MAL in today's Globe & Mail: Magellan fires up cylinders
SALES LIFTOFF / In just 18 months, the company has blossomed from its roots as a hodgepodge of aerospace orphans.
Tuesday, February 24, 1998 By Oliver Bertin
Mississauga -- WHEN Magellan Aerospace Corp. appeared on the scene in late 1996, nobody took much notice -- it was a hodgepodge of aerospace orphans that nobody seemed to want.
But 18 months later, that same company has blossomed into the fourth-largest Canadian-owned aerospace company in the country with annual sales of about $300-million and a healthy profit.
"We just put [the components] together and made something really strong," said Richard Neill, Magellan's president and chief operating officer.
But behind that self-effacing statement lies more than a textbook turnaround. Personalities also played a key role as did a dose of smart management, observers say. After all, a host of other people have tried to turn around the businesses formerly known as Fleet Industries Ltd. over the past five years, without much success.
A new name and a new owner seem to have made the difference for the maker of airplane and jet engine parts.
"It is a well-respected company that is very well positioned to take on new business," said Glynn Williams, an analyst with Newcrest Capital Inc. in Toronto.
Mississauga-based Magellan has hit "a sweet spot" in the aerospace business, he added. Its plants have excess capacity at a time when there is heavy demand for airplane parts and the competition is too busy to pick up extra work.
Analyst Greg McLeish of Toronto- based Octagon Capital Canada Corp. agrees. "The management is very strong. They have been able to build a very strong company and rebuild some of the Fleet assets."
The key to the turnaround at Magellan, observers say, is Murray Edwards: At 38 years old, he is seen as the shy eminence grise of the Calgary financial community. He has been quietly building Magellan into a major aerospace company by finding much-needed capital, instilling a business discipline on the operations and, probably most important, showing enthusiasm for a group of companies that have plodded for too long.
"Murray has been able to use his business expertise," Mr. McLeish said. "Magellan is not the first company he has [turned around] and most, if not all, have been very successful."
The companies that he has rejuvenated include Rio Alto Exploration Ltd. and Foremost Industries Inc., both of Calgary.
Magellan is a new name in the Canadian aerospace industry, but its components have been around for decades: Fleet is a sheet-metal maker -- a metal-basher in aerospace terms -- that makes airplane skins and wing parts in Fort Erie, Ont.
It veered close to bankruptcy in the industry downturn of the early 1990s, despite a high-profile board that included former Ontario premier William Davis and retired U.S. admiral Elmo Zumwalt. Orenda Aerospace Corp. built the jet engines for the Avro Arrow, the ill- fated Canadian jet fighter of the 1950s. By the 1990s, Orenda was an unwanted appendage to Hawker Siddeley Canada Inc., the Canadian arm of a once-mighty industrial empire.
Hawker's chief executive officer Keith Moore had been ordered to break the company up and sell off the parts, and he freely admitted that he had little interest in rebuilding the aerospace arm.
Magellan includes a number of small aerospace companies in the United States that have quietly gone about their business without raising much notice: Middleton Aerospace Corp. in Middleton, Mass., and Aeronca Inc. of Middletown, Ohio, supply the world's jet engine makers with some of their most fundamental parts. Bristol Aerospace Ltd. is usually considered the jewel of the collection. The Winnipeg company overhauls jet fighters for the Canadian air force, builds rockets for the U.S. government and makes the panels that fit on the back of a Boeing 737 wing.
Bristol was part of Rolls-Royce Industries Canada Inc. of Montreal, but Rolls-Royce was more interested in building huge industrial turbines than rockets and put it up for sale.
Mr. Edwards bought control of Fleet in early 1996, changed the name to Magellan and put the basics of his empire together through a series of acquisitions over the next year.
The numbers tell the tale. In 1995, Magellan -- or Fleet, as it was then called -- lost $9.3-million on sales of $64.2-million. In 1996, with Orenda under its wing, it made a profit of $19.4- million on sales of $136.7-million.
The Bristol acquisition last July is expected to take revenue up to $290- million for 1997, said Magellan president Mr. Neill, with $365-million forecast for 1998 and $450-million for 1999. While the 1997 profit figures are not yet available, he expects them to be significantly higher than in 1996.
Mr. Neill offers many reasons for the turnaround at Magellan and some are straight out of a business textbook.
He gives considerable credit to Mr. Edwards, now chairman, CEO and 30- per-cent shareholder of the company. A financial expert and lawyer rather than an engineer, Mr. Edwards introduced tight controls, twice-monthly executive meetings, access to financing and the motivation that was lacking in the component companies.
"If we can build a good business case, he will find the money to go forward," Mr. Neill said.
Mr. Edwards already has invested about $30-million into new tooling and there is more money available should a potential acquisition come on to the market, Mr. Neill said. Then, he refinanced some of the U.S. operations, abandoned marginal businesses and concentrated on what Magellan could do best -- the manufacturing of parts for companies such as Rolls-Royce, Boeing Co. and Bombardier Inc.
Middleton is one of the few companies in the world capable of making the shaft that runs down the centre of an airliner's jet engine, while Fleet and Bristol are concentrating on the sophisticated "plastics" used in jumbo jet wings and the special "glues" that stick modern airplanes together.
Magellan is also pushing a number of proprietary products that have a niche all their own.
There is the Black Brant rocket, used by the U.S. government to check for greenhouse gases in the upper atmosphere, and a giant wire snipper for emergency use if a helicopter can't avoid hydro or telephone lines.
But one of the most promising new projects is an airplane engine that Orenda adapted from the racing car version of a 454-cubic-inch Chevrolet truck motor. In truck guise, it puts out 290 horsepower, the car maker said. Orenda's version goes up to 750 hp, enough to power a six-seat executive airplane or a Beaver bush plane.
Magellan has sold about 140 of those engines out of a new plant in Truro, N.S., and Mr. Neill expects sales to top $50-million when the plant comes fully on stream next year.
theglobeandmail.com |