Author: Staff Writer

  • Ex-chairman returns to RAI board

    Susan Cameron (Ivey) was yesterday elected to rejoin the RAI board of directors.

    Cameron—or Ivey as she was then known—retired as chairman, president and CEO of RAI in February 2011.

    She had served on the RAI board between 2004 and 2011.

    Also yesterday, H.G.L. “Hugo” Powell retired from the RAI board.

    Powell was one of RAI’s original board members when the company went public in July 2004.

  • Reynolds American declares dividend

    Reynolds American Inc. said yesterday that its board of directors had declared a quarterly cash dividend on the company’s common stock of $0.63 per share ($2.52 per share annualized).

    The dividend will be payable on Jan. 2 to shareholders of record on Dec. 16.

    The company said that this was the 38th consecutive quarterly cash dividend that RAI had declared since it became a public company on July 30, 2004.

  • “No impact of plain packaging on transactions”

    A study led by Curtin University professor Owen Carter, which timed transactions at retail stores before and after Australia’s plain packaging law took effect in December 2012, found virtually no difference in transaction times, reports the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

    The study was conducted to investigate claims that transactions would take up to 45 seconds longer per pack, because plain packaging would be more difficult for retailers to locate.

  • Skycig appoints CFO

    Skycig, the Scottish e-cigarette company that was acquired by Lorillard in October, has appointed Bruce Casely as its chief financial officer. Casely is the former finance chief of U.S. online advertising firm Digital Globe Services.

    Skycig’s president and co-founder Tom Rolfe said Casely will help the company integrate smoothly into a global corporation with complex financial reporting requirements, adding that his international experience would also support potential European expansion.

    Casely has held executive and managerial positions at Bank of Scotland, Ernst & Young, Rothschild and Scottish & Newcastle.

  • China’s cigarette output soars despite tobacco control

    China’s cigarette production has soared over the past decade, despite efforts to curtail tobacco use, according to a new study, reported by China Daily.

    Annual cigarette production in the world’s most populous country has increased 50 percent over the past 10 years, according to the report Tobacco Control in China from a Civil Society Perspective 2013. In the 12 months to October, Chinese tobacco companies produced 2.175 trillion cigarettes.

    The latest finding echoed a similar recent assessment by the World Health Organization (WHO), which rates China as a poor performer among countries that have joined the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.

    The WHO assessment awarded China two of a possible 16 points on public smoking control, and zero points on tobacco advertising control. Moreover, the country’s tobacco tax rate, at 43.4 percent, is still below the world average, the assessment noted.

    The Chinese government signed the FCTC in 2003.

     

  • Blackout Cigs to accept virtual currency

    E-cigarette manufacturer Blackout Cigs has started accepting payments in Bitcoin, a virtual currency.

    Because Bitcoin is not tied to credit card issuers or banks, the value is transferred directly from the customer to the merchant. As a result, transactions are completed faster and the fees are minimal.

    “Our mission is to make Bitcoin every merchant’s favorite form of payment,” said Anthony Gallippi, CEO of Bitpay, a company that promotes the use of Bitcoin. “Blackout is a forward thinking company, and we are thrilled that they have adopted Bitcoin payments.”

  • 22nd Century purchases equipment out of bankruptcy

    22nd Century Group has purchased the cigarette production equipment used by the defunct Renegade Tobacco in Mocksville, North Carolina, USA. The Clarence, New York-based biotechnology firm intends to manufacture experimental and high-end cigarettes at the plant.

    22nd Century paid $3.22 million for the equipment owned by GE Capital during a bankruptcy proceeding. In October, the company had already signed a lease agreement for Renegade’s 61,500-square-foot facility.

    22nd Century plans to first manufacture Spectrum research cigarettes and shortly thereafter begin production of its Red Sun and Magic super-premium brands. The company also expects to enter into a manufacturing agreement with a strategic partner and to begin exporting its products in 2014.

    22nd Century believes that having its own factory will create shareholder value as control and production of its differentiated tobacco products will be greatly facilitated and costs will be reduced. Until now, 22nd Century Group’s subsidiary, Goodrich Tobacco Co., had produced all of its products through contract manufacturers.

    The company makes the Spectrum cigarette for the U.S. government, which is distributed under the direction of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health. The Spectrum line includes a series of cigarette styles that have a similar tar yield, but varying nicotine yields.

    Approximately one-third of the manufacturing equipment purchased will not be needed and is expected to be sold to other parties that have already expressed interest.

     

     

     

     

  • Promotions at Star Tobacco

    Star Tobacco International has made several corporate management appointments.

    Baldev Mistry has been promoted to the position of vice president, African Region. In capacity, he will oversee all of Star’s commercial operations in Africa, as well as spearhead vertical integration projects in Kenya, Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia. He will also be responsible for the group’s cloves business in Madagascar.

    Akin Akdogan has been promoted to the position of commercial director for tobacco monopolies & group logistics. In addition to overseeing Star’s logistics and the group’s business with government tobacco monopolies, Akdogan will spearhead the expansion of the company’s “just-in-time” tobacco depots initiative in southern Europe and Asia.

    Christopher Maan has been promoted to the position of commercial director for sales & marketing. In this capacity, Maan will be overseeing Star’s commercial sales worldwide with the exception of sales to tobacco monopolies and Asia.

  • PMI and JTI acquire stakes in Russian distribution firm

    Photo: scaliger

    Philip Morris International and Japan Tobacco International are acquiring equity stakes of 20 percent each in Megapolis Distribution, the holding company of CJSC TK Megapolis, a major distributor in Russia.

    The companies are paying $750 million each for their stakes. If Megapolis’ operational performance meets certain benchmarks during the four fiscal years following the closing of the agreement, PMI and JTI will each pay an additional $100 million.

    Megapolis is one of Russia’s leading consumer goods distributors focusing principally on tobacco and beverages. It employs almost 15,000 employees and commands a direct store delivery system that reaches more than 150,000 points of sale. Megapolis handles approximately 70 percent of the cigarettes sold in Russia through its distribution agreements with PMI, Japan Tobacco International and Imperial Tobacco Group.

    “We are delighted to reach this agreement with Megapolis, our proven distribution partner, which will support our business expansion in this profitable market,” said Miroslaw Zielinski, PMI’s president, Eastern Europe, Middle East & Africa Region and PMI Duty Free.

    “Megapolis has been our partner since 2007 and has contributed to JTI’s success in the important Russian market,” commented Kevin Tomlinson, JTI’s regional president, commonwealth of independent states. “This acquisition will strengthen their distribution platform allowing us to implement our growth strategy in the region more efficiently and effectively.”

  • Tobacco Solutions Asia installs first filter facility

    tsalTobacco Solutions Asia (TSAL) has commissioned its first filter rod manufacturing facility, in South Africa.

    The machine comprises a Hauni KDF line capable of supplying monoacetate filters in various diameters and lengths. The capacity is 8,500 rods per minute.

    “This completes TSAL’s first African project,” says Frederick Maan, business development manager, TSAL. “We are also completing other related factories in D.R. Congo, Madagascar and Zambia. Given the robustness of the South African cigarette market, the establishment of our first line in South Africa is appropriate.’’

    According to TSAL, Africa has some of the world’s faster-growing cigarette markets after Asia.

    TSAL is a tobacco technical consulting firm offering feasibility studies, blend development, factory design, factory equipment procurement, factory implementation and factory technical management, among other services. The company is a fully owned subsidiary of Star Tobacco International.