RJR Nabisco

From WikiCigar
Jump to navigation Jump to search

R.J.R. Nabisco, Inc.
TypeSubsidiary
ISINScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
IndustryScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
PredecessorScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
FoundedScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
FounderScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
DefunctScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
FateSeparated R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company and renamed to Nabisco Group Holdings
SuccessorScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
Headquarters
ProductsCookies, crackers, cigarettes
RevenueScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
Script error: No such module "WikidataIB".
Script error: No such module "WikidataIB".
Total assetsScript error: No such module "WikidataIB".
Number of employees
Script error: No such module "WikidataIB".
ParentR.J. Reynolds
Websitewww.rjrnabisco.com (archived)

RJR Nabisco, Inc., was an American conglomerate, selling tobacco and food products, headquartered in the Calyon Building in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.[1] RJR Nabisco stopped operating as a single entity in 1999; however, both RJR (as R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company) and Nabisco (now part of Mondelēz International) still exist.

History

Calyon Building, former site of the RJR Nabisco headquarters

RJR Nabisco was formed in 1985 by the merger of Nabisco Brands and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company.[2] In 1988 RJR Nabisco was purchased by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. in what was at the time the largest leveraged buyout in history. In 1999, due to concerns about tobacco lawsuit liabilities, the tobacco business was spun off into a separate company, and RJR Nabisco was renamed Nabisco Holdings Corporation. Nabisco is currently owned by Mondelēz International Inc.

RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp. (NYSE: NGH) was the parent company of RJR Nabisco, Inc.[3] After the food and tobacco businesses separated in June 1999, Nabisco Group Holdings Corp. owned 80% of RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp., which was the parent company of Nabisco, Inc.[4]

Formation

R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company was founded in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, in 1875 and changed its name to R. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. in 1970. It became RJR Nabisco on April 25, 1986, after the company's $4.9 billion purchase, and earlier 1.9 billion stock swap, of Nabisco Brands Inc. in 1985.[5][6]

Headquarters move

In August 1986, the RJR Nabisco board announced that F. Ross Johnson would replace J. Tylee Wilson as head of the company effective January 1, 1987. Soon after that, Johnson, believing "bucolic" Winston-Salem did not have the right image for a "world-class company", began looking at other possible headquarters cities. After ruling out New York City and Dallas, the company decided on Atlanta because it was "nouveau riche and overbuilt".[7] On January 15, 1987, the RJR Nabisco board approved a headquarters move from Winston-Salem to Cobb County, Georgia, north of Atlanta, where the company had rented space. The move would affect 250 to 300 employees, while Winston-Salem would still have 14,000 people working for the company. RJR Nabisco donated the 519,000-square-foot World Headquarters Building to Wake Forest University but continued to use it until the September 1987 move.[5] Later, RJR Nabisco's Planters-Life Savers Division moved to the former headquarters building.[7]

The leveraged buyout

The RJR Nabisco leveraged buyout was, at the time, widely considered to be the preeminent example of corporate and executive greed. Bryan Burrough and John Helyar published Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco, a successful book about the events which was later turned into a television movie for HBO.

Ross Johnson was the President and CEO of RJR Nabisco at the time of the leveraged buyout and Henry Kravis was the managing partner at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. The leveraged buyout was in the amount of $25 billion, and the battle for control took place between October and November 1988.

Although KKR eventually took control of RJR Nabisco, RJR management and Shearson Lehman Hutton had originally announced that they would take RJR Nabisco private at $75 per share. A fierce series of negotiations and proposals ensued which involved nearly all of the major private equity players of the day, including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Salomon Brothers, First Boston, Wasserstein Perella & Co., Forstmann Little, Shearson Lehman Hutton, and Merrill Lynch. Once put in play by Shearson Lehman Hutton and RJR management, almost every major Wall Street firm involved in M&A launched frenzied, literal last-minute bids in a fog of incomplete or misleading information.

KKR quickly introduced a tender offer to obtain RJR Nabisco for $90 per share—a price that enabled it to proceed without the approval of RJR Nabisco's management. RJR's management team, working with Shearson Lehman Hutton and Salomon Brothers, submitted a bid of $112, a figure they felt certain would enable it to outflank any response by Kravis. KKR's final bid of $109, while a lower dollar figure, was ultimately accepted by the board of directors. It was accepted because KKR's offer was guaranteed whereas management's lacked a "reset", meaning that the final share price might have been lower than their professed $112 per share. Additionally, many in RJR's board of directors had grown concerned at recent disclosures of Johnson's unprecedented golden parachute deal. Time Magazine featured Johnson on the cover of its December 1988 issue along with the headline "A Game of Greed: This man could pocket $100 million from the largest corporate takeover in history. Has the buyout craze gone too far?".[8]

KKR's offer was welcomed by the board, and, to some observers, it appeared that their elevation of the reset issue as a deal-breaker in KKR's favor was little more than an excuse to reject Johnson's higher payout of $112 per share.[9] Johnson received compensation worth more than $60 million from the buyout, then left in February 1989. In March 1989, Louis V. Gerstner of American Express became the new head of RJR Nabisco.[7]

After the KKR buyout

On April 27, 1989, RJR Nabisco announced it would move its headquarters to the New York City area.[10]

As a result of the acquisition, RJR Nabisco divested the following divisions:

Another major consequence of the buyout was that according to United States Department of Labor, in its report "American Workplace", over 2,000 workers subsequently lost their jobs, which 72% eventually replaced, but earning less than half of their previous incomes, suggesting that it took most of those who lost their jobs an average of 5.6 months to find new employment.[19]

On March 21, 1991, RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp. became a publicly traded stock. In March 1999, RJR Nabisco announced the sale of the international division of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco, and in June of that year, the company sold the remainder of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco to stockholders. The parent company became Nabisco Group Holdings and owned 80.5 percent of Nabisco Holdings. In 2000, Philip Morris bought Nabisco Holdings. Soon after that, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings, Inc., first traded in June 1999, announced the acquisition of Nabisco Group Holdings. The deal was completed in December 2000.[6][20]

Controversy

Ads on smoking-free flights

In April 1988, RJR Nabisco fired the Saatchi & Saatchi advertising agency after their Northwest Airlines ad introducing the airline's in-flight smoking ban. This was despite the agency only being contracted for Nabisco products, not any tobacco products.[21]

Pandora Papers

In 2021, RJR Nabisco (before it split up) was listed in the Pandora Papers after the law firm Baker McKenzie set up shell companies in Cyprus.[22]

References

  1. "Investor Information 1997 Annual Report." RJR Nabisco. February 2, 1999. Retrieved on December 2, 1999. "Corporate Offices: RJR Nabisco, Inc. 1301 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10019"
  2. Bozman, Jean S. "Nabisco seeking DBMS to enhance connectivity." Computerworld. IDG Enterprise, May 18, 1987. Vol. 21, No. 20. 89. Retrieved from Google Books on September 6, 2011. "ISSN 0010-4841"
  3. "Corporate Profile." Nabisco Group Holdings. October 1, 2000. Retrieved on December 2, 1998.
  4. "Corporate Profile." Nabisco Group Holdings. October 1, 2000. Retrieved on December 2, 2011.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "RJR Nabisco Plans to Move". The New York Times. 1987-01-16. Retrieved 2012-03-20.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "A Stock History – Sequence of Events" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-03-23.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Tursi, Frank; White, Susan E.; McQuilkin, Steve (1999). "Chapter 27: Honk If You're Bucolic". Winston-Salem Journal. Archived from the original on 2011-03-07. Retrieved 2012-03-20.
  8. "A Game of Greed". Time Magazine. December 5, 1988. Archived from the original on March 13, 2005.
  9. Bill Saporito (April 24, 1989). "How Ross Johnson Blew the Buyout". CNN Money. Archived from the original on April 16, 2014.
  10. "RJR Nabisco Headquarters to Move to New York Area". Los Angeles Times. 1989-04-28. Retrieved 2012-03-20.
  11. Greenhouse, Steven (7 June 1989). "5 RJR Units Sold for $2.5 Billion - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-02-09.
  12. McGill, Douglas C. (4 July 1989). "Pepsico, to Aid Europe Sales, Buys 2 British Snack Units - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-02-09.
  13. "RJR Sending Chun King To Orient". Chicago Tribune, June 22, 1989.
  14. s, From Times wire service (1989-07-07). "P.M. BRIEFING : Nabisco Sells India, Pakistan Units". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2015-02-09.
  15. "British Conglomerate to Buy Part of Del Monte From RJR". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. 1989-09-08. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2015-02-09.
  16. La Ganga, Maria L. (1989-09-26). "RJR Sells Del Monte Operations for $1.4 Billion : Deal Puts Company Close to Lenders' February, 1990, Debt-Reduction Goal". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2015-02-09.
  17. Fabrikant, Geraldine (1990-11-09). "Hearst to Buy 20% ESPN Stake From RJR". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-10-22.
  18. Staff. "HEARST BUYS 20% OF ESPN". The Buffalo News. Retrieved 2021-10-22.
  19. U.S. Department of Labor, Office of the American Workplace, Volumes 2-3, Issues 1-5. United States Department of Labor. 1994.
  20. Eleni Chamis, "Breakup Dismantles the 1985 Union of Two 100-Year-Old Companies," Winston-Salem Journal, May 13, 1999.
  21. Dougherty, Philip H. (April 6, 1988). "Cigarette Maker Cuts Off Agency That Made Smoking-Ban TV Ads". The New York Times.
  22. "How America's biggest law firm drives global wealth into tax havens - ICIJ". 4 October 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-05.

Further reading

External links