Chiquita Brands International, Inc.

views updated Jun 11 2018

Chiquita Brands International, Inc.

250 East 5th Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202-5190
U.S.A.
(513) 784-8011
Fax: (513) 784-8030

Public Company
Incorporated: 1885 as the Boston Fruit Company
Employees: 50,000
Sales: $4.62 billion
Stock Exchanges: New York Boston Pacific
SICs: 0179 Fruits & Tree Nuts Nee; 5148 Fresh Fruits & Vegetables; 2037 Frozen Fruits & Vegetables

One of the worlds foremost marketers of fresh fruits and vegetables, Chiquita Brands International, Inc. is a food conglomerate whose name will forever be linked with the Chiquita Banana, a perennial market leader with a long and colorful history. Sales for the Chiquita Banana are the driving force of the companys $2.4 billion Fresh Foods Group. The company has also capitalized on the Chiquita name in its Prepared Foods Group, which accounts for the remainder of sales and features John Morrell and other name-brand meats, as well as a line of blended fruit juices, processed vegetables, salads, and other value-added products.

Management under Carl H. Lindner has richly rewarded shareholders: Chiquita shares purchased in 1984 and held through 1991 increased in value by 1,000 percent. Lindners American Financial Corporation, a large Ohio-based holding company founded in 1955, retains 48 percent of the voting stock of Chiquita Brands.

During the pre-Lindner era, Chiquita was known first as the United Fruit Company and was reviled in some corners as the creator and perpetuator of banana republics. Beginning in the 1950s the company began diversifying widely, while repairing its image, and eventually became the United Brands Company in 1970 under Eli Black. After suffering a $70 million dollar loss in 1974, which was followed by the suicide of Black and revelations of corporate scandal in early 1975, the future of Chiquita was in jeopardy. Now, nearly two decades later, the Chiquita name is not only intact but has become the companys leading image, governing its product line and propelling it onward as a global leader in premium branded foods.

The idea for a dominant international banana company was first launched in 1870 when Captain Lorenzo Dow Baker specula-tively sold 160 bunches of Jamaican bananas in Jersey City at an enormous profit. The delicate fruitcoupled with the vagaries of transportation, weather, and pricesmade for a particularly risky business. In addition, the American public was, until the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876, largely unfamiliar with the many merits of bananas. However, Baker soon found an ally in Boston produce agent Andrew Preston, who agreed to handle marketing. The two men, aided by Prestons other partners, eventually joined to form the Boston Fruit Company in 1885. When three other banana companies, including railroad pioneer Minor Keiths concern, agreed to merge in 1899 with Boston Fruit, the United Fruit Company was born.

The strategy behind the merger was to create a broad base of operations in an effort to continue trade when droughts, floods, or political upheavals were disrupting one or another of the harvesting lands. From then until well into the twentieth century, the company operated principally in Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Panama, though shipments also came from Colombia, Guatemala, and Honduras. The governments of these Central and South American countries were eager to develop, but were unable to finance the construction of railroads and ports themselves. For North American companies who were willing to buy land, which was cheaply priced, and do the building themselves, the situation offered unimaginable potential. Although United faced some competition, namely from the Standard Fruit and Steamship Company of New Orleans, for all practical purposes, it became the U.S. banana company and guided not only the economic but the political developments in the countries it had invested in.

Technologically, too, United led the fruit-producing and importation industry. In 1903 it became the first company to transport refrigerated cargo; in 1904 it established commercial radio on its ships; and in 1910 it successfully introduced uninterrupted radio service between headquarters in Boston and New York and its various crop-producing outposts. Aside from continuing to acquire more plantation land with its profits, the company expanded into the Cuban sugar trade with acquisitions in 1907 and 1912. A much later acquisition of Samuel Zemurrays Cuyamel Fruit Company in 1930 led to new management three years later under Cuyamels largest shareholder, Zemurray himself.

From this period through the mid-1950s the company prospered and wielded considerable influence, both at home and abroad. Several of the Central American governments felt powerless when negotiating land rights and new development with The Fruit Company; Hondurans commonly referred to the corporation as the Octopus, for its control seemed to reach virtually everywhere. In the United States the company enjoyed a far better image, particularly with the federal government, which found United indispensable during World War II and in later years for maintaining security (in 1961 United supplied the government with ships for the failed Bay of Pigs invasion) and the free flow of both durable and nondurable goods throughout the Caribbean. In 1944 the company unleashed its single greatest public relations campaign with the creation of the Chiquita Banana Song for radio. Soon such notables as Xavier Cugat, the King Sisters, and Carmen Miranda transformed the Calypso jingle into a long-running, nationwide hit. More importantly, the name Chiquita (meaning little one) became imprinted in the American consciousness and domestic banana consumption rose rapidly. In 1947 the company solved the problem of distinguishing their bananas from the competitions with the colorful Chiquita sticker. In so doing, United made advertising history by creating a branded premium product out of what was essentially a common commodity.

From the early 1950s through the early 1960s the company experienced radical and disturbing changes. Although Uniteds share of the banana market had been declining since 1910, the company still had a near monopoly of the market. Earnings of $45 million during the early 1950s translated into profit margins of around 15 percent. A decade later the company was posting losses of half a million. As John M. Fox, the executive charged with reorganizing operations in the 1960s, recounted: No longer was United Fruit the major source of quality bananas. No longer was the Great White Fleet, as United Fruits ocean ships were called, the only dependable furnisher of refrigerated transport of fruit from the tropics. With rising production costs and dropping prices, the company was in serious trouble. Contributing to the dire situation was the gradual evolution of the banana republics into the role of self-sustaining exporters as well as the outbreak of Panama disease, a fusarium wilt virus that was proving to be a huge capital drain on the company. In addition, antitrust action by the U.S. Justice Department would ultimately require United to help establish a domestic competitor through the sale of a portion of its operations.

Uniteds response was to hire new management to better integrate its three often autonomously run branches of production, shipping, and sales. Greater competition in the commodity market also suggested that the company begin diversifying; United proceeded to acquire a miscellany of companies, including the A & W Root Beer Company, Baskin-Robbins, and Foster Grant. The result was a relatively unfocused stream of purchases that ended when United Fruit merged with AMK Corporation in 1970. In 1966 AMK, originally a producer of milk-bottle caps, had acquired a third of the common shares of John Morrell and Company (a meat packer once involved with orange-trading during the early nineteenth century) and in December of the following year acquired the rest. Eli Black, the president and chairman of AMK, gained a reputation for financial wizardry with this acquisition because Morrell, the fourth-largest meat packer in the country, was twenty times larger than AMK.

Unfortunately, Blacks triumph as chief executive officer of the expanded United was short-lived, punctuated only by a few years of solid earnings and the companys considerable strides forward in eradicating injustices against workers. During the mid-1970s United Brands experienced some of the worst losses in its history. In April 1974 Central American governments began levying a large export tax on their bananas. Then, in September 1974, hurricane Fifi hit Central America, wiping out 70 percent of the companys Honduran plantations and causing losses of more than $20 million. Black sent relief teams to the victims of the hurricane, but he could do nothing to help the company. Losses continued to mount; because of high cattle feed costs, the John Morrell division contributed another $6 million in losses to United Brands $70 million operating loss in 1974, compared to a $16 million profit the previous year. Blacks final attempt to alleviate the companys troubles was to sell Uniteds interest in Foster Grantonce touted as the companys crown jewelfor almost $70 million at the very end of the year. The sale was considered a tremendous success, but apparently it was not enough for Black, who committed suicide on February 3, 1975.

Investigations into Blacks death uncovered a bribery scandal that was to plague United Brands for more than three years. In April 1975 the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged United Brands with having paid a bribe of $1.25 million and having agreed to pay another $1.25 million to a Honduran official in exchange for a reduction in export taxes. The SEC also accused United of bribing European officials for $750,000. Trade in United Brands stock was halted for almost a week. Blacks culpability, however, offered only a partial explanation for his leap to death from his Manhattan offices. Jefferson Grigsby surmised that the scandal was simply the last straw. Through his so-called wizardry Black had created a giant company . . . but he had also made a classic mistake. By merging a cash-rich company with a capital-hungry company, he had hoped to create one strong company but instead created a weak one. In this case, one plus one had equaled zero.

In May 1975 Wallace Booth, a former executive at Rockwell International, succeeded the string of chairmen who had headed the company by committee-rule in the wake of Eli Blacks death. Booth is credited with leveling the rocky operation by methodically tightening management control, streamlining banana delivery systems, and updating meat-packing technology at John Morrell. Yet United was far from recovery. In 1972 it had been forced by the government to sell its Guatemalan operations to Del Monte. Perhaps the sale came as a reliefGuatemala had for a long time been the companys most politically volatile producer region. Yet the transaction also signalled a weakening of the once monolithic food company that, unlike fruit-producers Del Monte or Dole, was still largely dependent on a single, highly perishable cash crop. Booth lasted only until 1977.

Until 1984 a series of chairmen and presidents, including Paul and Seymour Milstein, managed to keep United Brands afloat, but profits slipped and net losses increased steadily. John Morrell came close to closing a plant in the early 1980s and in 1983 tropical storms in Panama and Costa Rica inflicted further damage. Fortune writer Eleanor Tracy, in 1984, summarized Uniteds downward spiral: For more than a decade United Brands has looked about as appealing to investors as a black banana. The debt-ridden successor to the old United Fruit Co. had cumulative profits of only $97 million from 1974 through 1982. In fiscal 1983 it lost $167 million on revenues of $2.4 billion. Another Fortune writer called the ailing company a case study in corporate calamity.

Carefully watching these developments was board member and American Financial founder Carl Lindner. Since 1973 Lindner had been amassing stock in United. Beginning in 1982 he accelerated his purchases and prepared to overtake the company two years later by buying out the companys principal shareholders: Max Fisher and the Milsteins. With 87 percent control of the company, Lindner named himself the new chief executive officer. He quickly moved the company away from large diversified operations and toward a narrower focus on stable profits. He and the four new directors he elected doubled Uniteds cash flow between 1985 and 1988. Lindner streamlined the companys operations by selling some of its extraneous operations (i.e., soft drinks, animal feeds, domestic lettuce, and telecommunications) and lowered its overhead by moving the headquarters from New York to Cincinnati. Most importantly, under Lindner the company succeeded in recapturing from Dole its position as the number one marketer of bananas worldwide.

In 1988 Lindner, after beginning to reduce his stake in the company, quieted rumors that he was planning to either take the company private or sell it. A health-conscious American public, new ad campaigns, and Lindners financial savvy had all served to revive Chiquita and there was little reason to be suspicious of the companys future. In 1990 the company changed its name to Chiquita Brands International and ushered in a new age of aggressive, food-related business acquisitions. The Chiquita label began to appear on a wide variety of fruits, including kiwis, melons, and pineapples; fresh produce, though limited to 45 percent of the companys sales, was contributing some 90 percent to operating profits.

With the new age, however, came new problems. A 1990 rebellion by Honduran growers pointed out the fact that Chiquita was offering a full 30 percent less for its banana shipments than British competitor Fyffes. Although an agreement between Chiquita and its growers, securing such prices, remained in effect until 1992, it did little to assuage flaring tempers or halt strikes by underpaid workers. Given Chiquitas reliance on independent suppliers for 50 percent of its banana production, maintaining good trade relations had become and would continue to be a primary concern for the company.

Most of Chiquitas profits during the period, from earnings and from public offerings, were funneled into enormous capital expenditures on land and equipment. In 1990 such investment totaled $282 million; in 1991, $400 million. A commitment to buy more refrigerated freighters promises investments of similar scale in the coming years. Chiquita also remains acquisition-hungry and has made overtures to buy both Castle and Cookes Dole and Polly Peck Internationals Del Monte Tropical Fruit.

After eight years of solid performance, however, the company faltered in 1992. For the nine months ended on September 30th, it reported a $90.6 million net loss. This compared to record earnings during the previous year of $119.2 million. Poor banana quality (due to El Niño and outbreaks of banana disease), a sluggish European market, and increased domestic competition among meat packers were all cited as contributing factors. A New York Times article dated July 8, 1992, declared that Chiquita was involved in the great banana war of 1992. Reporter Eben Shapiro explained that, as the worlds biggest banana marketer and the only one of the Big Three that relies on bananas for its fortunes, Chiquita Brands International has been kicked hardest through plummeting stock prices.

For all of its difficulties, Chiquita still spends alot of its income on advertising. Shapiro remarked, Chiquitas hard knocks show the difficulty of dressing up what is essentially a commodity food as a premium brand. The Cincinnati-based company spends about $20 million a year on television and magazine advertising to convince shoppers, grocers, and its stockholders that bananas blessed with the Chiquita seal are somehow worth more than the others.

As president, Carl Lindners son Keith is now faced with turning the company around yet again. The possibility of large acquisitions remains a realistic solution to some of the companys problems, as does a management buyout of its nonfruit properties. Still, the investment community remains wary. In February of 1993 Chiquitas stock price hovered near its 52-week low of $15.75, far distant from its 1991 high of $50.75. For the foreseeable future a return to the heyday of early Lindner management seems unlikelyand yet, the Chiquita banana endures. Perpetual risk versus potentially high profit margins mean nothing to the average consumer. The look, flavor, and nutritional benefits of bananas (the most popular fruit in the country), however, will always be important. For many shoppers, if the name says Chiquita, so much the better.

Principal Subsidiaries

Chiquita Brands, Inc.; Chiquita Ventures, Inc.; Compania Mundimar; Compania Palma Tica; John Morrell & Co.; Polymer United G.C. Inc.; UB-N26LB, Inc.; United Brands Food Ventures Ltd.; United Brands Japan Co., Ltd. (89%).

Further Reading

Lavine, Harold, Bright New Image for the Octopus, Saturday Review World, April 20, 1974; United Brands Trades More Assets for Cash, Business Week, January 13, 1975; Who Calls the Shots at United Brands, Business Week, May 26, 1975; Sorting Out the Wreckage, Fortune, June 1975; Grigsby, Jefferson, The Wonder Is That It Works at All, Forbes, February 18, 1980; Fox, John M., How Chiquita Helped United Fruit, Agribusiness Worldwide, February/March 1980; Tracy, Eleanor Johnson, United Brands Hidden Charms for Carl Lindner, Fortune, March 19, 1984; Jaffe, Thomas, Dont Slip, Forbes, July 1, 1985; Lindners Buildup at United Brands, Business Week, August 26, 1985; Hannon, Kerry, Ripe Banana, Forbes, June 13, 1988; The Banana Rebellion, Time, June 11, 1990; Shapiro, Eben, Revitalized Chiquita Seeks Growth, New York Times, September 11, 1990; Mejia, John, Chiquita, Polly Peck Deny Reports of Del Monte Sale, Supermarket News, March 4, 1991; Shapiro, Eben, Yes, They Have Too Many Bananas, New York Times, July 8, 1992; Chiquita Cites Lower Meat Margins in Results, Feedstuffs, December 21, 1992; De Cordoba, Jose, Fruit Fight: Two Banana Empires, Latin and Caribbean, Battle Over Europe, Wall Street Journal, January 15, 1993.

Jay P. Pederson

Chiquita Brands International, Inc.

views updated May 11 2018

Chiquita Brands International, Inc.

250 East Fifth Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
U.S.A.
(513) 784-8011
Fax: (513) 784-8030
Web site: http://www.chiquita.com

Public Company
Incorporated:
1885 as the Boston Fruit Company
Employees: 36,000
Sales: $2.44 billion (1996)
Stock Exchanges: New York Boston Pacific
SICs: 0179 Fruits & Tree Nuts, Not Elsewhere Classified; 2033 Canned Fruits, Vegetables, Preserves, Jams & Jellies; 5148 Fresh Fruits & Vegetables; 2037 Frozen Fruits & Vegetables

One of the worlds foremost marketers of fresh fruits and vegetables, Chiquita Brands International, Inc., is a food conglomerate whose name will forever be linked with the Chiquita Banana, a perennial market leader with a long and colorful history. Sales for the Chiquita Bananawhich have been curtailed in recent years thanks to the imposition of a banana quota by the European Unionare the driving force of the companys fresh foods operations, which also market other fruits under the Chiquita, Frupac, and other brands, and a wide variety of vegetables under the Premium and other brands. The company has also capitalized on the Chiquita name in its prepared foods operations, which feature fruit and vegetable juices, processed fruit and vegetables, fresh cut and ready-to-eat salads, edible oils, and other value-added products. The company sells its products in about 40 countries in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and the Pacific Rim. Carl H. Lindners American Financial Corporation, a large Ohio-based holding company founded in 1955, retains 44 percent of the voting stock of Chiquita Brands.

During the pre-Lindner era, Chiquita was known first as the United Fruit Company and was reviled in some corners as the creator and perpetuator of banana republics. Beginning in the 1950s, the company began diversifying widely, while repairing its image, and eventually became the United Brands Company in 1970 under Eli Black. After suffering a $70 million dollar loss in 1974, which was followed by the suicide of Black and revelations of corporate scandal in early 1975, the future of Chiquita was in jeopardy. Now, more than two decades later, the Chiquita name is not only intact but has become the companys leading image, governing its product line and propelling it onward as a global leader in branded foods.

Founding of the United Fruit Company in 1899

The idea for a dominant international banana company was first launched in 1870 when Captain Lorenzo Dow Baker speculatively sold 160 bunches of Jamaican bananas in Jersey City at an enormous profit. The delicate fruitcoupled with the vagaries of transportation, weather, and pricesmade for a particularly risky business. In addition, the American public was, until the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876, largely unfamiliar with the many merits of bananas. However, Baker soon found an ally in Boston produce agent Andrew Preston, who agreed to handle marketing. The two men, aided by Prestons other partners, eventually joined to form the Boston Fruit Company in 1885. When three other banana companies, including railroad pioneer Minor Keiths concern, agreed to merge in 1899 with Boston Fruit, the United Fruit Company was born.

The strategy behind the merger was to create a broad base of operations in an effort to continue trade when droughts, floods, or political upheavals were disrupting one or another of the harvesting lands. From then until well into the twentieth century, the company operated principally in Ecuador, Nicaragua, and Panama, though shipments also came from Colombia, Guatemala, and Honduras. The governments of these Central and South American countries were eager to develop but were unable to finance the construction of railroads and ports themselves. For North American companies who were willing to buy land, which was cheaply priced, and do the building themselves, the situation offered unimaginable potential. Although United faced some competition, namely from the Standard Fruit and Steamship Company of New Orleans, for all practical purposes, it became the U.S. banana company and guided not only the economic but also the political developments in the countries it had invested in.

Technologically, too, United led the fruit-producing and importation industry. In 1903 it became the first company to transport refrigerated cargo; in 1904 it established commercial radio on its ships; and in 1910 it successfully introduced uninterrupted radio service between headquarters in Boston and New York and its various crop-producing outposts. Aside from continuing to acquire more plantation land with its profits, the company expanded into the Cuban sugar trade with acquisitions in 1907 and 1912. A much later acquisition of Samuel Zemurrays Cuyamel Fruit Company in 1930 led to new management three years later under Cuyamels largest shareholder, Zemurray himself.

From this period through the mid-1980s the company prospered and wielded considerable influence, both at home and abroad. Several of the Central American governments felt powerless when negotiating land rights and new development with The Fruit Company Hondurans commonly referred to the corporation as the Octopus, for its control seemed to reach virtually everywhere. In the United States the company enjoyed a far better image, particularly with the federal government, which found United indispensable during World War II and in later years for maintaining security (in 1961 United supplied the government with ships for the failed Bay of Pigs invasion) and the free flow of both durable and nondurable goods throughout the Caribbean.

Chiquita Brand Gained Fame in 1940s

In 1944 the company unleashed its single greatest public relations campaign with the creation of the Chiquita Banana Song for radio. Soon such notables as Xavier Cugat, the King Sisters, and Carmen Miranda transformed the Calypso jingle into a long-running, nationwide hit. More importantly, the name Chiquita (meaning little one) became imprinted in the American consciousness and domestic banana consumption rose rapidly. In 1947 the company solved the problem of distinguishing their bananas from the competitions with the colorful Chiquita sticker. In so doing, United made advertising history by creating a branded premium product out of what was essentially a common commodity.

From the early 1950s through the early 1960s the company experienced radical and disturbing changes. Although Uniteds share of the banana market had been declining since 1910, the company still had a near monopoly of the market. Earnings of $45 million during the early 1950s translated into profit margins of around 15 percent. A decade later the company was posting losses of half a million. As John M. Fox, the executive charged with reorganizing operations in the 1960s, recounted: No longer was United Fruit the major source of quality bananas. No longer was the Great White Fleet, as United Fruits ocean ships were called, the only dependable furnisher of refrigerated transport of fruit from the tropics. With rising production costs and dropping prices, the company was in serious trouble. Contributing to the dire situation was the gradual evolution of the banana republics into the role of self-sustaining exporters as well as the outbreak of Panama disease, a fusarium wilt virus that was proving to be a huge capital drain on the company. In addition, antitrust action by the U.S. Justice Department would ultimately require United to help establish a domestic competitor through the sale of a portion of its operations.

Merged with AMK Corporation in 1970

Uniteds response was to hire new management to better integrate its three often autonomously run branches of production, shipping, and sales. Greater competition in the commodity market also suggested that the company begin diversifying; United proceeded to acquire a miscellany of companies, including the A & W Root Beer Company, Baskin-Robbins, and Foster Grant. The result was a relatively unfocused stream of purchases that ended when United Fruit merged with AMK Corporation in 1970. In 1966 AMK, originally a producer of milkbottle caps, had acquired a third of the common shares of John Morrell and Company (a meatpacker once involved with orange-trading during the early nineteenth century) and in December of the following year acquired the rest. Eli Black, the president and chairman of AMK, gained a reputation for financial wizardry with this acquisition because Morrell, the fourth-largest meatpacker in the country, was twenty times larger than AMK.

Unfortunately, Blacks triumph as chief executive officer of the expanded United was short-lived, punctuated only by a few years of solid earnings and the companys considerable strides forward in eradicating injustices against workers. During the mid-1970s United Brands experienced some of the worst losses in its history. In April 1974 Central American governments began levying a large export tax on their bananas. Then, in September 1974, hurricane Fifi bit Central America, wiping out 70 percent of the companys Honduran plantations and causing losses of more than $20 million. Black sent relief teams to the victims of the hurricane, but he could do nothing to help the company. Losses continued to mount; because of high cattle feed costs, the John Morrell division contributed another $6 million in losses to United Brands $70 million operating loss in 1974, compared to a $16 million profit the previous year. Blacks final attempt to alleviate the companys troubles was to sell Uniteds interest in Foster Grantonce touted as the companys crown jewelfor almost $70 million at the very end of the year. The sale was considered a tremendous success, but apparently it was not enough for Black, who committed suicide on February 3, 1975.

Company Perspectives:

As the leading marketer and distributor of bananas, Chiquita sets the pace for providing the worlds finest quality fresh fruits and vegetables. The famous Chiquita brand is universally recognized as a symbol of superior quality, taste and nutrition.

Investigations into Blacks death uncovered a bribery scandal that was to plague United Brands for more than three years. In April 1975 the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged United Brands with having paid a bribe of $1.25 million and having agreed to pay another $1.25 million to a Honduran official in exchange for a reduction in export taxes. The SEC also accused United of bribing European officials for $750,000. Trade in United Brands stock was halted for almost a week. Blacks culpability, however, offered only a partial explanation for his leap to death from his Manhattan offices. Jefferson Grigsby surmised that the scandal was simply the last straw. Through his so-called wizardry Black had created a giant company but he had also made a classic mistake. By merging a cash-rich company with a capital-hungry company, he had hoped to create one strong company but instead created a weak one. In this case, one plus one had equaled zero.

In May 1975 Wallace Booth, a former executive at Rockwell International, succeeded the string of chairmen who had headed the company by committee-rule in the wake of Eli Blacks death. Booth is credited with leveling the rocky operation by methodically tightening management control, streamlining banana delivery systems, and updating meatpacking technology at John Morrell. Yet United was far from recovery. In 1972 it had been forced by the government to sell its Guatemalan operations to Del Monte. Perhaps the sale came as a reliefGuatemala had for a long time been the companys most politically volatile producer region. Yet the transaction also signaled a weakening of the once monolithic food company that, unlike fruit-producers Del Monte or Dole, was still largely dependent on a single, highly perishable cash crop. Booth lasted only until 1977.

Until 1984 a series of chairmen and presidents, including Paul and Seymour Milstein, managed to keep United Brands afloat, but profits slipped and net losses increased steadily. John Morrell came close to closing a plant in the early 1980s, and in 1983 tropical storms in Panama and Costa Rica inflicted further damage. Fortune writer Eleanor Tracy, in 1984, summarized Uniteds downward spiral: For more than a decade United Brands has looked about as appealing to investors as a black banana. The debt-ridden successor to the old United Fruit Co. had cumulative profits of only $97 million from 1974 through 1982. In fiscal 1983 it lost $167 million on revenues of $2.4 billion. Another Fortune writer called the ailing company a case study in corporate calamity.

Carl Lindner Took Over Company in 1984

Carefully watching these developments was board member and American Financial founder Carl Lindner. Since 1973 Lindner had been amassing stock in United. Beginning in 1982 he accelerated his purchases and prepared to overtake the company two years later by buying out the companys principal shareholders: Max Fisher and the Milsteins. With 87 percent control of the company, Lindner named himself the new chief executive officer. He quickly moved the company away from large diversified operations and toward a narrower focus on stable profits. He and the four new directors he elected doubled Uniteds cash flow between 1985 and 1988. Lindner streamlined the companys operations by selling some of its extraneous operations (i.e., soft drinks, animal feeds, domestic lettuce, and telecommunications) and lowered its overhead by moving the headquarters from New York to Cincinnati. Most importantly, under Lindner the company succeeded in recapturing from Dole its position as the number one marketer of bananas worldwide.

In 1988 Lindner, after beginning to reduce his stake in the company, quieted rumors that he was planning to either take the company private or sell it. A health-conscious American public, new ad campaigns, and Lindners financial savvy had all served to revive Chiquita and there was little reason to be suspicious of the companys future. In 1990 the company changed its name to Chiquita Brands International, Inc., and ushered in a new age of aggressive, food-related business acquisitions. The Chiquita label began to appear on a wide variety of fruits, including kiwis, melons, and pineapples; fresh produce, though limited to 45 percent of the companys sales, was contributing some 90 percent to operating profits.

With the new age, however, came new problems. A 1990 rebellion by Honduran growers pointed out the fact that Chiquita was offering a full 30 percent less for its banana shipments than British competitor Fyffes. Although an agreement between Chiquita and its growers, securing such prices, remained in effect until 1992, it did little to assuage flaring tempers or halt strikes by underpaid workers. Given Chiquitas reliance on independent suppliers for 50 percent of its banana production, maintaining good trade relations had become and would continue to be a primary concern for the company.

Most of Chiquitas profits during the period, from earnings and from public offerings, were funneled into enormous capital expenditures on land and equipment. In 1990 such investment totaled $282 million; in 1991, $400 million. Chiquita also remained acquisition hungry and in October 1990 acquired Frupac International Corp., a Philadelphia-based importer, packer, and exporter of fresh fruit, primarily grown in Chile. In late 1991 Chiquita combined its North American tropical diversified fruit sales operation with Frupac to form the new Chiquita Frupac Inc. subsidiary.

Entered Difficult Period Starting in 1992

After eight years of solid performance, however, the company faltered in 1992, reporting a $284 million net loss. This loss compared to record earnings during the previous year of $128.5 million. Poor banana quality (due to E1 Niño and outbreaks of banana disease), a sluggish European market, and increased domestic competition among meatpackers were all cited as contributing factors. Profits were also affected by the companys heavy debt load and the resulting hefty interest expenses. Late in 1992 Chiquita embarked on a cost-cutting program that involved consolidation of operations, asset disposals, and workforce reductions and that resulted in a restructuring and reorganization charge of $61.3 million. At the same time, the company decided to divest its troubled meat division. In 1994 the divisions specialty meat operations were sold for $53 million, and the remainder of the meat division was sold in December 1995 to Smithfield Foods, Inc., for $60 million. Chiquita also made other divestitures in 1995, including the sale of older ships and the Costa Rican operations of the companys Numar edible oils group, the closing of part of Chiquitas juice operations, and the reconfiguration of banana production assets. Proceeds of $217 million were realized from these moves.

Despite these attempts to clean up Chiquitas portfolio of operations, the company continued to lose money well into the mid-1990s, with the exception of the modest $9.2 million in net income posted in 1995. Chiquita was affected severely by trade barriers erected by the European Union (EU) in 1993. The EU enacted quotas on bananas that favored the former island colonies of European countries to the detriment of bananas originating in Central and -South America, the source for most of Chiquitas bananas. The company, which previously held 40 percent of the European banana market, saw its sales in Europe cut in half. Bananas turned away from Europe then flooded the U.S. market, driving prices down and delivering another blow to Chiquitas earnings. Company sales declined from $2.72 billion in 1992 to $2.44 billion in 1996.

Chiquita, meanwhile, incurred a public relations black eye in February 1996 when it evicted 100 families of banana workers in Honduras from their homes on a banana plantation that the company was closing down because it said the land was no longer productive; the company also razed the families homes. A Honduran human rights commission and the Roman Catholic Church both denounced these actions as violations of Honduran law, but Chiquita maintained that it had acted legally and with justification.

The EU banana quotas were eventually protested by the governments of the United States, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Colombia, and Mexico, who brought the issue before the World Trade Organization (WTO). Although the WTO ruled in favor of Chiquita in the spring of 1997, it was not immediately clear whether this ruling would be enough to turn Chiquita around.

Principal Subsidiaries

Chiquita Brands, Inc.; Chiquita Brands Company, North America; Chiquita Citrus Packers, Inc. (80%); Chiquita Frupac Inc.; Solar Aquafarms, Inc.; Compania Mundimar, S.A. (Costa Rica); Dunand et Compagnie des Bananas, S.A. (France; 94%); United Brands Japan, Ltd. (95%); Chiquita Banana Company B.V. (Netherlands).

Further Reading

The Banana Rebellion, Time, June 11, 1990, p. 49.

Brown, Christie, Banana Split, Business Week, August 12,1996, pp. 94-95.

Chiquita Cites Lower Meat Margins in Results, Feedstuffs, December 21, 1992.

De Cordoba, Jose, Fruit Fight: Two Banana Empires, Latin and Caribbean, Battle Over Europe, Wall Street Journal, January 15, 1993.

Fox, John M., How Chiquita Helped United Fruit, Agribusiness Worldwide, February/March 1980.

Grigsby, Jefferson, The Wonder Is That It Works at All, Forbes, February 18, 1980.

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Jay P. Pederson

updated by David E. Salamie