Donaldson Company

Donaldson Company
Donaldson Company Inc.
Type public
Traded as NYSEDCI
Industry Filtration Engines
Membranes Gas Turbines
Valves Hydraulics
Founded 1915
Headquarters Bloomington, Minnesota
Key people W. Cook, chair, pres, cfo
Thomas VerHag, cfo, vp
Revenue $1.877 bil '10 FYincrease0.45%[1][2]
Operating income $238.2 mil '10 FYincrease40.2%[1]
Net income $166.2 mil '10 FYincrease26%[1]
Total assets $1.4995 bil'10FYincrease12.4%[1]
Employees 12,300 (2009)[1]
Divisions Engine
Industrial
Website Donaldson Company

Donaldson Company, Inc. is a vertically integrated filtration company engaged in the production and marketing of products used as a means to improve performance efficiency and air quality. Its products are used by various industry sectors ranging from commercial/industrial (engines, exhausts, transmissions of all types of vehicles, vents in private vehicles, hydraulics of pipelines, windmills and other equipment), aerospace (helicopters, planes) to chemical producers requiring membranes of various fiber sizes. The company also plays a key role in the alternative energy and pharmaceutical industries by providing self cleaning, temperature balancing air systems in rotating devices involved in energy production, and filters used to prevent contamination of chemicals in research facilities. As a multinational company it operates in Belgium, Mexico, China, UK, Thailand, USA, Japan, Italy, Germany and France. In the 2010 fiscal year 45.3% of operating income came from business in the Asia, Pacific region (was 37.9% in 2008), 24.6% from Europe (was 43.3% in 2008) and 19.7% from the US.[1] It is also an aftermarket parts supplier.

There was significant growth in the size of the company in terms of market value in 2009, going from about $2 billion at the start of the year to $3.26 billion in May 2010.[3][4] Although sales were steady between 2007 and 2010 long term debt rose 98.6% over that period.[1] No single customer contributes more than 10% to Donaldson's revenue (Caterpillar is the largest at 10%).

The company has been recognized for innovations it made in air filter technology (it has spent at least $40.6 million each year since 2008 on research and development).[5] Also it has been involved in technological advancements associated with fuel cells.[6]

History

Started as Donaldson Engineering, a small business built around Frank Donaldson's air intake filter invention (engine air cleaner).[7] The business was incorporated in 1915 by Donaldson, his parents and his siblings as Donaldson Company Inc.[8]

During the first decade Donaldson Company made two important moves, it acquired the Wilcox-Bennet air filter license and introduced a new kind of filter, the Simplex used to prevent engine damage. Deere & Company was the company's most important client during the first couple decades. The early 1930s brought additional prosperity when William Lowther joined the company and designed the NS Filter, a tractor performance enhancing filter that was invented by Frank Donaldson. The 1930s were a transitionary period for the company, at the beginning of the decade it was forced to contract in size due to tough economic conditions in the United States causing business from farmers to fall however the sale of patents to influential investors provided the funds and market exposure it needed to survive and grow (part of the agreement was that Donaldson Company produce the filters). World War II provided an opportunity for the company to expand into aerospace and military hydraulic equipment and device filters.

The 1950s were bittersweet, the company gained market share, grew in size and went public (1955) but was faced with employee strikes, the exodus of key employees (who started a new company to compete with Donaldson for market share) and IRS charges of hidden back taxes.[7]

In the 1960s subsidiaries were established in Germany, South Africa, Britain, France, Australia and Benelux.

Key dates and events

  • 1938 - First production facility abroad (Canada)
  • 1942 - Frank Donaldson died his son Frank jr. eventually replaced him as president in 1951
  • 1960 - International expansion
  • 1973 - Acquired Torit Corp. and Majac Inc. (both involved in air dust filtration)
  • 1975 - new hydraulic fluid filtration system created
  • 1984 - Forced to enter new markets (through acquisitions) and restructure due to recessionary affects on major customers like John Deere Tractor Company
  • 1996 - Acquired French muffler manufacturer Tecnov
  • 1997 - Launched Donaldson Korea Company.
  • 1999 - Began producing in China (computer disk drive) and purchased AirMaze Corp for $31.9 million
  • 2000 - Acquired England based company DCE dust control for $56.4 million
  • 2002 - Acquired industrial parts maker Ultrafilter International AG for $68 million. Ultrafilter had sales of $100 million and operated in 30 countries.[9][10]
  • 2007 - Purchased outright Aerospace Filtration Systems a company that had 18 million in sales the year before. Made a distribution agreement with Kaman Industrial Technologies [11][12]

Divisions and Subsidiaries

Numerous subsidiaries are grouped based on whether their products are related to engine, industrial, aerospace or pharmaceutical applications. The 2 core business segments are

Industrial includes all business involved in the filtration of computer disk drives and commercial plant emissions as well as applications which enhance the performance of air compressors and rotating turbines. This segment accounted for 40% of revenue in the fourth quarter of 2010 down from 42.9% in the 2nd half of 2009.

Engine customers include OEM of many different types of commercial and private vehicles. Engine Products accounted for 60% of revenue in the fourth quarter of 2010 up from 57.1% in the 2nd half of 2009 (60.2% of which was aftermarket parts, 11.7% was business related to aerospace and defense).[13]

The business lines with growing importance are after market parts (35% of total sales in 2010 compared to 28-29% in 2008 and 2009) and special applications products (10% up from 8% the two previous years). Aerospace and defense and offroad products have been steady (6% and 4% respectively) while all other business lines have decreased some more than others (gas turbine products down to 8% from 10 and 11% the two previous years and industrial filtration solutions products down to 24% from 27% in 2008 and 2009)[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Donaldson Company 2010 Fiscal Year SEC 10-K Form". 2010-09-24. http://www.faqs.org/sec-filings/100924/DONALDSON-CO-INC_10-K/#A104463A012_V1. 
  2. ^ "Donaldson Company Inc Annual Report for 2010". http://www.b2i.cc/Document/960/115063.pdf. Retrieved 2010-11-05. 
  3. ^ "Donaldson Net Rises; Phillips-Van Heusen Net Loss". 2010-05-25. http://www.123jump.com/earnings-story/Donaldson-Net-Rises;-Phillips-Van-Heusen-Net-Loss/38830. 
  4. ^ "Donaldson:Looks Like the Streak Is Over". 2009-02-26. http://seekingalpha.com/article/122927-donaldson-looks-like-the-streak-is-over. 
  5. ^ "Donaldson Recognized by Frost & Sullivan for Product Innovation in Automotive Air Filters Aftermarket". 2006-02-14. http://www.frost.com/prod/servlet/press-release.pag?docid=60843453. 
  6. ^ "Donaldson Company and Los Alamos National Laboratory Join Forces". 2003-04-22. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Donaldson+Company+and+Los+Alamos+National+Laboratory+Join+Forces+to...-a0100442851. 
  7. ^ a b about Donaldson
  8. ^ Donaldson Company History
  9. ^ "Donaldson Company". 2001-07-31. http://google.brand.edgar-online.com/EFX_dll/EDGARpro.dll?FetchFilingHTML1?ID=1665195&SessionID=M1GEHHhUWjA76-7. 
  10. ^ "Donaldson Company Announces Agreement to Acquire Ultrafilter international AG". 2002-06-13. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Donaldson+Company+Announces+Agreement+to+Acquire+ultrafilter...-a087142621. 
  11. ^ "Kaman Industrial Technologies". 2007-10-01. http://www.kamandirect.com/news/2007_10_01.asp. 
  12. ^ "Donaldson Company Acquires Aerospace Filtration Systems, Inc.". 2007-03-01. http://news.thomasnet.com/companystory/Donaldson-Company-Acquires-Aerospace-Filtration-Systems-Inc-511021. 
  13. ^ "Donaldson Co Inc SEC 10K". 2010-03-04. http://www.faqs.org/sec-filings/100304/DONALDSON-CO-INC_10-Q/. 

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Donaldson's — Former type Department store Industry Retail Fate Purchased by Carson Pirie Scott …   Wikipedia

  • Donaldson — is a patronymic surname meaning son of Donald . There are other spellings. Donaldson may refer to: People Surname Alastair Donaldson, a Scottish bass guitar player for the band The Rezillos Alex Donaldson (1890–unknown), a Scottish footballer… …   Wikipedia

  • Donaldson Air Force Base —   …   Wikipedia

  • Donaldson v Beckett — (1774) 2 Brown s Parl. Cases 129, 1 Eng. Rep. 837; 4 Burr. 2408, 98 Eng. Rep. 257 ; 17 Cobbett s Parl. Hist. 953 (1813) is the ruling by the United Kingdom House of Lords that denied the continued existence of a perpetual common law… …   Wikipedia

  • Donaldson v. Beckett — 2 Brown s Parl. Cases 129, 1 Eng. Rep. 837; 4 Burr. 2408, 98 Eng. Rep. 257 (1774); 17 Cobbett s Parl. Hist. 953 (1813) is the ruling by the British House of Lords that denied the continued existence of a perpetual common law copyright and held t …   Wikipedia

  • Company for Gertrude —   Author(s) P. G. Wodehouse Country …   Wikipedia

  • Donaldson Brown — Frank Donaldson Brown (1885 1965) was a financial executive and corporate director with both DuPont and General Motors Corporation. He graduated from Virginia Tech in 1902 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering. He did… …   Wikipedia

  • Donaldson Line — Die britische Reederei Donaldson Line bestand von 1855 bis 1967. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Geschichte 1.1 Gründungsjahre 1.2 Als Limited 1.3 Nachkriegszeit …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Donaldson, Walter — born Feb. 15, 1893, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S. died July 15, 1947, Santa Monica, Calif. U.S. songwriter. He began his career as a music publisher s pianist and later established his own music publishing company. After his first Broadway success with My …   Universalium

  • DONALDSON, Sir Stuart Alexander (1812-1867) — first premier of New South Wales was born in England in 1812. He was a son of Stuart Donaldson, a prosperous London merchant, and in his twentieth year was sent to Mexico to obtain business experience. He came to Sydney in 1834 and established… …   Dictionary of Australian Biography

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”