Here's a newspaper article that says Arthur "doesn't inspire investor confidence."
It also mentions the co. he was involved with was a favorite with short-sellers because of the background of the company's backers.
Sound familiar?
Maybe some things never change.
Here's the full story, with my emphasis added:
Times Publishing Company St. Petersburg Times
February 18, 1990, Sunday, City Edition
SECTION: BUSINESS; Pg. 1I
LENGTH: 1833 words
HEADLINE: Had your tires buffed lately?Assix is on a roll with machine that smooths out rough spots on tires
BYLINE: JAMES GREIFF
DATELINE: TAMPA
BODY:
The life of a car tire is anything but glamorous. We kick them when they're new, curse them when they go flat and toss them St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 aside when they grow old and bald. Well, it turns out that tires are actually sensitive souls, easily bent out of shape by the beat-up wheels on which they are mounted. And that's bad, according to the people who run Assix International Inc., a Tampa company that wants every tire on the road to hum. "As a tire rolls down the road, harmonic imbalances begin to occur," says Assix consultant Charles Ross, an otherwise serious guy who gets vaguely Zen-like once the subject turns to tires. All that commotion could cause the tire to wear faster, putting more strain on the car's suspension and preventing the car from riding smoothly. Assix's angle on all this is a patented machine that the company claims matches a tire to the wheel by buffing off any high or low spots. Assix calls this technique "Tire Matching," and when the perfectly round tire is rolling down the road it will deliver what Assix describes as "the new car ride." There are some who believe that Assix is taking investors for a a different kind of ride. And its stock, which closed Friday at $ 9.12 a share in over-the-counter trading, has attracted a jungle of bearish investors known as short sellers. Short sellers borrow shares from stock brokers and sell on the open market, hoping to repurchase the shares in the future at a lower price. They profit when share prices drop, and lose money when prices rise. Checking out the resumes of some of those involved in Assix doesn't inspire investor confidence. One of the company's financial advisors was fined and suspended last year from the securities industry for insider trading. A board member who once ran an investment firm was fined for regulatory violations. In the early 1980s, several of the company's backers got mixed up with one of the country's shakiest banks, Penn Square Bank of Oklahoma City, which was one of the first oil patch banks to go kaput in a cloud of scandal. It's not too surprising, then, that Assix finds itself pulled violently between those who think its future prosperity is assured and those who think the company is headed for the dogs. If it all works out, Assix wants to convince consumers that tire matching is an essential service, like wheel balancing. It doesn't want to steal a piece of the $ 1.3-billion annual wheel-balancing business, it just wants to piggyback on top of it. St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 Dealers should love it. Tire balancing is the single greatest source of profits for tire retailers. The company has important backers, including some of the biggest tire retailers in the country, such as Sears, Roebuck & Co., Pep Boys Manny, Moe & Jack Inc. and Western Auto Co. "Our automotive executives were very impressed with the results of demonstrations," said Richard Williford, a Sears spokesman. "They felt it was so superior to just traditional tire balancing that they gave it the go-ahead." Sears signed a contract last year to install Tire Matching machines in all 820 of its auto care centers. Assix is actually a reincarnation of a company called Autodynamics Inc. that tried the same thing 10 years ago. It burned up a lot of money with an ill-conceived marketing plan and went nowhere. The idea behind Tire Matching is this: Every tire that comes from the factory is perfectly round. As part of the final preparation, any rough spots, bumps or deviations are buffed off. But the average wheel on the road has pounded over thousands of miles of St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 pavement, slammed into potholes and banged against curbs during parking. The wheel may look round, but it has probably been knocked slightly out of kilter. Put a brand new tire on this wheel and the tire doesn't stay exactly round. The Assix machine, invented by 46-year-old company founder R. Park Newton III, works just like similar machines at tire factories. It inflates the tire, applies an 800-pound load, and rotates the wheel. A computer scanner picks up the spots that are out of whack and buffs them off. The tire is then put on a traditional balancing machine and weights are attached to the rim. "We're not correcting a defect or problem with the tire," Ross said. "We're putting the tire in harmony with the entire wheel assemblage." Tire professionals say the procedure may have some merit. "No tire assembly is ever round," said Bob Lee Jr., owner of Bob Lee's Inc., a St. Petersburg tire dealer. "If it trimmed off the high and low spots it might help." But Lee said that in most cases "I don't see any advantages. Maybe it would help if you had a real out-of-round situation, but 99 percent of all tires will ride fine without it," provided the wheel is balanced. "It sounds like more of a marketing idea than anything else." St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 Still, Sears liked the idea so much that last May it signed a contract to rent Assix machines for its auto centers. The company now has about 1,500 machines in place at major tire outlets around the country. To help it finance its expansion, Assix recently secured $ 15-million in loans from a combination of banks and insurance companies. For each machine installed, Assix collects a $ 590 initial fee, monthly rent of $ 295 and a user fee of 18 cents per tire. The charge to the customer is steep: $ 12.50 a tire at Sears compared with $ 7 a tire for balancing. Ross, the Assix consultant, claims that 85 percent of all tire customers agree to the Tire Matching procedure, compared with 91 percent who have their wheels balanced. Each machine costs about $ 7,500, which includes the cost of training tire dealers on selling Tire Matching to consumers. After two years of operation, Assix claims it recovers its costs and starts making a profit. Despite start-up costs, Assix has seen its profits grow smartly. Net income for the fiscal year ended June 30 was $ 479,377, a 41 percent gain from a year earlier. St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 For these reasons, Assix stock is a favorite among some investors. Within the last year, Assix shares traded as low as $ 5.125 a share in over-the-counter markets. Friday's close at $ 9.12 a share is near its 52-week high of $ 9.62 a share. There is plenty of downward pressure on Assix stock, however. Out of the 1.92-million shares that trade on OTC markets, 235,128 shares were sold short as of Jan. 15. Short sellers say it is the history of Assix and its backers that makes them doubt its long-term profitability. The predecessor of Assix got its start in 1972. At the time, Newton owned an Tampa auto service business. In 1975, he began doing some tire research with the aid of General Motors Corp. GM dropped out eventually, leaving the field open to Newton, who took out patents on the technology. The main patent expires this year, leaving the way open to competitors. By 1980, Newton was ready to run with Tire Matching. He financed the venture, which was called Autodynamics Inc., by selling limited partnership shares that gave investors tax breaks that exceeded their initial investment. He revved up a high-powered advertising campaign using 10- and 30-second St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 television commercials featuring comedian Arte Johnson, of Laugh-In fame. "It didn't work," Ross conceded, adding that Newton "blew about $ 1-million" in the first start-up effort. The lesson learned, Ross said, was that nobody rushes out to get their wheels balanced simply to marginally improve the performance of their tires. "We could have advertised on the Super Bowl till the cows came home and people still wouldn't have gone out to get their wheels balanced," he said. After the first aborted effort to get the business off the ground, Newton tried his hand at real estate. He was only slightly more successful. Among his ventures was an investment in raw land in a Tampa office project called Century Park. One Newton partner was John E. Kearney, former chairman of Park Bank, the St. Petersburg bank that collapsed in February 1986 in the biggest bank failure in Florida history. In late 1986, Newton and Kearney wound up in foreclosure on the land deal to the tune of $ 7-million. Ross acknowledged that Newton did poorly in real estate investing. Other Assix backers had their own pratfalls. In 1981, George Karpay and James J. Carlstedt, Assix directors, and S. Lee St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 Puckett, Assix's investor relations manager, joined in an Oklahoma oil-exploration limited partnership. The partnership borrowed $ 2.6-million from Michigan National Bank. As collateral, each partner pledged a letter of credit drawn on one of the loosest money shops around, Penn Square Bank of Oklahoma City. Penn Square subsequently failed in one of the biggest banking fiascos in history, ultimately pulling down Continental Illinois Corp., which had to be propped up by the federal government in 1984. The letters of credit were withdrawn and the members of the partnership were sued by Michigan National. Meanwhile, Carlstedt was running an investment firm in Tampa, Carlstedt Associates Inc., which disbanded in 1986. In 1982 and again in 1984, the firm was fined by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) for failure to maintain proper capital levels. And last year, an Assix financial consultant, Porcari Fearnow Advisors, of Houston, and its two principals, Arthur J. Porcari and Michael T. Fearnow, were fined $ 10,000 each and suspended from securities trading for three months by NASD for insider trading violations committed in 1987. Assix has heard the complaints, Ross said. All the company has to do to St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 send the doubters running is perform, which it has so far, he asserts. The short-sellers "didn't think we would get the Sears contract and we did," Ross said. "Then they didn't think we would get the ($ 15-million) in loans, and we did. We think there is no way to go but up." A LOOK AT ASSIX INTERNATIONAL Revenues 1987 1988 1989 $ 1,230,117 $ 1,695,467 $ 2,804,109 Net income 1987 1988 1989 $ 245,744 $ 351,908 $ 479,377 for fiscal years ended June 30. Company facts Founded: in 1972 by R. Park Newton III. Employees: 70 Headquarters: in Tampa. Biggest customers: Sears, Roebuck & Co., Pep Boys Manny Moe & Jack Inc., Western Auto Supply Co. and Grand Auto Inc. St. Petersburg Times, February 18, 1990 GRAPHIC: COLOR PHOTO, DAVID MILLS; BLACK AND WHITE PHOTO, (2); Sears emplyoee Paul Schraedler works on a "tire matching" machine as Jim Newman, from Assix International Incorporated, looks on; R. PARK NEWTON III; JOHN KEARNEY
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
LOAD-DATE: November 11, 1992 |