Saturday, July 28, 2007

Competing With Style

Ain't Competition Nasty!!

I just want to relay my thank you to those of you who have bothered to contact me over the demise of the old Share Investor Forum. It has taken a lot of work to get it going and it was getting a couple of thousand of visitors a day. Not big, but it was growing.

It seems I have now been relegated to the realms of blogging. Here I shall stay and I hope some of you will join me.

The main thrust of this post has been spurred on by the nastiness that has come from individuals and those connected with http://www.sharetrader.co.nz/ . They are responsible for informing my host, http://www.jconserv.net/, that I was "violating copyright" on my site and thus here I am now.

I'm not sure what the "violation" was for but suffice it to say Share Trader has a wealth of material on it that infringes copyright. I am not about to inform the owners of copyrighted material of such.

The nastiness started soon after I opened the site last September, with subterfuge related to the owners of Share Trader, re-directing my URL to a porn site and an attack on its content in early 2007.

For the life of me I don't understand why Share Trader may be afraid of a little competition. They are in a monopoly position, so perhaps they want to maintain it anyway they see fit?

Competition is really what today's piece is about and I can relate my recent experience to the business world in general and specifically to New Zealand business and its listed companies.

Perhaps the most glaring example of recent occurrence when it comes to tough competition is the stoush between New Zealands two major supermarket players, Foodstuffs and Progressive, over the battle for control of The Warehouse [WHS.NZ] Foodstuffs and Progressive currently dominate the supermarket sector with duopoly pricing but want to take out a fledgling player in the supermarket industry simply because they fear what a bigger third player might do to corporate profits.

These two players are not interested in competing at the shop floor with a new entrant, they simply want to eliminate this competition before it starts.I am not against competition but surely if Progressive and Foodstuffs want to expand their empires why don't they duke it out with the minnow fair and square, compete on price and service and open some additional outlets of their own?

It is interesting to note that Progressive have stopped one of Foodstuffs outlets from opening on Auckland's North Shore for more than 10 years and the market has lain idle for more than two years as empty as it was when first built. Legal action has also been taken(and failed) by Progressive to shut down an outlet mall in the same area for dubious reasons.

The fate of this stoush is now in the hands of New Zealand's Commerce Commission.

Monopolies in New Zealand are very common. This is mainly because we are a small market. The consumer clearly must be protected to some extent from these giants.

Telecom [TEL.NZ]and its dominance in the tel co sector for the last 20-30 years has had a negative effect on New Zealand, its economy and the consumers back pocket. The technology that Telecom customers must use is never up to date with overseas tel cos and most communication is still being done with the use of copper wire. True enough Telecom has been a good business for its early investors and many have made plenty of moola but as time has gone on the refusal by management to invest back in the business has cost Telecom ,its current shareholders and customers dearly. New Zealand is currently at the back end of the line when it comes to broadband and its products are expensive. Its current shareholders have lost big time.

Vodafone, similarly, seems to have adopted many of the traits that Telecom has had as a Telco monopoly and its mobile service and prices reflect the duopoly structure that co-exists with Telecoms mobile network.

It is a human trait to be confidant when one is in a good position in life and one could be forgiven if one was even a little cocky and boastful at times but some of the leaders of our monopolies take this position to levels of arrogance that seem to mock and deride their customers.

The recent case of Teresa Gattung is a well known one. She professed in 2006 in a Telecom shareholders meeting that "...the tel co business model, using "confusion" as a "marketing tool to maintain prices and margins" and that Telcom had been using this model for years wasn't really a shock to consumers but what was a slap in the face was the fact that she actually said it with impunity!!

Perhaps the funniest use of arrogance and disdain for consumers of recent times by the CEO of Auckland Airport [AIA.NZ] was his contention that narrowing the duty free retailers from two down to one at Auckland International Airport would "...give consumers more choice and the same low prices that they have always had..." now I didn't graduate from university with honours but even I can fathom that Don Huse might be pulling on something more malleable than a duty free wine cork. This individual is currently telling AIA shareholders to sell their shares to Dubai Aeronautical Enterprise for a measly $NZ3.80. Would you trust him? I don't.

Even my favourite topic of discussion of listed companies on the NZX, Restaurant Brands[RBD.NZ] have displayed some of the qualities of a monopoly over its last 10 years as a listed company without actually being one as such-to be fair though its Pizza Hut and KFC divisions were very dominant. Vicki Salmon, its most recent CEO, was blind in the face of reality when every time there was a poor profit announcement(which was most often the case) she continued to trot out the mantra "...we expect to see an improvement in the coming months..." The real arrogance of Vicki and her predecessors though was the fact that they had two dominant brands, KFC and Pizza Hut and much like Teresa Gattung RBD management neglected those brands simply because of their dominant positions and the thought by management that these brands were bullet-proof. Those two brands currently wallow in mediocrity in the face of real competition from the likes of Dominoes and Nando's Chicken.

Sky Televisions [SKT.NZ] position as the only player in the pay TV market in New Zealand makes its clients shake in their boots every month when their account arrives. Monopoly pricing rules and the arrogance of management when consumers complain is almost on a par with Telecoms head honchos. Perhaps they all went to the same charm school but I detect a pattern with management reaction to customer complaint when you are the only big kid on the block.

A dominant player that must be admired is Coca Cola. The focus on their product is fanatical and every aspect of marketing and selling is expertly crafted and nurtured from upper management all the way down to the fridge in the corner store. Coke ignored their consumers in the mid-1980s when they changed the formula of Coke without consulting consumers and had to back peddle when a backlash by consumers saw sales volumes fall in the USA. Their dominance of the caffeinated fizzy beverage market gave management the belief that they could mess with their leading product without a consequence. How wrong they were. They did learn from their mistake though and that is to be admired.

What can happen when a company or individual has a dominance in its field-and clearly they have got that way because they have been enterprising, hard working and clever-is that its position as the only or biggest player can be undermined by the tunnel vision that often comes about when one doesn't have to look over ones shoulder at the ankle biter running behind you. When suddenly that ankle biter starts nipping at your heels your reaction to the competition is a very important pivotal position for your company or product. What you do next, whether it be competing on a level playing field in your market or trying to undermine the newbie in any way you can , can have a negative perceptional outlook on your company from its consumers and ultimately a material effect as you lose the vision you once had when you initially set out to conquer your entrepreneurial goals.

There are countless monopolies that have fallen because of lack of care, they shouldn't have simply because they were in the dominant position, but the lack of care for the consumer and or the product or service they sell can even bring a dominant player to its knees. Management simply can't overlook basic business acumen simply because they "own the market."

Competition is essential to life, in business, on the sports field and life in general but ultimately if you play with a loaded deck and cards up your sleeve you , your company and your product or service just may be the loser in the end.

Related Amazon Reading

On Competition, Updated and Expanded Edition

On Competition, Updated and Expanded Edition by Michael E. Porter
Buy new: $26.37 / Used from: $22.50
Usually ships in 24 hours


Copyright Share Investor 2007, 2009

Friday, July 27, 2007

Burger Fuel Listing 27th July 2007 (NZ time)

Image result for burger fuel

The story below from the NBR confirms that Burger Fuel is listing on Friday July 27.

After the big top up from its present owners and founders one can only guess that its appearance on the NZX today is going to be somewhat of an anti-climax.

It is a great little company but has been repeated often by myself and others, it overvalues itself and this overvaluing has led to the low interest in the IPO.

Had it been a lower valuation the market could have taken this IPO seriously and backed it fully.

As it is BFW is going to struggle today SP wise and will continue to struggle in the weeks and months to come.

Management have overestimated their abilities in a financial sense when it comes to the IPO, lets hope they havent done the same when it comes to future financial management projections.

Readers will have to ask themselves if founders have only managed to raise at best $5m NZ dollars of a sought after 15m, then the original plan is going to be somewhat constrained.

The reported $1.5m cost of the IPO is a laugh and there is no report yet as to whether that cost comes off the $5m raised. In the absence of further info we will be generous here and give them the benefit of the doubt until told otherwise.

With such a shakey start to its public life, Burger Fuel is going to struggle right from the get go. Not a good omen for its future.


The NBR Story

BurgerFuel to list after $2.7m top-up
NBR Staff


BurgerFuel will list on the NZAX on 27 July following a $2.75 million top-up from founders Chris Mason and Josef Roberts.

$5.25 million was raised from 2380 shareholders - although that also included shares bought by the founders from the public pool - making up the minimum $8 million equity sought.

The company originally hoped to raise $15 million for 26.7 percent of the company but the response to its "would you like shares with that?" campaign was unenthusiastic and the offer had to be extended.

The capital will be used to pay the upfront costs of more stores before these were on-sold to franchisees.

In Australia, BurgerFuel has one franchised store and hopes to franchise more as well as operating its own store due for construction soon in Sydney's Kings Cross.

Chairman Peter Brook said the company would look to roll out stores in other countries with local partners to reduce capital investment costs.

BurgerFuel is due to open in Tauranga and Napier soon to take the total store numbers to 24.




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Share Investor 2007



Friday, July 13, 2007

But wait there’s more: How I’m learning to love Kiwisaver

For selfish reasons, I have been thinking lately. What I have been mulling over is Kiwisaver and its relation to the NZX and what it might mean for its future. The stocks in my portfolio and yours are going to benefit.

Let’s get this straight, I am dead against Kiwisaver. It is compulsory, inefficient, costly, enormously complex, will have low returns for its participants and is damaging for business.

The big winners will be the Kiwisaver providers, the IRD, who have hired 400 more drones and other government lackeys and the recipients of our largess.

The NZX could be the big winner if overseas experience has anything to go by.

The US and most recently the Australian stock market have benefited greatly from the retirement schemes that run in both those countries. The companies on those countries listed indexes have performed consistently better than our listed companies simply because of the large amount of retirement money sloshing around with no place to go but investment.

True, a lot of retirement funds will be inefficiently filtered through fund managers before reaching the NZX and much of the Kiwisaver proceeds will go offshore to other exchanges but there will clearly be billions going into our stock market.

In the USA their 401ks have helped push stock fundamentals to levels above the Kiwi NZX and in Australia multiples are similarly higher.

The extent of many countries super funds and its contributions to their local economies cannot be understated but as these funds have gotten bigger they have even stretched their economic tentacles abroad, US funds through private equity have bought companies in Australia and New Zealand and other countries while Australian funds have bought up large in New Zealand. The biggest retirement money buyout in New Zealand being the Canadian teachers fund buyout of Telecom New Zealand Ltd [TEL.NZ] Yellow Pages for over $2 million NZ dollars.

How long it will take for the New Zealand super funds proceeds to have an effect on our market depends on the uptake of Kiwisaver by its citizens of course and the impact will also depend on whether Kiwis who start a new job opt out of the conservative 6 providers that are the default ones and whether current employees decide to open themselves up for more risk and more return by going with a provider such as Fisher Funds which is likely to focus on the NZX and ASX and its smaller growth companies.

Certainly there is already evidence that these types of funds have had an impact on our market. Government and quasi Government institutions through agencies such as the ACC and the Government super fund for state employees have helped bolster our market and its listed companies. Mostly the blue chips but also a few middle to smaller cap stocks have been targeted by these funds.

Our market has mostly been a disappointment over the years compared to foreign bourses and the absence, up till now, of retirement funds bolstering the NZX will put our market on more of an even footing, help stimulate IPO’s and channel funds away from the over inflated and the tax friendly property market.

Even though our market has done well over the last few years don’t imagine that it is overvalued as a whole. When you include the extra funds from retirement money that are to come on-stream over the coming years you could be forgiven for doing cartwheels if you are already in the market at the prospects of fund managers pouring mum and dads money into the NZX.

Kiwisaver isn’t a perfect tool or even close to a perfect tool for helping kiwis save retirement money, tax cuts would be a far better and cheaper solution and then we could put those funds directly where we like.

Having said that there are always winners and losers when it comes to Governments meddling in its citizens business and for those that are already invested in the NZX and its fund managers of course, they are the big gainers.


Kiwisaver @ Share Investor

Kiwisaver mediocre substitute for real saving





c Share Investor 2007




Friday, July 6, 2007

Share Investor Interview: Josef Roberts, Senior Burger Fuel Director

Exclusive Interview with Josef Roberts, a director of Burger Fuel Worldwide [BFW.NZ] pre IPO and listing on the NZAX board of the New Zealand Stockmarket.

Burger Fuel IPO

New Zealand's fastest-growing gourmet burger chain BurgerFuel is putting its customers first as it plans to list on the NZAX after raising $15 million with an issue of 15 million shares at $1 each, with a one-for-five option to buy additional shares at the same price in 18-months' time. Minimum subscription is for $1000 worth of shares and options.

Funds raised from the issue will be used to fund the company's national and international growth aspirations, primarily in New Zealand, Australia, Europe and the United States. BurgerFuel currently has 19 outlets in New Zealand and one in Sydney.


This interview was conducted via email.



The Q & A


Share Investor

What exactly is the money raised to be used for?

Josef Roberts

Primarily securing and constructing new stores and expanding infrastructure to support growth. Although the construction costs of a franchisee owned store are paid for by the franchisee; capital is required to secure leases, make construction commitments and secure prime sites as they become available.

The stores built are then on-sold to franchisees. In this way capital can be recycled. In addition, however, it is possible that BFW could operate some stores until the appropriate franchisees are selected. In this case BFW would collect the revenue from those stores and could also elect to sell those stores on an earnings multiple, as opposed to a set franchise fee – so there are benefits – if a store is held and operated for a period of time by BFW.

Sometimes we have franchisees already signed and no site available and sometimes the other way around. Additional capital allows us to speed up store development by being able to proceed with immediately securing top locations as they become available and even operating them in the short term if necessary. However, we are primarily about franchising; this allows us to achieve much faster growth.

S.I. How was the value of the company at $60m arrived at?

J.R. Firstly, we have to remember that the $60 million valuation assumes a further $15 million in cash is raised in the IPO.

A company like ours is not so easy to value, as you know. A number of factors have to be taken into account such as the company investment to date, future earnings, growth capabilities, scalability, personnel and intellectual property - amongst other factors. The company has been extensively modeled under different scenarios to determine a valuation. Grant Samuel, the independent corporate advisory firm, analyzed the various scenarios and settled on a value that they considered to be achievable, based on our future growth potential and associated earnings.

Valuation ties into forecasts and as you know we are not providing those. Why? Well for a growth company like ours it is very difficult to confirm exactly where we will be in 12-months from now. As outlined on page 15 of the prospectus – there are 3 possible scenarios for expansion. Each would provide different financial outputs. If we were to make early predictions now and not achieve those predictions this could seriously impact on the company’s future share price. Accordingly, it is the most responsible approach to gain investment on the clear understanding that no projections are being provided.

Whilst we knew that this could make it harder for us to raise capital, we also believe in the fairness it gives investors up-front in accepting the terms we offer. We want them to assess the value and potential for themselves; which is what you guys are doing – even if this means they say “no thanks”.

The company intends to rely on continuous disclosure reporting to keep the market informed of key developments – such as yesterday’s announcement about our growth - already up 41%. Imagine what that would have done for our share price had we been listed?

We will have plenty of announcements to make in the future – because we are a high growth company and we operate very visibly. People can see progress and performance and this is what drives a share price – right?

To those who say the company is over-valued – they are entitled to their opinion. We know the value of what we have and we are confident in our ability to not only grow the company but also its share price. We have come to the market with an offer. If our offer is not acceptable – so be it – we stay private.

S.I. If you are opening company stores initially, how long do you intend to keep those stores?

J.R. As explained in question 1. However, in general only until the appropriate franchisee is appointed

S.I. The market is confused about what sort of company they might be investing in. Is it principally a franchisor or an owner of actual stores?

J.R. Principally a franchisor as explained in question 1, however, it is our view at this stage, that we should always own and operate at least one store long-term, in each country like we do in New Zealand and will do in Australia. This keeps us in touch with the reality of operations as well as providing a valuable training ground to personnel and franchisees in each local market.

S.I. Will stores be leased or owned outright?

J.R. Leased

S.I. Long-term, is the bulk of company revenue going to be based on royalty fees or revenue from store sales?

J.R. Answered in Q1. Also, please refer to page 54 of the prospectus – this sets out our revenue income. Clearly, you can see that royalty fees are the major on-going component, but up-fronts, transfer fees and income from our satellite kitchens also make substantial contributions.

S.I. There is similar competition from such outlets world-wide, most notably GPK in the UK, how well do you think you and/or your franchisees will do against this competition?

J.R. GPK is essentially a Wisconsin model. We think our track record in NZ in competing against Wisconsin speaks for itself. But we do not underestimate competition here or in other countries. In the end we are confident in our ability to compete with any gourmet burger offering.

What you have to understand with BurgerFuel is that we have strong operating systems that are scalable. We also have a strong brand that represents more than the sum of its parts. That is to say we have a defined culture – we don’t just make burgers – people eat BurgerFuel for the experience as well as the product and our culture. Once again, that’s either understood by investors or it isn’t.

S.I. It is nice to see owners retaining a stake in the business, so firstly why not float a larger stake if your intention is to expand quickly, wouldn’t it have been better borrow from banks, keep the company for yourselves if it is only a small 25% of the company going public?

J.R. We think that being listed will greatly assist us in expanding overseas as well as attracting franchisees – it’s as simple as that. Credibility toward securing leases, supply lines, staff, franchisees and other associated stake holders becomes easier if we are publically listed.

If people don’t want us listed here in NZ – I think you can work out for yourself what will happen. We will most likely continue as a private company and list further down the track in a different country or we may never list.

In respect of the 25% for $15 million, we have the ability to re-cycle capital (as explained in Q1). The options also provide for some future capital, as well as giving investors an incentive to invest now. If we asked for more now we would just be sitting on your cash – and you wouldn’t like that either Darren!

S.I. A related question to the above, why is the sunset clause on directors and founder owners for selling their shares such a brief one?

J.R. Yes, it could have been longer. Having said that, our aspirations are all about building a global brand. We are committed to doing that – I am personally doing this because I enjoy it and am passionate about growing BurgerFuel, just as I did with Red Bull in NZ and Australia. However, unlike Red Bull, this is a NZ brand. We feel it too can go global. It is my intention to be there when we open stores in the US, whether its next to the Viper room in LA, on the strip in Las Vegas or in Times Square I can’t say, but I want to be there for it. Chris is also a very passionate guy – he created this company and he loves it – it’s his life. We have everything to gain by building this up to be a huge company and increasing our own value as well as those of our partners (shareholders).

S.I. The decision to list on the NZAX instead of the NZX, why was that made when the disclosure rules of the NZX would give possible investors more confidence in their investments because as we know knowledge in investing is what it is all about?

J.R. The NZAX is designed for companies with high growth potential like us. They are not required to publish forecasts due to the fact that they are in a high growth phase and actual results could vary considerably.
We have come to the market with an offer on terms that we knew would not appeal to all investors – but they are our terms. We could have made grand projections now to attract investors (like other companies you know have) – but that is not how we do things.

As already outlined there are a range of scenarios for the way we can roll out and this goes to the heart of any projections we would have committed to. We want to be upfront about that. “Invest if you believe in us” – that is what our message is. People don’t have to invest. We would rather know that we have a certain style of investor. Like the franchisees that we select to become our partners – we want to attract investors who are there for the same reasons we are – because they are passionate about the company and believe that we can do it – (I can hear some of you laughing!!).

We’ve been criticised for targeting so called “naïve” investors. This is not the case at all. We want a big spread of investors including those who eat at our stores and take part in the ownership. Although these people may not be seasoned investors like yourselves, they should not be underestimated. They are the opinion leaders, they understand what makes a brand.

Our IPO advertisements are all about light hearted communication, boosting awareness and a bit of fun. This is who we are and this is how we do things. We polarize and we think that is important to build any strong brand or culture. It’s a mistake to try and be all things to all people.

We want a base of NZ investors who will review our business on a daily basis and tell us where we can improve. We think this is very important to our future. In this way, we have a constant R & D base assisting our international development. However, this offer is also for other serious investors who may not yet eat in our stores. We can see that by some of the larger amounts that are being applied for that also carry CSN numbers, that clearly, our growth potential and ability to drive the share price by announcements of progress and performance, is understood by some seasoned investors.

S.I. Finally, what or who was your inspiration to start the Burger Fuel company and did you intend to "go global" initially and where do you see your company in 10 years?

J.R. Chris knew he could make the world’s best burger and he knew he could come up with a scalable business model that could grow fast. He always wanted to take BurgerFuel global. For me; I invested for this reason. If you read the prospectus thoroughly you should get a strong sense of this. Just look at our trademark protection programme. This alone, demonstrates our vision in thinking global and acting to secure our intellectual property over the years.

Page 67 of the prospectus – clearly sums up where we see our company in the future.

S.I. Thanks for your time Josef and good luck for the future of Burger Fuel .


Burger Fuel Background


BurgerFuel started in 1995 when Chris Mason opened the company's first store in Auckland's Ponsonby Rd. It is the brainchild of founder and director Chris Mason, who met Josef Roberts when Roberts owned the Red Bull brand in New Zealand, and wanted to sell his drinks through Burger Fuel shops.

Roberts took Red Bull to Australia, and after selling the Australasian Red Bull franchise back to its original European owners, decided to join Mason and work to expand the business. He said both businesses were brand-driven. "But with Burger Fuel there is the prospect of exporting a Kiwi product globally."

Roberts said Burger Fuel eschewed private equity raising in favour of public listing because that would add to its credibility as it sought to roll out overseas.

Currently BurgerFuel serves over 35,000 burgers a week and has 20 outlets, with three more scheduled to open soon in New Zealand, including one in Queen St Auckland, and one planned for Kings Cross in Sydney.


Additional info from Josef Roberts unrelated to questions posed by Share Investor but furnished to us by him

This whole process reminds me of when I started Red Bull in NZ in 1996 and then Australia in 1999. When many laughed and mocked us for trying to sell a small, unusual tasting can of drink for an “outrageous” wholesale price of over $2.00! I was told “only Coca Cola can do something like this. Red Bull will never make it, it’s a fad drink that anyone can produce. This is destined to fail.”

Hmmmm!

Investors should look at the strong corporate governance and the people behind BurgerFuel. The advisors, the independent directors on the board – these are highly respected and experienced individuals who have chosen to join BurgerFuel. They did not need to. They have assessed the company’s prospects for themselves. Investors should take this into account.

We respect your community. We know that you guys carry huge influence. I bring you back to the fact that we have come to the market with an offer. Saying “here’s our price and terms”. If they are accepted – great we know we have the kind of partners (in the shareholders that buy in) that we want. If not – we will continue as a private company and still be successful.

Take a look at the total system sales growth figures from yesterday’s press release. Last year’s first quarter was a weekly average of $276,403, same period this year $390,379. Last week - $445,011.
We are growing anyway, but the IPO process alone has totally enhanced the value of the company even more. No one in New Zealand has not heard of BurgerFuel as a result of it. Remember, we’re a marketing company. Our campaign is all about growing the brand and selling burgers, as well as shares - and that’s what we’re doing.

Darren, best regards and thanks again for the time you have given us. We know this may not be everyone’s kind of investment and we respect that. We also respect you and your community’s views.

I would like to say one last thing though – if NZ continues to criticise companies and publish material so quickly before thoroughly assessing the offer – aren’t we somehow killing our own country? It’s amazing what gets published in the media without the prospectus even being read. There is in fact a lot of information in our prospectus for potential investors - it’s not just a pretty document.

New Zealand needs higher risk growth stocks (which is what we are) just as it needs the kinds of stocks that are like “watching paint dry”.

Would the last entrepreneur in NZ please turn the lights off when you leave? Australia, UK, USA – here we come!

Josef Roberts

Director

BurgerFuel Worldwide Limited


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Related Share Investor Reading

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Discuss Burger Fuel @ Share Investor Forum




c Share Investor 2007