Financial woes lead to sale of Azerty

Two years ago office supplies distributor United Stationers discovered evidence of fraud and financial irregularities at its Azerty United Canada division, leading to the removal of senior executives.

The fallout from that discovery has led United agreement to sell most of the assets of the division to Synnex Canada for US$17 million.

“Although we made progress in reducing the US$5.9 million in operating loss reported by the Canadian division in 2005, we decided it was best to sell the division,” United president and CEO Richard Gochnauer told analysts last Friday in a conference call to discuss the company’s first quarter results.

United has been close-lipped about the division’s troubles, refusing to identify which executives were replaced. It said in its 2004 annual report that it had to take a US$13.2-million charge following an investigation that took “countless hours reviewing customer and supplier transactions and divisional books and records.”

It concluded “certain items were incorrectly accounted for, and we found evidence of fraud by certain personnel.”

Pat Collins, senior vice-president of sales who also has responsibility for Canada, said in an interview the problems didn’t cause irreparable damage to the division, which had annual sales of US$120 million in ink and toner consumables and office supplies.

However, in the quarter just ended the division recorded a US$900,000 operating loss.

“Our decision in Canada was really more one of just the basic economics of what the business was there,” he said. “We felt and still feel we had a good operation there that needed more volume in order to be successful, and we would need to acquire that or be acquired.”

Nor did he believe Synnex Corp.’s purchase in 2004 of EMJ Data Systems, one of Azerty’s biggest competitors, to create Synnex Canada, was not a factor in the Canadian division’s fall.

That’s not, however, how Synnex Canada chair (and former EMJ owner) Jim Estill sees it. The Synnex purchase of EMJ was the “power engine” that turned his small company into a major threat to Azerty, he said.

Azerty’s financial difficulties didn’t help, he also said.

“When they changed their management team they really lost momentum,”; said Estill. He estimates that Synnex Canada won a half a dozen major retail chain accounts from Azerty since 2004 because of those problems.

“I suspect (the financial problem) is partly why United isn’t thrilled with Canada,” he said.

Asked if the 2004 problems affected Azerty’s business, Estill replied, “I believe it did. It’s very tough to quantify, but distribution is a very lean business and there’s very little margin for error. They lost some of their customer relationships because they lost all of their senior staff, (and) lost some vendor relationships.”

Synnex Canada’s purchase of Azerty is expected to close by June 15. Estill said it will absorb some 60 of Azerty’s staff, about half of its employees in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Synnex Canada will move into Azerty’s offices in Montreal.

United said it might have to take a charge of as much as US$6 million due to staff payouts and termination of Canadian leases. 

Collins said it began shopping the division in the last quarter of 2005. When Estill heard about it he began discussions.

“Synnex is probably the largest distributor of toner supplies in Canada,” he said, “and Azerty, if they weren’t second they were close to second, so it very much solidifies us in that market.”

While Azerty’s major suppliers — including Hewlett-Packard, Lexmark and Brother — are also carried by Synnex Canada, Estill said there will be “huge economies of scale.” It will, however, pick up some new accessory lines.

“They (Azerty) would have some resellers that we don’t have,” he added. “They were stronger in office supply space than we were. However, most of the larger customers we would both have been dealing with.”

The majority of Azerty’s business here was toner and ink consumables, but there was some office equipment product sales as well. That is not part of what United is selling to Synnex, but the company is getting out of that business up here.

United acquired Azerty in July 2000. Before that it had been part of Ohio-based Miami Computer Supply, which bought the company from Axidata.

Would you recommend this article?

Share

Thanks for taking the time to let us know what you think of this article!
We'd love to hear your opinion about this or any other story you read in our publication.


Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

Featured Download

Howard Solomon
Howard Solomon
Currently a freelance writer, I'm the former editor of ITWorldCanada.com and Computing Canada. An IT journalist since 1997, I've written for several of ITWC's sister publications including ITBusiness.ca and Computer Dealer News. Before that I was a staff reporter at the Calgary Herald and the Brampton (Ont.) Daily Times. I can be reached at hsolomon [@] soloreporter.com

Related Tech News

Featured Tech Jobs

 

CDN in your inbox

CDN delivers a critical analysis of the competitive landscape detailing both the challenges and opportunities facing solution providers. CDN's email newsletter details the most important news and commentary from the channel.