Inchcape PLC

views updated May 23 2018

Inchcape PLC

22a St. Jamess Square
London SW1Y 5LP
United Kingdom
Telephone: + 44 (0) 20 7546 0022
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7533 9117
Web site: http://www.inchcape.com

Public Company
Incorporated: 1958 as Inchcape & Co. Ltd.
Employees: 11,000
Sales: £3.2 billion (2001)
Stock Exchanges: London
Ticker Symbol: INCH
NAIC: 441110 New Car Dealers; 551112 Offices or Other Holding Companies

Inchcape PLC, a company with more than a 150-year historystarting as a shipping and trading firm and evolving into a diversified conglomeratehas reinvented itself at the end of the 20th century. The company now describes itself as the worlds largest independent automotive distribution group, operating in more than 20 international markets, including the United Kingdom, Greece, Australia, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Inchcape has relationships with many of the worlds leading car manufacturers, including Mazda, Ferrari, Jaguar, BMW, Peugeot, and Subaru, but has a particularly strong partnership with Toyota Motor Corporation, representing that company in 11 markets, including Belguim, Greece, Hong Kong, and Singapore. With its entry into the e-commerce market with its new and used car-purchasing retail Web site Autobytel UK, Inchcape continues to reinvent itself for the future.

19th Century Origins

Inchcape PLC was launched as an overseas trading company in 1958, yet the origins of its constituent companies date back to the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Thus, the creation of Inchcape dates back to the early expansion of commerce with India by a group of Scottish merchants. In 1847 a meeting took place in Calcutta between William Mackinnon and Robert Mackenzie, two merchants from Campbeltown, which led to the formation of their general merchanting partnership, Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company. Realizing the benefits of combining trading with ocean transport, especially with the gold rush to Australia in 1851, the business expanded and diversified. In 1856, Mackinnon at age 34 founded the Calcutta & Burmah Steam Navigation Company (C&B), secured from the East India Company the contract for carrying the mails between Calcutta and Rangoon, and incorporated the company in London with a capital of £35,000, of which Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company invested £7,000, becoming agents for the new shipping line. As a result of their success in carrying troops from Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) to India during the Indian Mutiny of 1857 to 1859, and through Mackinnons contacts with the influential civil servant Sir Henry Battle Frere, the partners obtained further contracts to support a fleet of coastal steamers carrying mails around the Indian coast with extensions to the Persian Gulf and Singapore. In 1862, C&B raised sufficient additional capitala total of £400,000to float the company under the new name of the British India Steam Navigation Company (BI). Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company continued to act as agents for the BI for nearly 100 years.

Sir William Mackinnon also promoted steamer traffic to the Dutch East Indies, establishing a Dutch-registered shipping line around Java, and forming the Netherlands India Steam Navigation Company in 1868. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, BI ships entered the Mediterranean Sea, establishing a trunk line between London and India via the Suez Canal in 1876. In the process, Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company became one of the greatest Eastern agency houses, and the BI posed a mighty challenge to all other shipping lines operating between the United Kingdom and the East, including the giant Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O).

These events were the backdrop to the formative years of James Lyle Mackay, named Lord Inchcape in 1911. Born in 1852, the son of an Arbroath shipmaster, Mackay left Scotland at the age of 20 and worked in the customs department of Gellatly, Hankey and Sewell. Mackay, who joined Mackinnon Mackenzie & Companys Calcutta office in 1874, was to become the heir to the Mackinnon businesses after the death of Mackinnon in 1893. Mackay first became a partner after saving the BFs Bombay office from bankruptcy, and was to become president of the prestigious Bengal Chamber of Commerce a record three times between 1890 and 1893. A member of the Viceregal Council and a close friend and confidant of Lord Lansdowne, Viceroy of India, Mackay gained a knighthood for his contribution to the solution of Indias currency problems and the ultimate adoption of the gold standard in India. Mackay returned to the United Kingdom in 1894 as a director of the BI, replacing William Mackinnons nephew, Duncan Mackinnon, as chairman in 1913. Continuing his work on the Council of India, Mackays growing reputation as an outstanding public servant led to his being offered the viceroyalty of India in 1909. Prime Minister Herbert Asquith opposed Mackays nomination, however, on the grounds of his commercial interests in the subcontinent, and Mackay was offered a peerage in 1911 by way of compensation. He chose the name of Baron Inchcape of Strathnaver, commemorating the Inchcape Rock, located 12 miles from Arbroath, and expressing his loyalty to the clan Mackay, whose home is in Strathnaver. Between 1913 and 1932, Lord Inchcape personified Britains shipping industry as chairman of the BI and the P&O, after effecting a merger between the two lines in 1914.

Less well known than Lord Inchcapes shipping activities is his consolidation of an extensive group of commercial interests in India and beyond. These began with his accumulation of shares in Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company. Sir William Mackinnon had no son, his nephew Duncan died in 1914, and his great-nephews were killed in World War I, so Inchcape became the sole-surviving senior partner of the Mackinnon enterprise, and by 1950 the Inchcape family held a controlling interest. Inchcapes chairmanship of the BI and P&O resulted in a very close connection between Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company and the shipping line, to the extent that many observers came to believe that they were one company.

Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company spawned a variety of other enterprises to serve the BI routes. The BI originally employed small private firms in local ports of call as agents, but eventually replaced them with firms within the Mackinnon complex. These all came under the control of the senior partners and ultimately under Lord Inchcape himself. To separate the trading businesses from the shipping line, the Macneill & Barry partnership was developed to take over the extensive tea and merchanting operations that Lord Inchcape had acquired in 1915. Amalgamated in 1949, Macneill & Barry Ltd. comprised three merchant partnerships formed in the second half of the 19th century: Barry & Company, Macneill & Company, and Kilburn & Company, involved in tea, coal, jute, river steamers, and various trading enterprises. Their principals included the Assam Company, the oldest tea company in India; the River Steam Navigation Company; and the India General Steam Navigation and Railway Company. Between 1951 and 1956, Macneill & Barry took over Kilburn & Company, and the three groups set up Pakistan-based companies. In 1965 the two river steamer businesses were sold to the government of India.

In 1906, Mackay made a successful strategic acquisition, of Binnys, a South India-based textile business. Founded in 1799, Binnys originally carried out banking and general merchanting, diversifying in the 1840s into agriculture and textiles. Indian production of textiles boomed in the 1860s, when the U.S. Civil War interrupted cotton supplies, and by the late 19th century Binnys mills managed 70,000 spindles with over 1,500 looms. Yet in 1906, with the crash of the great Arbuthnot & Company banking house with whom it was closely involved, Binnys faced bankruptcy. Its greatly undervalued assets were acquired by Mackay and a consortium of Mackinnon partners for £53,000. Binny & Company Ltd., as it had become in 1906, made record profits in World War I with the production of khaki cloth, and by 1917 was supplying over a million yards per month. Binny & Company was subsequently restructured, setting up an Engineering department, and rose to greater prominence during World War II, producing one billion yards of cloth a year by 1942.

Owing to the need to supply shipping-agency services to the BI, Mackinnon group enterprises were established in East Africa, the Persian Gulf, Australia, and London. In East Africa, as Sir William Mackinnon began to open up the region to British influence, the BI operated a steam shipping service. In 1872, Archibald Smith, a member of the staff of William Mackinnon & Company in Glasgow, Scotland, together with a Mackenzie man from Calcutta, established an agency to operate as BI agents and general traders. In 1887, Sir William Mackinnon won from the sultan of Zanzibar in East Africa, the right to administer a coastal strip of land in return for customs revenue, which led to the founding of the Imperial British East Africa Company (IBEA), partly in response to the buildup of German interests in this area. Smith Mackenzie & Company took a stake in IBEA and acted as its agents, until the charter was surrendered in 1897. Smith Mackenzie & Company and the agency for Shell in East Africa became joint coaling agents to the admiralty during World War I and in the 1930s gained the agencies for British American Tobacco, Imperial Chemical Industries, and British Overseas Airways Corporation.

Company Perspectives:

Inchcape, as an international automotive services group, provides quality representation for its manufacturer partners, a choice of channels to market and products for its retail customers and a range of business services for its corporate customers. Operating primarily in the U.K., Greece, Belgium, Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore, its key partners are Toyota, Subaru, Ferrari, Jaguar and Land Rover. Inchcapes activities include exclusive Import, Distribution and Retail, Business Services, automotive E-commerce and Financial Services.

In 1862, when a contract was won to carry mail eight times a year up and down the Persian Gulf, the merchant partnership that became Gray Mackenzie & Company was formed, helping to develop navigation on the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers, and establishing a diversified trading business in an area that was also facing German expansionism. In World War II, Gray Mackenzie & Company acted as agents for the British government in unloading military cargoes; the growth of its business was helped by the spectacular development of the oil industry and the rapidly growing need to service the expanding ports of the Middle East.

The Mackinnon complex also branched into Australia, with BI services at first managed by the British India and Queensland Agency Company Ltd. The Mackinnon partners invested in the formation of a major Australian shipping conglomerate in 1887, the Australasian United Steam Navigation Company (AUSN), formed with a capital of £600,000. In 1894, Mackay was appointed to the board of the AUSN and, in 1900, spent several months in Australia successfully restructuring the business. In 1915 he created a new merchant partnership, Macdonald Hamilton & Company, formed by two trusted Mackinnon appointees, B.W. Macdonald and David Hamilton. The AUSN, which had once owned 42 steamers, declined in the face of increasing competition from railways in the 1920s, and Macdonald Hamilton & Company diversified its activities into mining, pastoral management, and operating the P&O agencies in Australia. The P&O acquired Macdonald Hamiltons P&O-related activities in 1959 and 1960.

The London partnership of Gray Dawes & Company was set up to serve the BI as a shipping and brokering agency, and eventually became a bank and a travel agency. It represented the interests of Smith Mackenzie & Company and Binny & Company in London, and set up a Secretarial department to administer the estate of James Mackay, the first Lord of Inchcape, after his death in 1932.

Consolidation and Expansion: Late 1950s through 1970s

These diverse Mackinnon group interests were consolidated and reorganized during the 1950s, coming together as Inchcape & Company Ltd. in 1958 at the initiative of the third Lord of Inchcape. Tax considerations necessitated the conversion of these companies into private limited companieswhose former partners became the principal shareholderscontrolled through London-based subsidiaries. Also in 1958, Inchcape & Company became a public company through a public offering of 25 percent of its equity, and starting in 1958 embarked on a program of growth and diversification, principally through acquisitions. The group today reflects the merger and acquisition activities of the last quarter of the 20th century, rather than the original companies that came together in 1958.

During the 1960s and 1970s, under the leadership of the third Lord of Inchcape, the company expanded to over 150 times its previous capitalization, due principally to a series of successful acquisitions, especially those of the Borneo Company in 1967; Gilman & Company in 1969; Dodwell & Company in 1972; Mann Egerton & Company in 1973; Anglo-Thai Corporation in 1975; A.W. Bain Holdings in 1976; and Pride & Clarke, which held the Toyota agency for the United Kingdom, in 1978. In this period, through several capitalization issues, 64 original shares costing £80 in total in 1958 were worth nearly £2,000 by 1975.

The merger with the Borneo Company almost doubled the size of Inchcape overnight, bringing in new interests in Canada, the Caribbean, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, and Thailand. The Borneo Company operated jointly with Inchcape in the United Kingdom and Australia, but introduced two new activities into the groups portfolio: motor vehicle distribution and timber and construction business. This merger, in which Inchcape entered new geographical regions in familiar businesses and entered new businesses in regions that it knew well, established a pattern for subsequent acquisitions and allowed considerable local autonomy to exist among local staff.

Through Peter Heath, originally a director of the Borneo Company, Inchcape acquired Gilman & Company, one of the great trading groups of Hong Kong. Gilman & Company was seeking an acquirer but did not wish to be taken over by an existing Hong Kong business. The acquisition of Dodwell & Company gave the group further interests in this region, which it maintained as quasi-independent companies, rather than forming one large entity. Dodwell & Company was founded in Shanghai in 1858, and by the 1970s had established extensive businesses in shipping, motors, and business-machine trading in Hong Kong, Japan, and many other Far Eastern ports and cities.

Key Dates:

1847:
Two Scottish merchants, William Mackinnon and Robert Mackenzie form their general merchanting partnership Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company.
1874:
James Lyle Mackay, later the first Lord of Inchcape, starts working in the Calcutta, India office of Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company, and eventually runs the organization.
1906:
Mackay and a consortium of Mackinnon partners purchase Binny & Company Ltd., producers of khaki cloth.
1958:
The diverse Mackinnon group interests are consolidated to form Inchcape & Company, Ltd., run by Mackays grandson, the third Lord Inchcape. The company goes public and is listed on the London Stock Exchange.
1967:
The company acquires the Borneo Company entering the motor vehicle distribution and timber and construction business.
1969:
The company acquires Gilman & Company, a trading group in Hong Kong.
1981:
Company is reincorporated as Inchcape PLC.
1982:
Lord Inchcape relinquishes his title of executive chairman, becoming life president of the Inchcape group.
1994:
Lord Inchcape dies, severing the last business link between Inchcape group and the Inchcape family.
1998:
Inchcape announces its restructuring plan to focus solely on its international motors operations, the largest and most successful part of the company.
1999:
Inchcape is reborn as a motors-only company.

Mann Egerton & Company, acquired in 1973, laid the foundations for Inchcapes motor-distribution business. Founded at the end of the 19th century in Norwich by an electrical engineer and an early motoring pioneer, Mann Egerton sold cars manufactured by de Dion, Renault, and Daimler for between £200 and £300 per car, at the turn of the century initially from branches in the eastern counties of England. By the 1970s, Mann Egerton distributed British Leyland cars, as well as an extensive range of luxury cars, but faced a possible takeover bid from an unwanted source, and felt increasingly vulnerable as a result of a wave of oil shocks.

The acquisition of Anglo-Thai Corporation involved the issue of nearly nine million Inchcape £1 ordinary shares, three times the number issued before, increasing Inchcapes market value by about 90 percent, and adding to group assets in the Far East and Southeast Asia. In one of the groups few predatory bids, valuable businesses such as Caldbeck Macgregor & Company, a well-known importer and distributor of wines and spirits, were included. In 1976, with A.W. Bain Holdings, Inchcape developed an important insurance business through a share issue second only to that involved in acquisition of the Anglo-Thai Corporation. With Pride & Clarke, the group gained the valuable concession of exclusive Toyota distribution in the United Kingdom after an issue of £1 million in £1 ordinary shares and £6.9 million in cash, in what some observers called the biggest bargain of the century. By 1989, the Motors segment was contributing two-thirds of group turnover and 53.6 percent of group profits, the greater part contributed by Toyota.

Reorganization in a Modern Era: 1980s, 1990s, and Beyond

Inchcapereincorporated as Inchcape PLC in 1981under the chairmanship of George Turnbull in the 1980s reinforced its concentration on its core businesses. Inchcapes key businesses at that time were organized into three main areas: services, marketing and distribution, and resources. The service businesses consisted of buying, insurance, inspection and testing, and shipping. The marketing and distribution businesses covered business machines, consumer and industrial services, and motors. The resource-based businesses covered tea and timber.

In April 1990, Toyota paid Inchcape £110 million in cash for a 50 percent stake in Inchcapes United Kingdom-based distributing business known as Toyota (GB). With this acquisition, Toyota also acquired a holding of nearly 5 percent in Inchcape itself.

Inchcape had a difficult time in the early 1990s during CEO Charles Mackays tenure in part because it had in prior decades overdiversified into areas not related to its core distribution business. The company continued to expand during this period, in particular in the shipping services and insurance areas. Through a variety of acquisitions from 1990 through 1993, Inchcape expanded into or expanded its shipping businesses in China, Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Canada, Turkey, Ecuador, and the United States. The U.S. acquisitions were seen as particularly strategic as Inchcape was able to secure operations for the Pacific, Atlantic, and Gulf coasts of the United States, with the goal of operating a broad shipping agency covering all three coasts.

In insurance, Inchcapes Bain Clarkson Ltd. insurance broker was bolstered through the 1994 acquisition of Hogg Group PLC for £176.6 million (US $264.9 million). The newly named Bain Hogg Group instantly joined the ranks of the worlds ten largest brokers, and Inchcape had gained a presence in the U.S. insurance market for the first time through Hogg Robinson Inc. Meanwhile, Inchcapes marketing operation was bolstered in a smaller way with the 1992 acquisition of the Spinneys group of companies, which ran a chain of supermarkets in the Middle East, from Bricom Group Ltd. for £32.1 million (US $57.9 million).

A combination of factors plunged Inchcape into its two most difficult years ever, 1994 and 1995. Difficult economic conditions in some of the companys key marketsparticularly in Western Europe and Hong Kongdampened consumer spending, while the strength of the yen made Inchcapes Japanese products, notably the Toyota automobiles, less attractive than those of competitors based outside Japan. In certain areas such as marketing, Inchcape had also become a more bureaucratic organization than in the past, and had lost touch with some of the local markets it served. As a result, pretax profits fell 15.8 percent from 1993 to 1994 and 92.4 percent from 1994 to 1995. The resulting plunge in Inchcape stock caused the company to be dropped from the prestigious PT-SE 100 index in late 1995. First, David Plastow retired as chairman of Inchcape at the end of 1995 and was replaced by Colin Marshall, who at the same time was chairman of British Airways PLC and deputy chairman of British Telecommunications PLC. Then in March 1996 Mackay stepped aside as CEO, and Philip Cushing, who was managing director, took his place.

The new management team determined that Inchcape had to focus on its core international distribution businesses in order to turn things around and began making significant business divestments, including selling the Bain Hogg insurance brokerage subsidiary to the Aon Corporation in the United States for £160 million in 1996. The company began to jettison unprofitable businesses, and significantly reduce the workforce.

In March 1998 spurred by the fact that the Asian economic crisis had more than split in half Inchcapes shares between October and January, Inchcape made a major announcement. The diversified company was to undergo a complete restructuring to focus exclusively on worldwide car distribution, the most successful part of the group. One of the first major sectors to go was the companys Russian soft-drink bottling business, whose losses skyrocketed from £7.1 million to £21 million between June and September 1998. Inchcape sold that part of their operations to The Coca-Cola Company for US$87 million in October (US $100 million less than the price agreed on in principle just two months earlier). The sales of bottling businesses in South America, marketing services in Asia and the Middle East, the global shipping business, and the Asia-Pacific Office Automation business were some of the wide range of divestments that quickly followed. In July 1999 another management shuffle had Peter Johnson succeeding Philip Cushing as CEO, and that same month the new motors-only Inchcape was officially born. The appointment of Sir John Egan as Chairman in June 2000 (replacing Marshall) rounded out the new leadership, reflecting the newly refocused Inchcape.

The transition to a motors-only focus was not entirely smooth. The automobile industry in the United Kingdom was thrown into controversy in 2000 when the Competition Commission issued report findings showing that new car prices in the United Kingdom were between 10 percent and 12 percent higher than in other countries. Consumer confidence plummeted, and the industry suffered. Inchcapes operating profit in the U.K. fell from £25 million in 1999 to £0.7 million in 2000. The auto industry scrambled to respond to the report, offering lower interest rates and price reductions. The consumers came back, and in 2001, the U.K. new car market soared by 10.7 percent. This helped Inchcapes U.K. operating profit to improve to £13.7 million in 2001.

The year 2000 found Inchcape selling its 49 percent share of Toyota (GB) to Toyota Motor Corporation for £42.1 million, which provided Inchcape with additional funds for investments in other ventures, plus gave Toyota 100 percent ownership in one of its key markets. The partnership between Inchcape and Toyota remained strong, as Toyotas largest independent distributor, Inchcape continued to represent the company in markets including Greece, Belgium, Hong Kong, and Singapore.

Inchcapes Asian investments steadfastly rebounded from the regions economic crisis of the mid- to late 1990s. The Hong Kong market profits posted an exceptional spike in 2001, due mainly to the strength of taxi sales. Due to a government incentive campaign that encouraged taxi drivers to switch from diesel to Liquified Petroleum Gas (LPG) cars, taxi sales surged 130 percent. With Toyota dominating 90 percent of the taxi market, Inchcape saw its Hong Kong operating profit leap from £40.7 million to £48.9 million between 2000 and 2001.

In 1999, Inchcape expanded into the rapidly developing market of e-commerce with the launch of Autobytel UK, the result of a partnership with the U.S.-based Autobytel.com, an Internet-based new and used car purchasing service. Though by 2001, the wholly owned U.K. subsidiary still posted losses, Inchcape had high hopes for future growth in expanding this market of e-commerce. By taking a chance in a financially unproven medium, Inchcape continued its quest to anticipate market changes and remain at the forefront of the industry.

Principal Subsidiaries

Autobytel Ltd. (U.K.); Bates Motor Group Ltd. (U.K.); Borneo Motors (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. (63%); Crown Motors Ltd. (Hong Kong); Eurofleet Ltd. (U.K.); Inchcape Automotive Australia Pty. Ltd.; Inchcape Automotive Ltd. (U.K.); Inchcape Fleet Solutions Ltd. (U.K.); Inchcape Motors Ltd. (Singapore; 63%); Inchcape Overseas Ltd. (U.K.); Inchcape Retail Ltd. (U.K.); Inchcape Vehicle Contracts Ltd. (U.K.); Maranello Concessionaires Ltd. (U.K.); Mazda Motors (Hong Kong) Ltd.; The Motor & Engineering Company of Ethiopia Ltd. S.C. (94%); Subaru (Australia) Pty. Ltd. (90%); Toyota Hellas S.A. (Greece); Toyota Belgium N.V./S.A.

Principal Competitors

Hyundai; Mitsui O.S. K. Lines; Pendragon.

Further Reading

Burt, Tim, and Flested, Andrea, Inchcape Works on Restructuring Drive, Financial Times, January 21, 2002, http://www.ft.com.

Canna, Elizabeth, More Acquisitions for Inchcape, American Shipper, December 1991, p. 79.

Car Firms under Pressure, BBC News Online, April 10, 2000, http://news.bbc.co.uk.

Foster, Geoffrey, Inchcapes Less Perilous Passage, Management Today, January 1988, p. 46.

Gillis, Chris, Inchcapes Open Door to China, American Shipper, January 1996, p. 50.

Griffiths, Percival Joseph, A History of the Inchcape Group, London: Inchcape & Company Ltd., 1977, p. 211.

, A History of the Joint Steamer Companies, London: Inchcape & Co. Ltd.

Jones, Stephanie, Trade and Shipping: Lord Inchcape 1852-1952, Manchester, England: Manchester University Press, 1989, 222 p.

, Two Centuries of Overseas Trading: The Origins and Growth of the Inchcape Group, London: Macmillan, 1986.

Ladbury, Adrian, Bain Hogg Group, Business Insurance, July 18, 1994, pp. 35-36.

Lindberg, Ole, et al., Companies That Made Their Mark, International Management, January/February 1993, p. 60.

Magnier, Mark, Inchcape Plans Expansion into 3 Asian Nations, Journal of Commerce and Commercial, March 19, 1992, p. 8B.

Porter, Janet, Inchcape Grows with Purchase of Three Shipping Businesses, Journal of Commerce and Commercial, February 23, 1993, p. 8B.

Souter, Gavin, Global Broker Merger: Bain Clarkson, Hogg Combination to Break into Top 10, Business Insurance, May 2, 1994, pp. 1, 61.

Taylor, Roger, Inchcape Plans Three-Way Split, Financial Times (London), March 3, 1998.

Tieman, Ross, Inchcape sells Bain Hogg to Aon for £160m, Financial Times (London), October 16, 1996.

Vincent, Lindsay, Inchcapes True Brit, Observer, April 4, 1993, p. 40.

Wighton, David, Inchcape to Focus on Distribution Business, Financial Times, March 26, 1996, p. 24.

William, John, Inchcapes Sales Loses Sparkle, Financial Times (London), October 6, 1998.

Stephanie Jonesupdates: David E. Salamie; Linda M. Gwilym

Inchcape PLC

views updated May 23 2018

Inchcape PLC

St. Jamess House
23 King Street
London SW1Y 6QY
United Kingdom
(071) 321-0110
Fax: (071) 321-0604

Public Company
Incorporated:
1958 as Inchcape & Co. Ltd.
Employees: 46,000
Sales: £2.95 billion (US$4.76 billion)
Stock Exchange: London

Inchcape, which describes itself as an international services and marketing group, was launched as an overseas trading company in 1958, yet the origins of its constituent companies date back to the late 18th and early 19th centuries. With ten core business streams in three key areas, the group operates in 60 countries. During the late 1980s Inchcape consolidated its already strong reputation for expert local marketing on behalf of prestigious principals around the world. The most valuable of these principals is the Toyota Motor Corporation of Japan, for whom Inchcape is the sole distributor for passenger cars in ten countries, including the United Kingdom, Belgium, Greece, Hong Kong, Singapore, Guam, and Brunei. This accounts for some 8% of Toyotas exports worldwide. In April 1990, Toyota paid £110 million cash to Inchcape for a half stake in Toyota (GB), Inchcapes United Kingdom-based distributing business. With this acquisition, Toyota also acquired a holding of nearly 5% in Inchcape itself.

The creation of Inchcape dates back to the early expansion of commerce with India by a group of Scottish merchants. In 1847 a meeting took place in Calcutta between William Mackinnon and Robert Mackenzie, two merchants from Campbeltown, which led to the formation of their general merchanting partnership, Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company. Realizing the benefits of combining trading with ocean transport, especially with the gold rush to Australia in 1851, the business expanded and diversified. In 1856, Mackinnon aged 34founded the Calcutta & Burmah Steam Navigation Company, secured from the East India Company the contract for carrying the mails between Calcutta and Rangoon, and incorporated the company in London with a capital of £35,000, of which Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company invested £7,000, becoming agents for the new shipping line. As a result of their success in carrying troops from Ceylon now Sri Lankato India during the Indian Mutiny of 1857 to 1859, and through Mackinnons contacts with the influential civil servant Sir Henry Bartle Frere, the partners obtained further contracts to support a fleet of coastal steamers carrying mails around the Indian coast with extensions to the Persian Gulf and Singapore. In 1862, C&B raised sufficient additional capitala total of £400,000to float the company under the new name of the British India Steam Navigation Company (BI). Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company continued to act as agents for the BI for nearly 100 years.

Sir William Mackinnon also promoted steamer traffic to the Dutch East Indies, establishing a Dutch-registered shipping line around Java, and forming the Netherlands India Steam Navigation Company in 1868. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, BI ships entered the Mediterranean Sea, establishing a trunk line between London and India via the Suez Canal in 1876. In the process, Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company became one of the greatest Eastern agency houses, and the BI posed a mighty challenge to all other shipping lines operating between the United Kingdom and the East, including the giant Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O).

These events were the backdrop to the formative years of James Lyle Mackay, created Lord Inchcape in 1911. Born in 1852, the son of an Arbroath shipmaster, Mackay left Scotland at the age of 20 and worked in the customs department of Gellatly, Hankey and Sewell. Mackay, who joined Mackinnon Mackenzie & Companys Calcutta office in 1874, was to become the heir to the Mackinnon businesses after the death of Mackinnon in 1893. Mackay first became a partner after saving the BIs Bombay office from bankruptcy, and was to become president of the prestigious Bengal Chamber of Commerce a record three times between 1890 and 1893. A member of the Viceregal Council and a close friend and confidant of Lord Lansdowne, Viceroy of India, Mackay gained a knighthood for his contribution to the solution of Indias currency problems and the ultimate adoption of the gold standard in India. Mackay returned to the United Kingdom in 1894 as a director of the BI, replacing William Mackinnons nephew, Duncan Mackinnon, as chairman in 1913. Continuing his work on the Council of India, Mackays growing reputation as an outstanding public servant led to his being offered the viceroyalty of India in 1909. Prime Minister Herbert Asquith opposed Mackays nomination, however, on the grounds of his commercial interests in the subcontinent, and Mackay was offered a peerage in 1911 by way of compensation. He chose the name of Baron Inchcape of Strathnaver, commemorating the Inchcape Rock, located 12 miles from Arbroath, and expressing his loyalty to the clan Mackay, whose home is in Strathnaver. Between 1913 and 1932, Lord Inchcape personified Britains shipping industry as chairman of the BI and the P&O, after effecting a merger between the two lines in 1914.

Less well known than Lord Inchcapes shipping activities is his consolidation of an extensive group of commercial interests in India and beyond. These began with his accumulation of shares in Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company. Sir William Mackinnon had no son, his nephew Duncan died in 1914, and his great-nephews were killed in World War I, so Inchcape became the sole surviving senior partner of the Mackinnon enterprise, and by 1950 the Inchcape family held a controlling interest. Inchcapes chairmanship of the BI and P&O resulted in a very close connection between Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company and the shipping line, to the extent that many observers came to believe that they were one company.

Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company spawned a variety of other enterprises to serve the BI routes. The BI originally employed small private firms in local ports of call as agents, but eventually replaced them with firms within the Mackinnon complex. These all came under the control of the senior partners and ultimately under Lord Inchcape himself. To separate the trading businesses from the shipping line, the Macneill & Barry partnership was developed to take over the extensive tea and merchanting operations that Lord Inchcape had acquired in 1915. Amalgamated in 1949, Macneill & Barry Ltd. comprised three merchant partnerships formed in the second half of the 19th century: Barry & Company, Macneill & Company, and Kilburn & Company, involved in tea, coal, jute, river steamers, and various trading enterprises. Their principals included the Assam Company, the oldest tea company in India; the River Steam Navigation Company; and the India General Steam Navigation and Railway Company. Between 1951 and 1956, Macneill & Barry took over Kilburn & Company, and the three groups set up Pakistan-based companies. In 1965 the two river steamer businesses were sold to the government of India.

In 1906, Mackay made a successful strategic acquisition, of Binnys, a south-India-based textile business. Founded in 1799, Binnys originally carried out banking and general merchanting, diversifying in the 1840s into agriculture and textiles. Indian production of textiles boomed in the 1860s, when the U.S. Civil War interrupted cotton supplies, and by the late 19th century Binnys mills managed 70,000 spindles with over 1,500 looms. Yet in 1906, with the crash of the great Arbuthnot & Company banking house with whom it was closely involved, Binnys faced bankruptcy. Its greatly undervalued assets were acquired by Mackay and a consortium of Mackinnon partners for £53,000. Binny & Company Ltd., as it had become in 1906, made record profits in World War I with the production of khaki cloth, and by 1917 was supplying over a million yards per month. Binny & Company was subsequently restructured, setting up an engineering department, and rose to greater prominence during World War II, producing one billion yards of cloth a year by 1942.

Owing to the need to supply shipping-agency services to the BI, Mackinnon group enterprises were established in east Africa, the Persian Gulf, Australia, and London. In east Africa, as Sir William Mackinnon began to open up the region to British influence, the BI operated a steam shipping service. In 1872, an agency was established by Archibald Smith, a member of the staff of William Mackinnon & Company, in Glasgow, together with a Mackenzie man from Calcutta, operating as BI agents and general traders. In 1887, Sir William won from the sultan of Zanzibar the right to administer a coastal strip of land in return for customs revenue, which led to the founding of the Imperial British East Africa Company (IBEA), partly in response to the build-up of German interests in this area. Smith Mackenzie took a stake in IBEA and acted as its agents, until the charter was surrendered in 1897. Smith Mackenzie & Company and the agency for Shell in east Africa became joint coaling agents to the admiralty during World War I and in the 1930s gained the agencies for British American Tobacco, Imperial Chemical Industries, and British Overseas Airways Corporation.

In 1862, when a contract was won to carry mails eight times a year up and down the Persian Gulf, the merchant partnership which became Gray Mackenzie & Company was formed, helping to develop navigation on the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, and establishing a diversified trading business in an area that was also facing German expansionism. In World War II, Gray Mackenzie & Company acted as agents for the British government in unloading military cargoes; the growth of its business was helped by the spectacular development of the oil industry and the rapidly growing need to service the expanding ports of the Middle East.

The Mackinnon complex also branched into Australia, with BI services at first managed by the British India and Queensland Agency Company Ltd. The Mackinnon partners invested in the formation of a major Australian shipping conglomerate in 1887, the Australasian United Steam Navigation Company (AUSN), formed with a capital of £600,000. In 1894 Mackay was appointed to the Board of the AUSN and, in 1900, spent several months in Australia successfully restructuring the business. In 1915, he created a new merchant partnership, Macdonald Hamilton & Company, formed by two trusted Mackinnon appointees, B. W. Macdonald and David Hamilton. The AUSN, which had once owned 42 steamers, declined in the face of increasing competition from railways in the 1920s, and Macdonald Hamilton & Company diversified its activities into mining, pastoral management, and operating the P&O agencies in Australia. The P&O acquired Macdonald Hamiltons P&O-related activities in 1959 and 1960.

The London partnership of Gray Dawes & Company was set up to serve the BI as a shipping and broking agency, and eventually became a bank and a travel agency. It represented the interests of Smith Mackenzie & Company and Binny & Company in London, and set up a secretarial department to administer the estate of James Mackay, the first earl of Inchcape, after his death in 1932.

These diverse Mackinnon group interests were consolidated and reorganized during the 1950s, coming together as Inchcape & Company Ltd. in 1958 at the initiative of the third Earl of Inchcape. Tax considerations necessitated the conversion of these companies into private limited companies whose former partners became the principal shareholders controlled through London-based subsidiaries. Also in 1958, Inchcape & Company became a public company through a public offering of 25% of its equity, and since 1958 has embarked on a program of growth and diversification, principally through acquisitions. The group today reflects the merger and acquisition activities of the last quarter century far more than it represents the original companies which came together in 1958.

The original Inchcape companiesGray Dawes, Binny & Company, Gray Mackenzie, Smith Mackenzie, Duncan Macneill, Macneill & Barry, the AUSN, and Mackinnon Mackenzie itselfhave now been eclipsed in importance by the development of the companies since acquired. In India, the remaining Inchcape businesses have been consolidated into the Assam Company Limited, now one of the largest tea groups in the subcontinent, and 74%-owned by Inchcape. In 1989, the Indian businesses contributed £24 million of group turnover and 3.2% of group profits. The East African businesses of the group have been sold due to declining profitability and political problems, but in the Middle East, Gray Mackenzie contributed £4.3 million towards group turnover in 1989 and 2.6% of group profits. Macdonald Hamilton & Company in Australia has been sold, but Inchcapes new businesses in Australasia contribute £8.1 million to group turnover, and 0.9% to group profit. Gray Dawes has also left the group. Gray Dawes Bank was sold in the early 1980s, and Gray Dawes Travel was acquired by its management in the late 1980s.

During the 1960s and 1970s, under the leadership of the third Earl of Inchcape, the company expanded to over 150 times its previous capitalization, due principally to a series of successful acquisitions, especially those of the Borneo Company in 1967, Gilman & Company in 1969, Dodwell & Company in 1972, Mann Egerton & Company in 1973, Anglo-Thai Corporation in 1975, A.W. Bain Holdings in 1976, and Pride & Clarke, which held the Toyota agency for the United Kingdom, in 1978. In this period, through several capitalization issues, 64 original shares costing £80 in total in 1958 were worth nearly £2,000 by 1975.

The merger with the Borneo Company almost doubled the size of Inchcape overnight, bringing in new interests in Canada, the Caribbean, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, and Thailand. The Borneo Company operated jointly with Inchcape in the United Kingdom and Australia, but introduced two new activities into the groups portfolio, motor vehicle distribution and timber and construction business. This merger, in which Inchcape entered new geographical regions in familiar businesses and entered new businesses in regions which it knew wellallowing considerable local autonomy to existing local staffestablished a pattern for subsequent acquisitions, and Inchcape gained a reputation in the City for being a fair and honorable operator.

Through Peter Heath, originally a director of the Borneo Company, Inchcape acquired Gilman & Company, one of the great trading groups of Hong Kong. Gilman & Company was seeking an acquirer but did not wish to be taken over by an existing Hong Kong business. The acquisition of Dodwell & Company gave the group further interests in this region, which it maintained as quasi-independent companies, rather than forming one large entity. Dodwell & Company was founded in Shanghai in 1858, and by the 1970s had established extensive businesses in shipping, motors, and business-machine trading in Hong Kong, Japan, and many other Far Eastern ports and cities.

Mann Egerton, acquired in 1973, laid the foundations for Inchcapes now extensive motor-distribution business. Founded at the end of the 19th century in Norwich by an electrical engineer and an early motoring pioneer, Mann Egerton sold cars manufactured by de Dion, Renault, and Daimler for between £200 and £300 per car, at the turn of the century initially from branches in the eastern counties of England. By the 1970s, Mann Egerton distributed British Leyland cars, as well as an extensive range of luxury cars, but faced a possible takeover bid from an unwanted source, and felt increasingly vulnerable as a result of a wave of oil shocks.

The acquisition of Anglo-Thai Corporation involved the issue of nearly nine million Inchcape £1 ordinary shares, three times the number issued before, increasing Inchcapes market value by about 90%, and adding to group assets in the Far East and Southeast Asia. In one of the groups few predatory bids, valuable businesses such as Caldbeck Macgregor & Company, a well-known importer and distributor of wines and spirits, were included. In 1976, with A. W. Bain Holdings, Inchcape developed an important insurance business through a share issue second only to that involved in acquisition of the Anglo-Thai Corporation. With Pride & Clarke, the group gained the valuable concession of exclusive Toyota distribution in the United Kingdom after an issue of £1 millions in £1 ordinary shares and £6.9 million in cash, in what some observers called the biggest bargain of the century. In 1989, motors contributed two-thirds of group turnover and 53.6% of group profits, the greater part contributed by Toyota.

Inchcapereincorporated as Inchcape PLC in 1981under the chairmanship of Sir George Turnbull, is reinforcing concentration on its core businesses. Inchcapes key businesses lie in three main areas: services, marketing and distribution, and resources. The service businesses consist of buying, insurance, inspection and testing, and shipping. The marketing and distribution businesses cover business machines, consumer and industrial services, and motors. The resource-based businesses cover tea and timber. Fiscal 1989 results saw an increase of profits before tax of 19%from £148 million to £176 million; earnings per share were up 17%, and dividends per share were up 19%. Turnbull announced in The Daily Telegraph that we have continued to grow in our main business activities, and we have maintained our programme of capital investment in our business streams and the main thrust of that investment is to ensure that we are building up a company that will continue to grow in the long term. Inchcape was considered to have produced good results in spite of political uncertainty in Hong Kong and despite increasingly difficult conditions in the U.K. car market.

Inchcape earns more than half its profits in the Far East and Southeast Asia and from the motor business. Analysts, commenting on Inchcapes outlook for the future, consider that its deal with Toyota will prove highly advantageous in the later 1990s, and might offset uncertainties in Hong Kong. This preoccupation with the Far East and with motors is a far cry from Inchcapes position in 1958, when most of its assets lay in India and the Middle East. Inchcape has transformed effectively from a series of colonial trading partnerships to a modern services and marketing organization, yet it relies heavily on its long-established roots in distant markets for its strong reputation for specialist expertise and local market knowledge.

Principal Subsidiaries

The Motor & Engineering Company of Ethiopia Ltd. (94%); Williamson Balfour SA (Chile); Caldbeck MacGregor (Australia) Limited; Inchcape Pacific Limited (Hong Kong); Dodwell & Company (Japan); Atkins Kroll Inc. (Guam); The Assam Company Limited (India, 74%); Gray Mackenzie & Company; Inchcape Berhad (Singapore, 63%); The Borneo Company Private Limited (Singapore, 63%); Borneo Motors Singapore Private Limited (65%); The Borneo Company (Thailand); International Motor Company SA (Belgium); Toyota Hellas SA (Greece); Bain Clarkson Limited; Gellatly Hankey & Co. Limited; Mann Egerton and Company Limited; Toyota (GB) Limited; Inchcape Inspection and Testing Services Limited.

Further Reading

Griffiths, P.J., A History of the Inchcape Group, London, Inchcape & Company Ltd., 1977; Jones, Stephanie, Two Centuries of Overseas Trading: The Origins and Growth of the Inchcape Group, London, Macmillan, 1986; Jones, Stephanie, Trade and Shipping: Lord Inchcape 1852-1952, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1989; Inchcape Company Pamphlet, London, Inchcape Corporate Affairs Department, 1990; Griffiths, P.J., A History of the Joint Steamer Companies, London, Inchcape & Co. Ltd. [n.d.].

Stephanie Jones

Inchcape plc

views updated Jun 27 2018

Inchcape plc

St. Jamess House
23 King Street
London SW1Y 6QY
United Kingdom
(071) 321-0110
Fax: (071) 321-0604

Public Company
Incorporated:
1958 as Inchcape & Co. Ltd.
Employees: 46,137
Sales:£63Q billion (US $9.76 billion) (1995)
Stock Exchanges: London
SICs: 6719 Offices of Holding Companies, Not Elsewhere Classified; 6799 Investors, Not Elsewhere Classified

In the mid-1990s, conglomerate Inchcape plc was in the process of transforming itself into a more focused group of businesses, all relating to international distribution. The company describes itself as the worlds largest motor vehicle importer, distributor, and retailer and is the sole distributor for Toyoto Motor Company of Japans passenger cars in several countries, including the United Kingdom, Belgium, Greece, Hong Kong, Singapore, Guam, and Brunei. Inchcapes motors segment accounts for more than 60 percent of company profits. Inchcape also runs the worlds largest shipping agency, with its shipping services segment providing about seven percent of profits. Inchcapes third segment is marketing, from which about 32 percent of profits flow. This segment includes the firms Spinneys supermarket chain located in the Middle East, Coca-Cola distributorships, and a joint venture with Ricoh established in 1995 that oversees distribution of office automation machines such as photocopiers and facsimile machines.

19th Century Origins

Inchcape plc was launched as an overseas trading company in 1958, yet the origins of its constituent companies date back to the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Thus, the creation of Inchcape dates back to the early expansion of commerce with India by a group of Scottish merchants. In 1847 a meeting took place in Calcutta between William Mackinnon and Robert Mackenzie, two merchants from Campbeltown, which led to the formation of their general merchanting partnership, Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company. Realizing the benefits of combining trading with ocean transport, especially with the gold rush to Australia in 1851, the business expanded and diversified. In 1856, Mackinnonaged 34founded the Calcutta & Burmah Steam Navigation Company, secured from the East India Company the contract for carrying the mails between Calcutta and Rangoon, and incorporated the company in London with a capital of £35,000, of which Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company invested £7,000, becoming agents for the new shipping line. As a result of their success in carrying troops from Ceylonnow Sri Lankato India during the Indian Mutiny of 1857 to 1859, and through Mackinnons contacts with the influential civil servant Sir Henry Bartle Frere, the partners obtained further contracts to support a fleet of coastal steamers carrying mails around the Indian coast with extensions to the Persian Gulf and Singapore. In 1862, C&B raised sufficient additional capitala total of £400,000to float the company under the new name of the British India Steam Navigation Company (BI). Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company continued to act as agents for the BI for nearly 100 years.

Sir William Mackinnon also promoted steamer traffic to the Dutch East Indies, establishing a Dutch-registered shipping line around Java, and forming the Netherlands India Steam Navigation Company in 1868. With the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, BI ships entered the Mediterranean Sea, establishing a trunk line between London and India via the Suez Canal in 1876. In the process, Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company became one of the greatest Eastern agency houses, and the BI posed a mighty challenge to all other shipping lines operating between the United Kingdom and the East, including the giant Peninsular & Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O).

These events were the backdrop to the formative years of James Lyle Mackay, named Lord Inchcape in 1911. Born in 1852, the son of an Arbroath shipmaster, Mackay left Scotland at the age of 20 and worked in the customs department of Gellatly, Hankey and Sewell. Mackay, who joined Mackinnon Mackenzie & Companys Calcutta office in 1874, was to become the heir to the Mackinnon businesses after the death of Mackinnon in 1893. Mackay first became a partner after saving the BIs Bombay office from bankruptcy, and was to become president of the prestigious Bengal Chamber of Commerce a record three times between 1890 and 1893. A member of the Viceregal Council and a close friend and confidant of Lord Lansdowne, Viceroy of India, Mackay gained a knighthood for his contribution to the solution of Indias currency problems and the ultimate adoption of the gold standard in India. Mackay returned to the United Kingdom in 1894 as a director of the BI, replacing William Mackinnons nephew, Duncan Mackinnon, as chairman in 1913. Continuing his work on the Council of India, Mackays growing reputation as an outstanding public servant led to his being offered the viceroyalty of India in 1909. Prime Minister Herbert Asquith opposed Mackays nomination, however, on the grounds of his commercial interests in the subcontinent, and Mackay was offered a peerage in 1911 by way of compensation. He chose the name of Baron Inchcape of Strathnaver, commemorating the Inchcape Rock, located 12 miles from Arbroath, and expressing his loyalty to the clan Mackay, whose home is in Strathnaver. Between 1913 and 1932, Lord Inchcape personified Britains shipping industry as chairman of the BI and the P&O, after effecting a merger between the two lines in 1914.

Less well known than Lord Inchcapes shipping activities is his consolidation of an extensive group of commercial interests in India and beyond. These began with his accumulation of shares in Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company. Sir William Mackinnon had no son, his nephew Duncan died in 1914, and his great-nephews were killed in World War I, so Inchcape became the sole surviving senior partner of the Mackinnon enterprise, and by 1950 the Inchcape family held a controlling interest. Inchcapes chairmanship of the BI and P&O resulted in a very close connection between Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company and the shipping line, to the extent that many observers came to believe that they were one company.

Mackinnon Mackenzie & Company spawned a variety of other enterprises to serve the BI routes. The BI originally employed small private firms in local ports of call as agents, but eventually replaced them with firms within the Mackinnon complex. These all came under the control of the senior partners and ultimately under Lord Inchcape himself. To separate the trading businesses from the shipping line, the Macneill & Barry partnership was developed to take over the extensive tea and merchanting operations that Lord Inchcape had acquired in 1915. Amalgamated in 1949, Macneill & Barry Ltd. comprised three merchant partnerships formed in the second half of the 19th century: Barry & Company, Macneill & Company, and Kilburn & Company, involved in tea, coal, jute, river steamers, and various trading enterprises. Their principals included the Assam Company, the oldest tea company in India; the River Steam Navigation Company; and the India General Steam Navigation and Railway Company. Between 1951 and 1956, Macneill & Barry took over Kilburn & Company, and the three groups set up Pakistan-based companies. In 1965 the two river steamer businesses were sold to the government of India.

In 1906, Mackay made a successful strategic acquisition, of Binnys, a south-India-based textile business. Founded in 1799, Binnys originally carried out banking and general merchanting, diversifying in the 1840s into agriculture and textiles. Indian production of textiles boomed in the 1860s, when the U.S. Civil War interrupted cotton supplies, and by the late 19th century Binnys mills managed 70,000 spindles with over 1,500 looms. Yet in 1906, with the crash of the great Arbuthnot & Company banking house with whom it was closely involved, Binnys faced bankruptcy. Its greatly undervalued assets were acquired by Mackay and a consortium of Mackinnon partners for £53,000. Binny & Company Ltd., as it had become in 1906, made record profits in World War I with the production of khaki cloth, and by 1917 was supplying over a million yards per month. Binny & Company was subsequently restructured, setting up an engineering department, and rose to greater prominence during World War II, producing one billion yards of cloth a year by 1942.

Owing to the need to supply shipping-agency services to the BI, Mackinnon group enterprises were established in east Africa, the Persian Gulf, Australia, and London. In east Africa, as Sir William Mackinnon began to open up the region to British influence, the BI operated a steam shipping service. In 1872, an agency was established by Archibald Smith, a member of the staff of William Mackinnon & Company, in Glasgow, together with a Mackenzie man from Calcutta, operating as BI agents and general traders. In 1887, Sir William won from the sultan of Zanzibar the right to administer a coastal strip of land in return for customs revenue, which led to the founding of the Imperial British East Africa Company (IBEA), partly in response to the build-up of German interests in this area. Smith Mackenzie took a stake in IBEA and acted as its agents, until the charter was surrendered in 1897. Smith Mackenzie & Company and the agency for Shell in east Africa became joint coaling agents to the admiralty during World War I and in the 1930s gained the agencies for British American Tobacco, Imperial Chemical Industries, and British Overseas Airways Corporation.

In 1862, when a contract was won to carry mails eight times a year up and down the Persian Gulf, the merchant partnership that became Gray Mackenzie & Company was formed, helping to develop navigation on the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, and establishing a diversified trading business in an area that was also facing German expansionism. In World War II, Gray Mackenzie & Company acted as agents for the British government in unloading military cargoes; the growth of its business was helped by the spectacular development of the oil industry and the rapidly growing need to service the expanding ports of the Middle East.

The Mackinnon complex also branched into Australia, with BI services at first managed by the British India and Queensland Agency Company Ltd. The Mackinnon partners invested in the formation of a major Australian shipping conglomerate in 1887, the Australasian United Steam Navigation Company (AUSN), formed with a capital of £600,000. In 1894 Mackay was appointed to the Board of the AUSN and, in 1900, spent several months in Australia successfully restructuring the business. In 1915, he created a new merchant partnership, Macdonald Hamilton & Company, formed by two trusted Mackinnon appointees, B. W. Macdonald and David Hamilton. The AUSN, which had once owned 42 steamers, declined in the face of increasing competition from railways in the 1920s, and Macdonald Hamilton & Company diversified its activities into mining, pastoral management, and operating the P&O agencies in Australia. The P&O acquired Macdonald Hamiltons P&O-related activities in 1959 and 1960.

The London partnership of Gray Dawes & Company was set up to serve the BI as a shipping and brokering agency, and eventually became a bank and a travel agency. It represented the interests of Smith Mackenzie & Company and Binny & Company in London, and set up a secretarial department to administer the estate of James Mackay, the first earl of Inchcape, after his death in 1932.

Consolidation and Expansion: Late 1950s through 1970s

These diverse Mackinnon group interests were consolidated and reorganized during the 1950s, coming together as Inchcape & Company Ltd. in 1958 at the initiative of the third Earl of Inchcape. Tax considerations necessitated the conversion of these companies into private limited companieswhose former partners became the principal shareholderscontrolled through London-based subsidiaries. Also in 1958, Inchcape & Company became a public company through a public offering of 25 percent of its equity, and starting in 1958 embarked on a program of growth and diversification, principally through acquisitions. The group today reflects the merger and acquisition activities of the last quarter century far more than it represents the original companies that came together in 1958.

The original Inchcape companiesGray Dawes, Binny & Company, Gray Mackenzie, Smith Mackenzie; Duncan Macneill, Macneill & Barry, the AUSN, and Mackinnon Mackenzie itselfhave been eclipsed in importance by the development of the companies since acquired. In India, the remaining Inchcape businesses were consolidated into the Assam Company Limited, now one of the largest tea groups in the subcontinent, and 74 percent-owned by Inchcape. The East African businesses of the group were sold due to declining profitability and political problems, but in the Middle East, Gray Mackenzie was retained. Also, Macdonald Hamilton & Company in Australia was sold, and Gray Dawes left the group. Gray Dawes Bank was sold in the early 1980s, and Gray Dawes Travel was acquired by its management in the late 1980s.

During the 1960s and 1970s, under the leadership of the third Earl of Inchcape, the company expanded to over 150 times its previous capitalization, due principally to a series of successful acquisitions, especially those of the Borneo Company in 1967, Gilman & Company in 1969, Dodwell & Company in 1972, Mann Egerton & Company in 1973, Anglo-Thai Corporation in 1975, A.W. Bain Holdings in 1976, and Pride & Clarke, which held the Toyota agency for the United Kingdom, in 1978. In this period, through several capitalization issues, 64 original shares costing £80 in total in 1958 were worth nearly £2,000 by 1975.

The merger with the Borneo Company almost doubled the size of Inchcape overnight, bringing in new interests in Canada, the Caribbean, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, and Thailand. The Borneo Company operated jointly with Inchcape in the United Kingdom and Australia, but introduced two new activities into the groups portfolio, motor vehicle distribution and timber and construction business. This merger, in which Inchcape entered new geographical regions in familiar businesses and entered new businesses in regions that it knew wellallowing considerable local autonomy to existing local staffestablished a pattern for subsequent acquisitions.

Through Peter Heath, originally a director of the Borneo Company, Inchcape acquired Gilman & Company, one of the great trading groups of Hong Kong. Gilman & Company was seeking an acquirer but did not wish to be taken over by an existing Hong Kong business. The acquisition of Dodwell & Company gave the group further interests in this region, which it maintained as quasi-independent companies, rather than forming one large entity. Dodwell & Company was founded in Shanghai in 1858, and by the 1970s had established extensive businesses in shipping, motors, and business-machine trading in Hong Kong, Japan, and many other Far Eastern ports and cities.

Mann Egerton, acquired in 1973, laid the foundations for Inchcapes now extensive motor-distribution business. Founded at the end of the 19th century in Norwich by an electrical engineer and an early motoring pioneer, Mann Egerton sold cars manufactured by de Dion, Renault, and Daimler for between £200 and £300 per car, at the turn of the century initially from branches in the eastern counties of England. By the 1970s, Mann Egerton distributed British Leyland cars, as well as an extensive range of luxury cars, but faced a possible takeover bid from an unwanted source, and felt increasingly vulnerable as a result of a wave of oil shocks.

The acquisition of Anglo-Thai Corporation involved the issue of nearly nine million Inchcape £1 ordinary shares, three times the number issued before, increasing Inchcapes market value by about 90 percent, and adding to group assets in the Far East and Southeast Asia. In one of the groups few predatory bids, valuable businesses such as Caldbeck Macgregor & Company, a well-known importer and distributor of wines and spirits, were included. In 1976, with A. W. Bain Holdings, Inchcape developed an important insurance business through a share issue second only to that involved in acquisition of the Anglo-Thai Corporation. With Pride & Clarke, the group gained the valuable concession of exclusive Toyota distribution in the United Kingdom after an issue of £1 million in £1 ordinary shares and £6.9 million in cash, in what some observers called the biggest bargain of the century. By 1989, the Motors segment contributed two-thirds of group turnover and 53.6 percent of group profits, the greater part contributed by Toyota.

Reorganization in a Modern Era: 1980s, 1990s, and Beyond

Inchcapereincorporated as Inchcape plc in 1981under the chairmanship of George Turnbull in the 1980s reinforced its concentration on its core businesses. Inchcapes key businesses at that time were organized into three main areas: services, marketing and distribution, and resources. The service businesses consisted of buying, insurance, inspection and testing, and shipping. The marketing and distribution businesses covered business machines, consumer and industrial services, and motors. The resource-based businesses covered tea and timber (which by the early 1990s had been divested).

In April 1990, Toyota paid Inchcape £110 million in cash for a 50 percent stake in Inchcapes United Kingdom-based distributing business known as Toyota (GB). With this acquisition, Toyota also acquired a holding of nearly five percent in Inchcape itself.

Inchcape had a difficult time in the early 1990s during CEO Charles Mackays tenure in part because it had in prior decades overdiversified into areas not related to its core distribution business. The company continued to expand during this period, in particular in the shipping services and insurance areas. Through a variety of acquisitions from 1990 through 1993, Inchcape expanded into or expanded its shipping businesses in China, Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, Canada, Turkey, Ecuador, and the United States. The U.S. acquisitions were seen as particularly strategic as Inchcape was able to secure operations for the Pacific, Atlantic, and Gulf coasts of the United States, toward the goal of operating a broad shipping agency covering all three coasts.

In insurance, Inchcapes Bain Clarkson Ltd. insurance broker was bolstered through the 1994 acquisition of Hogg Group P.L.C. for £176.6 million (US $264.9 million). The newly named Bain Hogg Group instantly joined the ranks of the worlds ten largest brokers, and Inchcape had gained a presence in the U.S. insurance market for the first time through Hogg Robinson Inc. Meanwhile, Inchcapes marketing operation was bolstered in a smaller way with the 1992 acquisition of the Spinneys group of companies, which ran a chain of supermarkets in the Middle East, from Bricom Group Ltd. for £32.1 million (US $57.9 million).

A combination of factors plunged Inchcape into its two most difficult years ever, 1994 and 1995. Difficult economic conditions in some of the companys key marketsparticularly in western Europe and Hong Kongdampened consumer spending, while the strength of the yen made Inchcapes Japanese products, notably the Toyota automobiles, less attractive than those of competitors based outside Japan. In certain areas such as marketing, Inchcape had also become a more bureaucratic organization than in the past, and had lost touch with some of the local markets it served. As a result, pretax profits fell 15.8 percent from 1993 to 1994 and 92.4 percent from 1994 to 1995.

The resulting plunge in Inchcape stock led not only to the company being dropped from the prestigious PT-SE 100 index in late 1995 but also to a management shakeup. First, David Plastow retired as chairman of Inchcape at the end of 1995 and was replaced by Colin Marshall, who at the same time was chairman of British Airways Plc and deputy chairman of British Telecommunications Plc. Then in March 1996 Mackay stepped aside as CEO, and Philip Cushing, who was managing director, took his place.

The new management team determined that Inchcape had to focus on its core distribution business in order to turn things around. Already in the later months of 1995, unprofitable businesses had been jettisoned and the work force had been reduced by more than 2,000 people, which all told resulted in exceptional charges of £129.4 million for 1995. Management planned to make more significant divestments in 1996 including the Bain Hogg and Testing Services operations which were both considered noncore. These actions would transform the services segment into simply shipping services. In the motors segment, among a number of actions to be taken was the strategic one of moving into other areas related to new cars, including parts, service, accessories, and financing. Finally, in the marketing segment, Inchcape planned to relocate its management to the local markets served in the Middle East and Asia, thus relying on a leaner and faster-reacting operation.

Although a challenged group in the mid-1990s, Inchcapes long-time strength in its core distribution businesses indicated that a streamlined operation could once again generate healthy profits. Furthermore, Inchcapes new management appeared to be taking the right combination of major restructuring moves in order to turn the companys fortunes around.

Principal Subsidiaries

Gray Mackenzie & Company Limited; Inchcape Motors International Plc; Inchcape Shipping Services (Europe) Limited; MCL Group Limited (40%); MEVC Finance Limited (25%); Spinneys 1948 Ltd.; TGB Finance Limited (37.5%); Towergate Automotive Limited; Toyota (GB) Limited (75%); Wadham Kenning Motor Group Limited; Toyota Belgium NV/SA; CECAR SA (France; 33.1%); France Motors SARL (95%); Inchcape Finance SA (France; 49%); Toyota Hellas SA (Greece); Caldbeck MacGregor (Australia) Limited; Subaru (Aust.) Pty Limited; TKM Automotive Australia Pty Limited; Inchcape Pacific Limited (Hong Kong); Crown Motors Limited (Hong Kong); JDH Company Limited (Hong Kong); Mazda Motors (Hong Kong) Limited; Inchcape NRG Limited (Hong Kong; 50%); Inchroy Credit Corporation (Hong Kong; 50%); Inchcape Marketing Services (Japan) Limited; Inchcape Shipping Services (Japan) KK; Inchcape Timuran Bhd (49%); Inch-cape Berhad (Singapore; 63%); Borneo Motors (Singapore) Pte Limited (63%); Inchcape Consumer Marketing Ltd. (Thailand); Inchcape Engineering Ltd. (Thailand); Gray MacKenzie & Partners (Abu Dhabi) LLC (49%); Spinneys (Abu Dhabi) LLC (49%); Bahrain Maritime & Mercantile International BSC (48%); Gray Mackenzie & Partners (Central Emirates) Private Limited (Dubai; 49%); Spinneys (Dubai) LLC (49%); Williamson Balfour SA (Chile); Inchcape Inc. (U.S.A.); SS Acquisition Corporation (U.S.A.).

Further Reading

Canna, Elizabeth, More Acquisitions for Inchcape, American Shipper, December 1991, p. 79.

Foster, Geoffrey, Inchcapes Less Perilous Passage, Management Today, January 1988, p. 46.

Gillis, Chris, Inchcapes Open Door to China, American Shipper, January 1996, p. 50.

Griffiths, Percival Joseph, A History of the Inchcape Group, London: Inchcape & Company Ltd., 1977, 211 p.

, A History of the Joint Steamer Companies, London: Inchcape & Co. Ltd.

Jones, Stephanie, Trade and Shipping: Lord Inchcape 18521952, Manchester, Eng.: Manchester University Press, 1989, 222 p.

, Two Centuries of Overseas Trading: The Origins and Growth of the Inchcape Group, London: Macmillan, 1986.

Ladbury, Adrian, Bain Hogg Group, Business Insurance, July 18, 1994, pp. 3536.

Lindberg, Ole, et. al., Companies that Made Their Mark, International Management, January/February 1993, p. 60.

Magnier, Mark, Inchcape Plans Expansion into 3 Asian Nations, Journal of Commerce and Commercial, March 19, 1992, p. 8B.

Porter, Janet, Inchcape Grows with Purchase of Three Shipping Businesses, Journal of Commerce and Commercial, February 23, 1993, p. 8B.

Souter, Gavin, Global Broker Merger: Bain Clarkson, Hogg Combination to Break into Top 10, Business Insurance, May 2, 1994, pp. 1, 61.

Vincent, Lindsay, Inchcapes True Brit, Observer, April 4, 1993, p. 40.

Wighton, David, Inchcape to Focus on Distribution Business, Financial Times, March 26, 1996, p. 24.

Stephanie Jones

updated by David E. Salamie