UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to
Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): June 17, 2010 (June 14, 2010)
GREIF, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware | 001-00566 | 31-4388903 | ||
(State or other Jurisdiction of Incorporation) | (Commission File Number) | (IRS Employer Identification No.) |
425 Winter Road, Delaware,
Ohio |
43015 | |
(Address of Principal Executive Offices) | (Zip Code) |
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (740) 549-6000
Not
Applicable |
(Former name or former address if changed since last report.) |
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
o Written
communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR
230.425)
o Soliciting material pursuant
to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule
14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule
13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))
Section 1 Registrants Business and Operations
Item 1.01. |
Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement. |
On June 14, 2010, Greif, Inc. (the “Company”)
and its indirect subsidiary Greif International Holding Supra C.V., a
Netherlands limited partnership (“Greif Supra”), entered into a
Formation Agreement with Dabbagh Group Holding Company Limited, a Saudi Arabia
corporation (“Dabbagh”), and National Scientific Company Limited, a
Saudi Arabia limited liability company and a subsidiary of Dabbagh
(“NSC”). Since 2007, the Company (through its indirect subsidiary Greif
International Holding B.V.) and Dabbagh (through its affiliate Petromin
Corporation), have been participating in a joint venture known as
Greif Saudi Arabia Ltd., a Saudi Arabia limited liability company.
The Formation Agreement provides for the establishment of a joint venture between Greif Supra and NSC to engage in the polywoven industrial packaging business and to build and operate a polywoven fabric manufacturing facility in Saudi Arabia and possibly other countries. Greif Supra and NSC will have equal economic interests in the joint venture in all respects, notwithstanding the actual ownership interests in the various legal entities. Greif Supra will provide the management for the operation of the business of the joint venture.
The closing of the transaction contemplated by the Formation Agreement is to take place five business days after the conditions set forth therein are fulfilled or waived by the parties. These conditions include the accuracy of representations and warranties of the parties, the performance by the parties of their respective obligations, and the receipt of all necessary governmental and regulatory approvals. If the closing has not occurred within 180 days from the date of the Formation Agreement, either party may terminate the Formation Agreement.
The Formation Agreement requires each of Greif Supra and NSC to commit to provide $150,000,000 of equity capital, a portion of which has already been used by Greif to acquire Storsack Holding GmbH and its subsidiaries. In addition, under the Formation Agreement, each of Greif Supra and NSC are required to provide an additional $150,000,000 of loans or other credit support if and to the extent required by the joint venture businesses.
The full text of the Companys press release announcing the formation of the joint venture is attached as Exhibit 99.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K.
Section 8 Other Events
Item 8.01. Other Events.
On June 15, 2010, the Companys senior management made a presentation to investors concerning the Companys strategy for its Flexible Products and Services business, which will include Storsack Holding GmbH and its subsidiaries. During that presentation, representatives of the Company disclosed that the Company has signed an agreement to acquire the outstanding share capital of two other companies that engage in the polywoven industrial packaging business: Sunjüt Suni Jüt Sanayi ve Ticaret Anonim Sirketi (Sunjut); and Ligtermoet B.V. (Ligtermoet). Sujut has manufacturing operations in China and Turkey and Ligtermoet is a distributor headquartered in the Netherlands.
The Sunjut transaction is subject to receipt of all necessary governmental and regulatory approvals and customary closing conditions and is expected to close during the Companys third quarter of 2010. The Ligtermoet transaction closed on June 14, 2010. The aggregate purchase price for the acquisitions of Sunjut and Ligtermoet will be less than $100 million.
The slides from this presentation are attached as Exhibit 99.2 to this Current Report on Form 8-K.
Section 9 – Financial Statements and Exhibits
Item 9.01. |
Financial Statements and Exhibits. |
(d)
|
Exhibits. |
Exhibit No. | Description | |
99.1 | Press release issued by Greif, Inc. on June 14, 2010. | |
99.2 | Slides from presentation to investors held by senior management of Greif, Inc. on June 15, 2010. |
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
GREIF, INC. | ||
Date: June 17, 2010 | By | /s/ Donald S. Huml |
Donald S. Huml, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer |
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit No. | Description | |
99.1 | Press release issued by Greif, Inc. on June 14, 2010. | |
99.2 | Slides from presentation to investors held by senior management of Greif, Inc. on June 15, 2010. |
EXHIBIT 99.1
NEWS
GREIF TO ESTABLISH A FLEXIBLE PRODUCTS JOINT VENTURE WITH NATIONAL SCIENTIFIC COMPANY; EXPECTS TO PUT FABRIC HUB IN SAUDI ARABIA
DELAWARE, Ohio (June 14, 2010) – Greif, Inc. (NYSE: GEF, GEF.B) through a subsidiary has agreed to form a flexible products joint venture (JV) with National Scientific Company Limited (NSC), a subsidiary of Dabbagh Group Holding Co. Dabbagh is a leading privately held Middle East business group headquartered in Saudi Arabia. Greif will manage the JV, 50 percent of which will be owned by National Scientific, and 50 percent by Greif’s subsidiary.
The venture includes the flexible products business of Storsack, which was recently acquired by Greif. Storsack is the world’s largest producer of flexible intermediate bulk containers (FIBCs), with 3,000 employees and 16 production facilities worldwide.
The joint venture will be completed after certain conditions are satisfied, including any necessary merger and regulatory approvals.
“This joint venture extends our core rigid industrial packaging business,” said Michael J. Gasser, Greif chairman and chief executive officer. “By joining forces with NSC and the Dabbagh Group, which has an established reputation as a trusted partner and pioneer of business within the Middle East and internationally, the JV will benefit from upstream advantages in the flexible industrial packaging business.
“Also, the extension of Greif’s product portfolio to include flexible woven polypropylene packaging enables us to diversify deeper into markets such as the food and pharmaceutical industries.”
The JV expects to build a factory in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA). The factory will produce the woven polypropylene fabric used to manufacture the finished flexible containers. It will also produce flexible containers for regional customers.
Dr. Majed Al Kassabi, chairman of Dabbagh Group, said, ”Together, NSC and Greif are in a prime position to leverage attractive growth opportunities in the flexible packaging global market. The combination of Greif’s industrial packaging expertise, NSC’s proven entrepreneurship and Saudi Arabia’s competitive cost basis will provide customers with unrivalled value.”
David Fischer, Greif president and chief operating officer, said, “Applying Greif’s global footprint and the Greif Business System to this strategic JV will create additional value for our customers and shareholders. By locating in KSA, we will have many advantages including a progressive, business-friendly environment, advantaged logistics and abundant energy and raw material sources.”
NOTE TO INVESTORS: Greif Chairman and CEO Michael Gasser, Executive Vice President and CFO Donald Huml and President and COO David Fischer will present Greif’s strategy for its Flexible Products and Services business at the Sofitel Hotel in New York City at 8 a.m. Eastern Time on June 15. The hotel is located at 45 W. 44th Street. A breakfast will be served beginning at 7:30 a.m. Interested persons are asked to RSVP to Deb Strohmaier at debra.Strohmaier@greif.com. The presentation will also be available through Greif’s Web site, www.greif.com, in the Investor Center under Presentations.
About Greif
Greif, Inc. is the world leader in industrial packaging products and services. The company produces steel, plastic, fibre, flexible, multiwall and corrugated containers and containerboard, and provides blending and packaging services for a wide range of industries. Greif also manages timber properties in North America. The company is strategically positioned in more than 50 countries to serve global as well as regional customers. Additional information is on the company’s Web site at www.greif.com.
About National Scientific Company Limited
National Scientific Company Limited is part of the Dabbagh Group, one of the leading privately held business groups in the Middle East. The Group was established in 1962 and today comprises more than 25 autonomous companies in diversified businesses with more than 5,000 employees operating in various countries around the world. Dabbagh’s core business portfolio is structured around strategic portfolios including petroleum products, manufactured housing, food and agriculture.
Swicorp acted as financial advisor to NSC and the Dabbagh Group.
# # #
Forward-Looking Statements
All statements other than statements of historical facts included in this news release, including, without limitation, statements regarding the Company’s future financial position, business strategy, budgets, projected costs, goals and plans and objectives of management for future operations, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements generally can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “intend,” “estimate,” “anticipate,” “project,” “believe,” “continue,” “on track” or “target” or the negative thereof or variations thereon or similar terminology. All forward-looking statements made in this news release are based on information currently available to management. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in forward-looking statements have a reasonable basis, the Company can give no assurance that these expectations will prove to be correct. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those expressed in or implied by the statements. Such risks and uncertainties that might cause a difference include, but are not limited to: general economic and business conditions, including a prolonged or substantial economic downturn; the availability of the credit markets to our customers and suppliers, as well as the Company; changing trends and demands in the industries in which the Company competes, including industry over-capacity; industry competition; the continuing consolidation of the Company’s customer base for its industrial packaging, containerboard and corrugated products; political instability in those foreign countries where the Company manufactures and sells its products; foreign currency fluctuations and devaluations; availability and costs of raw materials for the manufacture of the Company’s products, particularly steel, resin and old corrugated containers; price fluctuations in energy costs; costs associated with litigation or claims against the Company pertaining to environmental, safety and health, product liability and other matters; work stoppages and other labor relations matters; property loss resulting from wars, acts of terrorism or natural disasters; the Company’s ability to integrate its newly acquired operations effectively with its existing business; the Company’s ability to achieve improved operating efficiencies and capabilities; the Company’s ability to effectively embed and realize improvements from the Greif Business System; the frequency and volume of sales of the Company’s timber, timberland and special use timberland; and the deviation of actual results from the estimates and/or assumptions used by the Company in the application of its significant accounting policies. These and other risks and uncertainties that could materially affect the Company’s consolidated financial results are further discussed in its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its Form 10-K for the year ended Oct. 31, 2009. The Company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements.
Media contact:
Analyst contact:
Exhibit 99.2
Flexible Products & Services Investor Meeting New York June 15, 2010 |
1 Forward-Looking Statements This presentation and management's remarks may contain certain forward- looking information within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words "believe," "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "target," and similar expressions, among others, identify forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are based on information currently available to management. Such forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause events and the Company's actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. Please see the disclosure regarding forward-looking statements immediately preceding Part I of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2009. The Company assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. Safe Harbor |
2 Welcome and Introductions Safety reminder Speakers Chairman & CEO Mike Gasser President & COO David Fischer Executive Vice President & CFO Don Huml Greif senior executives SVP, People Services & Talent Development Karen Lane SVP, General Counsel and Secretary Gary Martz SVP and Divisional President, EMEA Ivan Signorelli FPS leaders Vice President, Middle East Development Daniel Lister Division President FPS Michael Mapes |
3 Greif Profile Founded in 1877 as a packaging company Initial public offering in 1926 Diversified business platform Leading industrial packaging company with more than 30% global product share More than 200 operations in over 50 countries |
4 Strategy Statement Continue to strengthen the core Industry consolidation Emerging markets Product line extensions Optimize and embed the Greif Business System throughout the enterprise to achieve top quartile profitability and lowest cost producer status while enhancing safety and quality Pursue adjacencies Emphasize sustainability in all of the company's activities to meet or exceed our stewardship responsibilities as a global citizen, and create long-term competitive and shareholder advantages Fix, sell or close underperforming assets |
5 Greif Advantages Global sourcing and distribution platform Raw materials Energy Logistics Industry leader with identified acquisition opportunities and a record of successful business integration Proven benefits of Greif Business System to unlock value Substantial percentage of customers who use both flexible and rigid industrial products |
6 Flexible Packaging The flexible products industry includes FIBCs and shipping sacks which are distributed regionally Storsack, acquired in February 2010, is the leader in the flexible packaging industry with approximately a 10% share Principal end markets for flexible packaging products include chemical, construction, food, feed, seed and pharmaceutical 1-loop 2-loop 4-loop |
7 Overlaps with Greif's customers and geographic footprint Enhances Greif's end market profile (e.g., agriculture, food) Customers and sectors Greif has developed operational and commercial capabilities through successful consolidation of rigid industrial packaging segment Direct expertise Complements Greif's rigid industrial packaging portfolio Product portfolio Flexible Products Reinforce Greif's Core Packaging Business |
8 Source: Industry and company data: FPS 41 Greif End Market Diversification Benefits Chemicals Ag & minerals Pharma/personal care Food Oil & lubes Other Pie 2 35 18 4 21 0 22 Chemicals Ag & minerals Pharma/personal care Food Oil & lubes Other Pie 1 46 15 16 23 Percent FPS diversifies Greif's business due to only ~50% end market overlap: Slightly lower exposure to chemicals No exposure to oil & lubes Significantly higher exposure to food and agriculture |
Flexible Products & Services Strategy President & COO David Fischer |
10 Polywoven an $11 Billion Industry FIBCs SSs Other 2 5 4 Greif initially focused on FIBCs and SSs Industry includes other product groups that can be targeted later by leveraging resin, fabric, channel and hub strategy |
11 Chemical Construction & other Food Feed Seed Pharma Fertilizer 38 27 17 9 5 4 0 Pie 2 9 26 42 15 9 0 6 5.00 FIBCs largely used in EU and NA, SSs in developing countries By industry - % share FIBC SSs NA EU LA ME APAC 23% 45% 9% 6% 17% 2.4 4.7 Revenue $ FIBC SS FIBCs SSs 4.5 4.0 CAGR % Focus globally on FIBCs & regionally on Shipping Sacks RoW 10 APAC 14 EU 44 NA 20 FIBCs % 27 NA 24 SSs % 15 Total Chem Construction & other F00d Feed Seed Pharma Fertilizer FIBCs -$2B USD SSs - $5B USD FIBCs and Shipping Sacks Industry Breakdown 5% 3% 12% 16% 64% |
12 Flexible Packaging Strategy Consolidate a fragmented industry Acquired Storsack, market leader Leverage the GBS to create the first world-class, integrated enterprise in the industry Realize cost and logistical advantages by locating "hub" in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) Conversion |
13 KSA Advantages Gateway to the world market Growing population New and large port Ease of doing business Efficient tax system Access to capital financing Globally competitive energy costs Abundant and low-cost resins |
14 Resin the Major Cost Component of FIBCs Polypropylene Other Electric 64 28 8 Existing competitors have focused strategic efforts primarily on lower cost labor sources 64% 28% 8% |
15 Achieve high ground through channel experience and expertise Provide unrivaled service via global footprint and integrated supply chain Drive consistency, value and sustainability via GBS Consolidate operations while maintaining agility and flexibility Leverage world-class economics with advantaged KSA fabric hub 5 Guiding Principles Conversion Leader Position Anchored in Channel and Fabric Cost Advantages |
16 + + Strategy Growth GBS Aspirations Advantaged hub Strategic outsourcing Channel mastery Organic growth, industry shaping and conduct Acquisitions Execution excellence Other tuck-ins OpEx ComEx People and teams Performance management Revenues of $1 Billion 25-30% global product share, FIBCs 20-25% North America product share, SSs FPS Creates Flexible Products Global Leader |
Flexible Products & Services Investment Rationale Executive Vice President & CFO Don Huml |
18 Investment Thesis Flexible Products & Services fit growth strategy as a product line extension Storsack acquisition provides platform for consolidating fragmented FIBC industry Flexible products complement rigid industrial packaging and its business model is similar Significant customer overlap and increased participation in stable end markets Opportunity to leverage the Greif Business System Joint venture is a value creation multiplier |
19 Greif Business System delivered performance improvement Embedded disciplined business processes throughout the company Right-sized the company and implemented capability-building to realize commercial and operational excellence objectives Initiated global sourcing and supply chain strategy Achieved first set of financial performance goals (Dollars in millions) Achievement 1 Phase one of Greif Transformation <5% + $400 million 5% $250 / 12.5% $100 / 5% 8.2% 2.5x improvement 16% - - $50 million 10% 2.5x improvement $1,248 22.5% $1,000 25% improvement Greif Transformation Illustrates Potential Net assets RONA SG&A Operating profit $ / margin Organic growth Year-end 2006 1 Year-end 2002 Note: Operating profit margin is operating profit divided by net sales. SG&A expense is selling, general and administrative expense. RONA is operating profit times net asset turnover. |
20 Disciplined Due Diligence and Comprehensive Acquisition Integration Recommendation on overall strategic and operational fit High level savings estimate from commercial, sourcing, SG&A, lean and logistics Investment needed to achieve savings Savings capture timeline and associated risks Talent and other business building findings Valuation-integrated assessment summary 1 Overall work plan based on milestones and KPIs Activities and deliverables for each due diligence phase Resource allocation, including due diligence team structure and roles Quick wins and sustainable savings capture plans End-to-end due diligence work plan and approach 2 Lean manufacturing diagnostics, OEE measurement, load balancing, kaizen initiatives and other best practices adapted to flexible products industry Labor optimization diagnostics, including takt time and improvement in UPMH (units per man hour) Inventory and SKU optimization diagnostics Flexible products-specific best practices across OpEx and ComEx Flexible products- adapted diagnostics 3 Elements OpEx Examples |
21 Key Operating Parameter Comparisons Note: COGS = Cost of Goods Sold Key Metrics Flexibles 1 Greif Operating profit margin (%) 4 - 6 12.5 2 Direct materials to COGS (%) 60 - 65 63 Labor to COGS (%) ~15 - 25 13 SG&A to net sales (%) ~12 - 18 7.5 2 Capital turnover 2.6x 2x Inventory days 60 - 90 30 - 45 Flexible products business differs from Greif in some dimensions More labor intensive Higher capital productivity Longer supply chain 1 Estimates based on Greif due diligence 2 Previously announced aspirations |
22 Operating Profit Bridge for Flexible Products 2010 Sourcing SG&A 2015 OpEx ComEx Fabric hub Joint venture 3% lift through optimizing footprint and factory- level lean Savings on gap compared to Greif Revenue uplift from ComEx programs, including product manage- ment and value pricing Scale and other advantages 15.0% 2.5% 1.0% 1.5% 2.0% 3.0% 5.0% Percent |
23 Flexible Products Metrics and Milestones Strategic Plan - Metrics Year 1 Year 5 Net sales $300 $1,000 FIBC global product share 12% 30% Organic growth -- 5% Operating profit $15 $150 Operating profit margin 5% 15% Investment 1 $60 $250 RONA <15% >30% (Dollars in millions) 1 Greif 50% share Key Milestones Sustainable operating profit achieved Scale advantages and synergies fully realized |
Wrap-up and Q&A Chairman and CEO Mike Gasser |
25 Diversity > Strength > Performance Re-earning the Right to Premium Valuation GBS - a catalyst enabling strong relative performance and value creation during cyclical trough Diversity - a compelling competitive advantage Strong balance sheet and access to alternate sources of liquidity Balanced focus on defense (contingency planning/enterprise risk management) and offense Solid, experienced and performance-driven management team with record of accomplishment |