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Grower-owned pasta firm opens investment door

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Published: May 30, 2002

Members of the Dakota Growers Pasta Co. have voted to change from a

grower-owned company to a common stock corporation, a move that might

spur interest among Canadian farmers.

Dakota Growers general manager Tim Dodd said the change will allow the

North Dakota company to attract the capital needed to remain nimble in

the marketplace while better accommodating the needs of farmer members.

Dodd hoped the change, which lets the company sell stock to the public,

will encourage greater involvement from western Canadian durum growers.

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“We’re not going to discriminate. To me, a producer is a producer. It

doesn’t matter to me which side of the border they’re on.”

The new corporate structure allows for common and preferred stock.

Farmers who own the Series D Delivery Preferred Stock will have first

right of delivery to Dakota Growers Pasta.

Dodd said the preferred stock will be more affordable for farmers than

current shares in the company. Delivery obligations will also be less

onerous than they are under the current structure.

Dakota Growers Pasta describes itself as the third largest producer of

dry pasta products in North America.

Organized as a new generation co-op a decade ago, it was viewed as a

way for farmers to profit directly from the processing of their crop.

In recent years, a group of Canadian farmers showed interest in

becoming partners with the pasta company.

Prairie Pasta Producers, also a new generation co-op, has been leading

the effort to link the U.S. company with western Canadian durum growers

Prairie Pasta chair Perry MacKenzie said Dakota Growers’ corporate

conversion should attract participation from Canadian producers.

During a membership drive in Western Canada last fall, liquidity was an

issue raised by Canadian producers, MacKenzie said. The growers wanted

to know who would buy their shares if they later decided to opt out of

Dakota Growers Pasta.

MacKenzie said the conversion and the ability to sell stock to the

public will create a larger market for the common shares.

So far, no one with Prairie Pasta has invested in the U.S. pasta maker.

Last year’s membership drive was stalled until the question of Dakota

Growers’ future corporate structure was settled.

Dodd said the change should be complete in June.

Dakota Growers Pasta voted more than a year ago to allow non-American

growers to be part of its membership.

A declining durum harvest in North Dakota forced the company to search

further afield for its grain supplies.

Dodd still sees a role for Prairie Pasta once the conversion is

complete. He said the group could help co-ordinate the gathering and

shipment of Canadian durum to the Dakota Growers Pasta plant in

Carrington, N.D.

He envisions an identity preservation system to move durum from Western

Canada, which would allow the company to track shipments of grain back

to farms where it originated.

MacKenzie agreed that grain procurement could be part of Prairie

Pasta’s role and he doubts the Canadian Wheat Board’s export monopoly

would thwart that effort.

He said the wheat board has given Prairie Pasta no concessions. If the

new generation co-op wants to buy and ship durum to North Dakota, it

would be treated the same as a milling company buying grain from the

board, he added.

MacKenzie said Prairie Pasta would like to buy grain from the wheat

board based on world market prices. The hope would be to return

premiums above those prices to producers.

There will be a small dividend paid to producers with the delivery

preferred stock. There might also be a premium for grain delivered to

North Dakota through an IP system.

Dakota Growers’ biggest competitors are American Italian Pasta Co. of

Kansas City, Missouri, and New World Pasta Co. of Harrisburg,

Pennsylvania.

Dakota Growers lost $1.8 million during its last budget year on sales

of $135.9 million. However, the company reported a $4.3 million profit

from July through December of 2001, the first six months of its new

budget year.

Earlier this month, Dakota Growers chair Jack Dalrymple assured the

company’s 1,155 farmer members that the planned conversion will not

mean the loss of Dakota Growers’ rural essence.

Farmer shareholders will still hold a controlling stake, according to

Dalrymple. The conversion plan requires that its nine-member board of

directors include five North Dakota residents and three farmers.

About the author

Ian Bell

Brandon bureau

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