Entity Dossier
Company

Fletcher Challenge

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Relationship LeveragePay Consultants to Open DoorsSignature MoveGood Cop While Gibbs Plays Bad CopCompetitive AdvantageMonopoly Infrastructure as ChokepointCapital StrategyHidden Cost of Frivolous SpendingCornerstone MoveSell Before the Floor, Buy the Next ThingSignature MoveNever Consider Failure as a Possible OutcomeRisk DoctrineBrierley's Bluff-Bid Brinkmanship LessonCornerstone MovePhone Call to the Top, Then Show Up AnywaySignature MoveStagger Contracts to Break Supplier CartelsCornerstone MoveExclusive Rights as Subscriber MagnetSignature MoveResign from Everything When Time Becomes the PrioritySignature MoveCut-Throat Competition Even at the Dinner TableDecision FrameworkRide Winners, Cut Losers at Ten PercentIdentity & CulturePhone Stops Ringing Test of FriendshipStrategic PatternState Broadcaster Arrogance as OpeningOperating PrincipleLucky Timing as Honest AccountingCapital StrategySubscriber Economics Over AdvertisingRisk DoctrineAnimal Intuition to ExitIdentity & CultureFree Market Conviction from Regulation ExperienceStrategic PatternDiscontinuity Hunting as Core StrategyCompetitive AdvantageStructural Value Recognition Over Market TimingCornerstone MovePrivatization Partnership ArbitrageCapital StrategyIntellectual Freedom Through Financial IndependenceSignature MoveWalk Away as Negotiation WeaponSignature MoveCash Preservation as Freedom DoctrineCornerstone MoveZero-Money Leveraged TakeoversSignature MoveHands-Off Management Through Trusted OperatorsRelationship LeverageRelationship Leverage in Government Asset SalesOperating PrincipleManagement Avoidance as Operational PrincipleSignature MoveSingle A4 Sheet AnalysisRisk DoctrineRisk Elimination Over Risk TakingDecision FrameworkPsychology Over Numbers in DealsSignature MovePartner Selection Over Capital

Primary Evidence

"Sometimes, the corporations created their own opportunities. Omnicorp was symbolic of the time. It was New Zealand’s largest public float when it listed in 1985, with its three major shareholders being Equiticorp and Chase Corporation, each with a 20 per cent stake, and Rainbow Corporation with 15 per cent. The remaining 45 per cent sold to the public. Its directors were Heatley, Allan Hawkins, Peter Francis and Colin Reynolds. The names of the directors and the shareholding by their respective companies were all that Omnicorp had to its name besides its issued capital of $50 million. It had no other assets and no stated raison d’être except to allow its three major shareholders to make investments they could not make individually. Although it was not said publicly at the time, the main shareholders were interested in acquiring Fletcher Challenge if they could. It never happened. But whatever its intentions, or lack of them, investors flocked and its 50c shares went straight to $1.50 on listing."

Source:No Limits: How Craig Heatley Became a Top New Zealand Entrepreneur

"The Forestry Corporation, meantime, generated much satisfaction for Gibbs because the stunning turnaround in results continued. It also provided the opportunity for some contact sport with Fletcher Challenge, the nation’s largest public company. Fletchers had inherited cutting rights to large areas of forest from Tasman Pulp and Paper, with which it had merged in 1981. Gibbs was incensed that politicians, going back to the 1950s, had ‘let them get away with murder’ with contracts that had no escalation clause for inflation for 25 years and other such details.[38](private://read/01jrsfvkjy84rkprtbz9amfvj8/#rw-num-note-477346-006497775-38) He was determined to claw back some value for the Forestry Corporation and had lawyers trawl through the contracts to see what rights and powers they had."

Source:Serious Fun

"With a likely price tag of at least $2.5 billion, Telecom itself was beyond the capacity of any New Zealand company to buy on its own. Gibbs thought Fletcher Challenge, the biggest local conglomerate, might be interested — ‘Hugh Fletcher,’ he says, ‘wanted to buy everything, at a bargain price’ — but even they would need to partner with someone. The task therefore was to find a suitable international partner. So while Farmer was concentrating on negotiations with Telecom over Netways, Gibbs began to search on his own in the early months of 1989. He soon got wind that merchant bankers Fay, Richwhite were also tapping the walls."

Source:Serious Fun

Appears In Volumes