an easy task for Federated

Co-operatives Ltd.’s board of directors – just find last year’s remarks

and change the date.

The 2001 version begins with a familiar refrain that has been used

numerous times over the past decade: “The board of directors is pleased

to present this report on another successful year of operations.”

You have to go back to the 1991 annual report to find a year when both

sales and net savings declined. From 1992 on, annual reports contain

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page after page of record sales and profits.

It must be noted there was that one unusual year in 1998 when sales

dropped slightly from the previous year, falling to $2.3 billion from

$2.4 billion in 1997.

Other than that unsightly blemish, it has been 10 straight years of

one-upmanship in the financial record books. The pinnacles for 2001 are

$3.25 billion in sales and $216 million in net savings.

Co-operative analyst Brett Fairbairn said the results are mind boggling.

“This success of theirs is much more remarkable than it appears,

because co-operatives of this type have in fact been in trouble all

over the world in the last 20 years,” said the director of the

University of Saskatchewan’s Centre for the Study of Co-operatives.

FCL is an “island of consumer co-operative success” in a sea of

failure, Fairbairn said. He’s not sure anybody can completely explain

why that is the case, but he has a few thoughts on the subject.

One is the importance of Consumer Co-operative Refineries Ltd., which

has been a cash cow for FCL.

Petroleum products accounted for $1.3 billion in sales in 2001 and the

segment delivered a gross margin of 14.8 percent, which was the highest

return of all six operating segments.

The company has recognized and rewarded that stellar performance.

Management has set aside $200 million in the 2002 budget for a refinery

expansion project.

Fairbairn said FCL won’t borrow money to do the improvements, but will

finance the project from the refinery’s profits.

It exemplifies a broader corporate philosophy of financing growth

through earnings rather than relying on outside sources, such as share

capital and bank loans. Chief executive officer Wayne Thompson said

that’s why FCL will never lose control of its co-ops .

The philosophy is reflected in the books. FCL, which provides central

wholesaling, manufacturing and administrative services for 300 western

Canadian retail co-ops, has no long-term debt. The member co-ops have

accumulated $46 million in long-term debt.

FCL also gets high marks for using basic co-operative principals,

Fairbairn said. It is almost single-mindedly focused on servicing its

member retail co-ops, which in turn service an estimated 900,000

individual co-op members.

Member retail co-ops have substantial equity in FCL and receive large

patronage refunds, Fairbairn said. Members’ share capital totaled $452

million in 2001 and $189 million was returned through patronage

allocations that year.

He said a healthy tension between the locals and the central co-op

helps keep FCL in check.

FCL also benefits from a kind of insurance against economic swings. It

is diversified, with plenty of stores in urban and rural centres, and

it deals in essential commodities such as fuel, food and feed, which

tend to be recession-proof.

Fairbairn said factors such as rural depopulation could eventually put

the brakes on record sales and profits – the streak has to end some

time.

But it doesn’t look like the board of directors is going to have to

search for an adjective other than “successful” anytime soon.

Thompson said FCL is once again ahead of budget for the first four

months of the 2002 fiscal year.

About the author

Sean Pratt

Sean Pratt

Reporter/Analyst

Sean Pratt has been working at The Western Producer since 1993 after graduating from the University of Regina’s School of Journalism. Sean also has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Saskatchewan and worked in a bank for a few years before switching careers. Sean primarily writes markets and policy stories about the grain industry and has attended more than 100 conferences over the past three decades. He has received awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Federation, North American Agricultural Journalists and the American Agricultural Editors Association.

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