Engelhard Corporation
Engelhard Corporation
101 Wood Avenue
Iselin, New Jersey 08830
U.S.A.
(908) 205-5000
Fax: (908) 321-1161
Public Company
Incorporated: 1981
Employees: 7,000
Sales: $2.94 billion
Stock Exchanges: New York London Zürich Basel Geneva
Engelhard Corporation is a leading supplier of catalysts used in the petroleum, chemical, and food industries. An unusually diversified company, Engelhard also produces a variety of industrial products such as paper coating agents, color pigments, temperature sensing devices, and precious-metal-coated anodes, and offers a precious-metals management service for its customers. From the company’s present configuration it is not apparent that the unifying thread of its many activities has been the refining and fabricating of precious metals for industrial as well as decorative uses. Engelhard Corporation took on its present corporate form only in 1981, but for most of the 20th century the name Engelhard had been associated with the glamorous, and sometimes notorious, world of precious metals: gold, silver, and those metals in the platinum group.
The company’s roots in the precious-metals industry extend back to 1891, the year in which Charles Engelhard immigrated to the United states from his native Germany to work as a foreign sales agent for his employer, a marketer of platinum. Engelhard decided to remain in the United States and soon was able to secure equity positions in a number of precious metals companies, chief among them Baker & Co., platinum; Irvington Smelting, which dealt with gold and silver; Hanovia Company; and American Platinum Works. Engelhard, who in Forbes, August 1, 1965, was described by his son as a “tough businessman” and “very Germanic,” united the companies into a comprehensive precious-metals fabricator under the name of Engelhard Industries. The Engelhard interests bought, refined, and sold the full range of precious metals, but, with Baker & Co. taking the lead, soon developed a special expertise in platinum.
Platinum is valuable not only for its beauty but because it exhibits a number of unusual and useful physical properties, among them the virtually complete resistance to corrosion by chemicals or heat, and a molecular formation well suited to various types of catalysis. By the early 1900s Engelhard had begun to exploit the metal’s industrial value as well as its importance to the jewelry and dental trades, helping develop its use as a heat resistant liner for chemical vessels and as filaments in electric light bulbs. As platinum was scarce, however, the metals industry did not much pursue its industrial applications. Engelhard Industries remained a supplier of precious metals primarily for ornamentation and dentistry. It was not until the 1920s that a secure supply of platinum encouraged further study of the metal’s engineering value. A Canadian mining concern, Inco, formerly called International Nickel Company, demonstrated that platinum could be produced as a by-product of nickel, thus temporarily stabilizing the supply of platinum and prompting intensive research into its properties. Charles Engelhard became Inco’s exclusive dealer of platinum in the United States, and in the early 1930s created a research-and-development department of his own to pioneer new uses for the metal. In conjunction with Du Pont, Engelhard’s Baker & Co. came up with a revolutionary process for the manufacture of nitric acid, that employed a platinum and rhodium catalyst. The process was soon adopted throughout the chemicals industry. Engelhard Industries began a long evolution that would first transform the company into the world leader in precious-metals fabricating and later encourage its present focus on catalysis in many of its forms.
The 1930s saw the development of the platinum spinnerette, a platinum nozzle perforated by thousands of microscopic holes designed to spin out synthetic fibers for the manufacture of textiles. World War II fostered other uses of platinum, such as the platinum-tipped sparkplug for aircraft engines, able to withstand high temperatures for long periods without corroding. In the early 1950s platinum began to be used in the petroleum industry for the catalysis of high-octane gasoline and to refine heavy crude oils. Engelhard Industries continued to derive the large majority of its sales from nonindustrial markets such as jewelry, but in the 1940s Charles Engelhard added to his growing assortment of companies with the purchase of D.E. Makepeace Company of Massachusetts, makers of gold and silver sheet, tube, and wire; Amersil Company, industrial appliers of fused quartz; and National Electric Instruments Company, a manufacturer of medical instruments. With these and other industrial acquisitions, Engelhard laid the groundwork for the later expansion of his business carried out by his son, Charles Engelhard Jr. Engelhard Jr., born in 1917, served as a pilot in World War II and afterward joined his father in the metals business. Anxious to make his own mark, young Engelhard soon moved to South Africa and began exploring opportunities in that mineral-rich country, source of much of the world’s gold, platinum, and diamonds.
Until 1971 the history of Engelhard Corporation was largely the story of Charles Engelhard Jr. The founder’s son had the unusual good fortune to succeed in both of the roles available to a wealthy scion. He became an international socialite and built his father’s company into a far greater success. Upon settling in South Africa, Engelhard started a gold-exporting business to supply his father’s companies with raw material, as well as to turn a profit. At the time, gold could not be traded except in the form of art objects, so Engelhard shipped his gold in the shape of dishes, jewelery, and even solid gold pulpit tops, much of which was later melted down by the customer. Engelhard incorporated his firm, Precious Metals Development, in London in 1949, using the services of Robert Fleming & Co. At Fleming & Co. Engelhard met Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, who is believed to have used the portly, gold-toting Engelhard as the model for his famous villain, Auric Goldfinger. When his father died in 1950, the younger Engelhard assumed control of a complex, heteroge-nous mix of companies headquartered in Newark, New Jersey. He once again made the United States his home, bringing with him connections with many of the leading figures in South African mining.
Engelhard found that his autocratic father had run his various metals businesses virtually without administrative help, and set about centralizing authority while also delegating its daily implementation. In 1953 he brought in Gordon Richdale as president of Engelhard Industries, the main operating company for the family interests. Richdale had experience in mining in the Transvaal region of South Africa, and was a good friend of Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, the chairman of that country’s dominant mining company, Anglo American Corporation of South Africa. Engelhard had become friends with Oppenheimer’s son Harry as well, so when the Oppenheimers needed a partner for a 1957 bailout of Central Mining and Investment Corporation they turned to Engelhard. Central Mining was a large, London-based oil and mining company with extensive South African holdings, in danger of a hostile takeover, which it hoped to prevent with Engelhard’s help. For a relatively small amount of cash, $3.5 million, Engelhard was able to gain a 30% share of Rand American Investments Limited, an Oppenheimer creation that then won the proxy fight at Central Mining and took control of its 12 gold mines, timber holdings, lime quarries, and 13 newspapers, with a total estimated value of $500 million. Charles Engelhard Jr. was named chairman of Rand American, having parlayed a youthful lark in South Africa into an intimate partnership with one of the most powerful families in international business.
The South African venture was kept separate from Engelhard’s stable of U.S. companies, which in 1957 had sales of $173 million, more than one-third of them derived from platinum fabricating. Engelhard Industries also did about $32 million in gold fabricating, and $55 million in silver, making it a world leader in all three of the major precious-metals markets. Industrial applications of precious metals were on the rise, and Engelhard Industries was well positioned to profit from their growing importance. Charles Engelhard Jr. also continued to pursue his valuable South African connections. As part of the 1957 takeover of Central Mining, Engelhard and Harry Oppenheimer had agreed to a stock swap, each of them taking 10% of the other’s family holding company. Engelhard thus gained a very valuable piece of Ernest Oppenheimer and Sons, the force behind Anglo American Corporation and the De Beers diamond mines; while Harry Oppenheimer took a similar chunk of Engelhard Hanovia, the family-owned corporation that, in turn, controlled 72% of Engelhard Industries. The trade would appear to have been one-sided, as Anglo American was a much larger concern than the Engelhard interests. Over the next two decades, however, Harry Oppenheimer continued to buy stock in Engelhard Hanovia and by 1970 came to own 70%, at which time his investment proved to have been very wise indeed.
In the meantime, Engelhard upped his investments in South Africa. In 1958 he set up the American-South African Investment Company Limited, with $34 million in assets. American-South African was an investment trust trading in South African gold stocks and was the first South African company listed on the New York Stock Exchange. As chairman of Rand Mines, one of the former Central Mining companies, Engelhard greatly expanded the firm’s holding into uranium, coal, and copper refining; and in 1961 he paid $17 million for two gold mines owned by Kennecott Copper, rolling all of his South African holdings into a new joint investment company with the Oppenheimers called Rand Selection Corporation Limited. Engelhard had by that time become a figure of recognized importance in South African affairs, an honor that brings with it involvement in all of the moral and political difficulties besetting that country. After the Sharpeville massacre of 1960, Engelhard became more open in his criticisms of apartheid and somewhat curtailed his active investment in the country. Engelhard did not seem to bother himself with apologies or explanations of the relation between his fortune and apartheid. As a businessman and as a strong supporter and confidante of Democratic politicians, he appears to have viewed apartheid as inefficent and doomed but did not further concern himself with its injustices.
In 1963 Engelhard put together the deal that would determine the future of his company. At the urging of Andre Meyer of Lazard Freres, the investment-banking house, Engelhard took a 20% interest in Minerals & Chemicals Philipp (MCP), a recently formed partnership between a rather small producer of nonmetallic minerals like kaolin and fuller’s earth, and Philipp Brothers, a powerful trading firm specializing in the buying and selling of ores on the international market. Again Engelhard made a stock swap an important part of the deal, giving up 8% of Engelhard Hanovia as partial payment for his 20% interest in MCP, which in 1964 had sales of $447 million, the bulk of it generated by Philipp Brothers’s fast-growing ore trading. In fact, Engelhard’s purchase of MCP stock soon proved prescient, as worldwide demand for precious and industrial metals began to take off, and Philipp’s sales skyrocketed, gaining as much as 45% in a single year.
By 1966 MCP sales had reached $709 million, while Engelhard Industries did only about 40% of that figure. Engelhard nevertheless worked out a merger of the two companies, in September of 1967, creating Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corporation (EMCC), with the Engelhard family controlling about 40% of the new giant’s stock. Given the relative size of the partners in this transaction, and Harry Oppenheimer’s increasing role in the Engelhard family interests, it is probable that the merger was made possible by the financial power of Oppenheimer’s Anglo American Corporation. EMCC was already a large corporation, but its potential was not yet apparent to many observers. Nearly one-half of the company’s 1967 net income of $28 million was generated by the Philipp trading division, with the Engelhard metal processing contributing 34%, and minerals and chemicals about 19%. Philipp’s trading worked on a small profit margin but was soon to enjoy phenomenal growth, as the world turned increasingly to spot traders to move scarce natural resources around the globe quickly and efficiently. By 1972 EMCC’s sales hit $2 billion, about 80% of it supplied by Philipp, and in 1974 revenue reached the astonishing figure of $5 billion and continued to climb.
Charles Engelhard Jr. did not live to see the success of his combination, however. When the “platinum king,” as he was called, died in early 1971, his family’s Engelhard Hanovia owned 43% of the increasingly profitable EMCC; but by that time 70% of Hanovia was controlled by Anglo American, which promptly exchanged its Hanovia shares for 30% of EMCC, leaving the Engelhard family with 10% of EMCC and all of its other interests. The friendship of Engelhard and Op-penheimer thus ended with a rough parity of gain—with the help of Oppenheimer, Engelhard had built an enormous metals combination, but when the dust settled it was Oppenheimer who would reap the long-term benefits.
In the absence of an Engelhard heir interested in business, Milton Rosenthal was appointed chairman of EMCC. Rosenthal had been president of EMCC since the 1967 merger, and after Engelhard’s death inaugurated a tightening of controls and general overhaul of the company. In part, this was an inevitable concomitant of the executive change, which saw Engelhard’s largely blue-blood management give way to a team dominated by Philipp Brothers’s trading veterans, chief among them Ludwig Jesselson. Neither side of the merger particularly enjoyed working with the other, and when the MCP men gained control of the company many of the Engelhard people left or were fired, and an air of hardworking sobriety settled over the firm. Rosenthal and his advisors cut back on luxuries but expanded mightily their trading business, which, soon after the 1973 oil crisis, began handling oil on the spot market. Commodities traded on the spot market, as opposed to the futures market, are for immediate delivery. From modest beginnings, the oil spot market quickly reached critical importance during the 1970s, a decade in which all natural resources seemed in short supply, and by 1978 Philipp was trading $4.5 billion in oil alone. Its $9 billion in total sales dwarfed the minerals-and-chemicals and precious-metals business of its partners, even as the latter became increasingly successful in the development of fluid catalytic cracking materials and exhaust emission control converters.
Philipp Brothers owed its success primarily to the scarcity of its commodities and the skill of its traders. By keeping tabs on the needs of both producers and consumers of over 100 kinds of raw materials, Philipp was able to buy and sell large quantities of goods for small but almost instant profits, and even offered its clients the use of a company bank in Switzerland to help finance the construction of new plants or to make unusually large purchases. As the markets for raw materials became increasingly widespread, Philipp’s business continued to grow at a fantastic rate, and from 1978 to 1980 EMCC’s sales jumped from $10 billion to $26.5 billion, about 90% of which was due to Philipp. So great a disparity between former partners naturally strained corporate relations, as minerals-and-chemicals people along with those in precious metals felt overshadowed by their trading counterparts and had trouble justifying time spent managing assets that grew at so comparatively slow a rate. In the spring of 1981, therefore, metals-and-minerals and precious-metals division of EMCC were spun off as a new, publicly traded entity to be called Engelhard Corporation, while Philipp Brothers went its way as Phibro toward an eventual merger with Salomon Inc. Harry Oppenheimer’s Anglo American Corporation maintained a 30% stake in both companies, a double wild card waiting to be played at any time.
The new Engelhard Corporation set about revising its mix of sales. In 1983, for example, when the company did about $2 billion in sales, 85% of the sales were generated by the precious-metals business, but the much smaller minerals-and chemicals-division produced 60% of Engelhard’s net income. As a result, in that year the company began referring to itself as a specialty chemicals firm, and two years later regrouped its businesses according to function rather than the raw material involved. Thus, all catalytic businesses became part of the specialty-chemicals division, regardless of whether they made use of kaolin or platinum for their catalysis; while the specialty-metals division worked strictly with metals technology and metals management services. This gradual redefinition and housecleaning continued up to the 1990s, with Engelhard announcing that it would sell off some of its remaining gold and silver businesses and begin deep cuts in its salaried staff, in anticipation of which the company took a special charge of $160 million in 1989.
At the end of the 1980s Engelhard Corporation derived the lion’s share of its sales from the remaining portion of its precious-metals fabrication business, $1.6 billion, but far more profitable was the catalysts-and-chemicals division, which earned $43 million on sales of $450 million in 1989. Much of that was generated by fluid catalytic cracking materials made for the petroleum industry. Even more promising was the performance of the company’s third product grouping, now known as pigments and additives. This group, a descendent of the EMCC merger partner that produces paper coatings and pigments for the plastic and paint industries, along with several businesses purchased in 1988 from the Harshaw/Filtrol Partnership, netted $53 million on only $360 million in sales. It was no surprise, therefore, that despite its heritage as one of the world’s premier users of precious metals, Engelhard is steadily moving toward the more lucrative fields of catalysis and specialty chemicals.
Principal Subsidiaries
Engelhard-Kalichemie (Germany, 50%); Hankuk-Engelhard (Republic of Korea, 50%); N.E. Chemcat (Japan, 38.8%).
Further Reading
“The Engelhard Touch,” Forbes, August 1, 1965.
—Jonathan Martin
Engelhard Corporation
Engelhard Corporation
101 Wood Avenue
Iselin, New Jersey 08830
U.S.A.
(908) 205-5000
Fax: (908) 321-1161
Web site: http://www.engelhard.com
Public Company
Incorporated: 1981
Employees: 6,300
Sales: $3.18 billion (1996)
Stock Exchanges: New York London Zurich Basel Geneva
SICs: 3339 Primary Nonferrous Metals, Not Elsewhere Classified; 2899 Foundry Supplies, Chemical Preparations; 2816 Mineral Pigments & Colors; 2819 Chemical Catalysts; 2834 Pharmaceuticals; 2836 Viruses, Vaccines, Biological & Allied Products; 2851 Fillers, Enamels, Lacquer, Paints, Stains, Primers, Removers; 3295 Kaolin Manufacturing, Ground or Otherwise Treated; 5169 Chemical Food Additives
Engelhard Corporation is a leading supplier of catalysts used in the petroleum, chemical, and food industries. An unusually diversified company, Engelhard also produces a variety of industrial products such as paper coating agents, color pigments, temperature sensing devices, and precious metal-coated anodes, and offers a precious metals management service for its customers. From the company’s present configuration it is not apparent that the unifying thread of its many activities has been the refining and fabricating of precious metals for industrial as well as decorative uses. Engelhard Corporation took on its present corporate form only in 1981, but for most of the 20th century the name Engelhard had been associated with the glamorous, and sometimes notorious, world of precious metals: gold, silver, and those metals in the platinum group.
Immigrant Roots
The company’s roots in the precious-metals industry extend back to 1891, the year in which Charles Engelhard immigrated to the United States from his native Germany to work as a foreign sales agent for his employer, a marketer of platinum. Engelhard decided to remain in the United States and soon was able to secure equity positions in a number of precious metals companies, chief among them Baker & Co., platinum; Irvington Smelting, which dealt with gold and silver; Hanovia Company; and American Platinum Works. Engelhard, who in Forbes, August 1,1965, was described by his son as a “tough businessman” and “very Germanic,” united the companies into a comprehensive precious-metals fabricator under the name of Engelhard Industries. The Engelhard interests bought, refined, and sold the full range of precious metals, but, with Baker & Co. taking the lead, soon developed a special expertise in platinum.
Platinum is valuable not only for its beauty but because it exhibits a number of unusual and useful physical properties, among them the virtually complete resistance to corrosion by chemicals or heat, and a molecular formation well-suited to various types of catalysis. By the early 1900s Engelhard had begun to exploit the metal’s industrial value as well as its importance to the jewelry and dental trades, helping develop its use as a heat resistant liner for chemical vessels and as filaments in electric light bulbs. As platinum was scarce, however, the metals industry did not much pursue its industrial applications. Engelhard Industries remained a supplier of precious metals primarily for ornamentation and dentistry. It was not until the 1920s that a secure supply of platinum encouraged further study of the metal’s engineering value. A Canadian mining concern, Inco, formerly called International Nickel Company, demonstrated that platinum could be produced as a byproduct of nickel, thus temporarily stabilizing the supply of platinum and prompting intensive research into its properties. Charles Engelhard became Inco’s exclusive dealer of platinum in the United States, and in the early 1930s created a research-and-development department of his own to pioneer new uses for the metal. In conjunction with Du Pont, Engelhard’s Baker & Co. came up with a revolutionary process for the manufacture of nitric acid that employed a platinum and rhodium catalyst. The process was soon adopted throughout the chemicals industry. Engelhard Industries began a long evolution that would first transform the company into the world leader in precious-metals fabricating and later encourage its present focus on catalysis in many of its forms.
The 1930s saw the development of the platinum spinnerette, a platinum nozzle perforated by thousands of microscopic holes designed to spin out synthetic fibers for the manufacture of textiles. World War II fostered other uses of platinum, such as the platinum-tipped sparkplug for aircraft engines, able to withstand high temperatures for long periods without corroding. In the early 1950s platinum began to be used in the petroleum industry for the catalysis of high-octane gasoline and to refine heavy crude oils. Engelhard Industries continued to derive the large majority of its sales from nonindustrial markets such as jewelry, but in the 1940s Charles Engelhard added to his growing assortment of companies with the purchase of D.E. Makepeace Company of Massachusetts, makers of gold and silver sheet, tube, and wire; Amersil Company, industrial appliers of fused quartz; and National Electric Instruments Company, a manufacturer of medical instruments. With these and other industrial acquisitions, Engelhard laid the groundwork for the later expansion of his business carried out by his son, Charles Engelhard Jr. Born in 1917, Charles served as a pilot in World War II and afterward joined his father in the metals business. Anxious to make his own mark, young Engelhard soon moved to South Africa and began exploring opportunities in that mineral-rich country, source of much of the world’s gold, platinum, and diamonds.
The South African Connection
Until 1971 the history of Engelhard Corporation was largely the story of Charles Engelhard Jr. The founder’s son had the unusual good fortune to succeed in both of the roles available to a wealthy scion. He became an international socialite and built his father’s company into a far greater success. Upon settling in South Africa, Engelhard started a gold-exporting business to supply his father’s companies with raw material, as well as to turn a profit. At the time, gold could not be traded except in the form of art objects, so Engelhard shipped his gold in the shape of dishes, jewelry, and even solid gold pulpit tops, much of which was later melted down by the customer. Engelhard incorporated his firm, Precious Metals Development, in London in 1949, using the services of Robert Fleming & Co. At Fleming & Co. Engelhard met Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, who is believed to have used the portly, gold-toting Engelhard as the model for his famous villain, Auric Goldfinger. When his father died in 1950, the younger Engelhard assumed control of a complex, heterogenous mix of companies headquartered in Newark, New Jersey. He once again made the United States his home, bringing with him connections with many of the leading figures in South African mining.
Engelhard found that his autocratic father had run his various metals businesses virtually without administrative help, and set about centralizing authority while also delegating its daily implementation. In 1953 he brought in Gordon Richdale as president of Engelhard Industries, the main operating company for the family interests. Richdale had experience in mining in the Transvaal region of South Africa, and was a good friend of Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, the chairman of that country’s dominant mining company, Anglo American Corporation of South Africa. Engelhard had become friends with Oppenheimer’s son Harry as well, so when the Oppenheimers needed a partner for a 1957 bailout of Central Mining and Investment Corporation they turned to Engelhard. Central Mining was a large, London-based oil and mining company with extensive South African holdings, in danger of a hostile takeover, which it hoped to prevent with Engelhard’s help. For a relatively small amount of cash, $3.5 million, Engelhard was able to gain a 30 percent share of Rand American Investments Limited, an Oppenheimer creation that then won the proxy fight at Central Mining and took control of its 12 gold mines, timber holdings, lime quarries, and 13 newspapers, with a total estimated value of $500 million. Charles Engelhard, Jr. was named chairman of Rand American, having parlayed a youthful lark in South Africa into an intimate partnership with one of the most powerful families in international business.
Company Perspectives:
What Engelhard makes, makes change. We combine the age-old elements of nature with leading-edge technology to enhance the performance of our customers’ products. We make their products safer, cleaner, brighter, more colorful, efficient, and cost-effective. We work closely with our customers. We understand their needs, and we help them realize their potential. This unique combination of scientific expertise and close customer relationships yields profound results. We affect the world—cleaning the air we breathe, producing the fuels that power our cars and homes, bringing vibrant colors to life, and adding functionality to thousands of industrial and household products. That’s why Engelhard is where companies go to change the nature of products, markets, and the world.
The South African venture was kept separate from Engelhard’s stable of U.S. companies, which in 1957 had sales of $173 million, more than one-third of them derived from platinum fabricating. Engelhard Industries also did about $32 million in gold fabricating, and $55 million in silver, making it a world leader in all three of the major precious-metals markets. Industrial applications of precious metals were on the rise, and Engelhard Industries was well positioned to profit from their growing importance. Charles Engelhard, Jr. also continued to pursue his valuable South African connections. As part of the 1957 takeover of Central Mining, Engelhard and Harry Oppenheimer had agreed to a stock swap, each of them taking 10 percent of the other’s family holding company. Engelhard thus gained a very valuable piece of Ernest Oppenheimer and Sons, the force behind Anglo American Corporation and the De Beers diamond mines, while Harry Oppenheimer took a similar chunk of Engelhard Hanovia, the family-owned corporation that, in turn, controlled 72 percent of Engelhard Industries. The trade would appear to have been one-sided, as Anglo American was a much larger concern than the Engelhard interests. Over the next two decades, however, Harry Oppenheimer continued to buy stock in Engelhard Hanovia and by 1970 came to own 70 percent, at which time his investment proved to have been very wise indeed.
In the meantime, Engelhard upped his investments in South Africa. In 1958 he set up the American-South African Investment Company Limited, with $34 million in assets. American-South African was an investment trust trading in South African gold stocks and was the first South African company listed on the New York Stock Exchange. As chairman of Rand Mines, one of the former Central Mining companies, Engelhard greatly expanded the firm’s holding into uranium, coal, and copper refining; and in 1961 he paid $17 million for two gold mines owned by Kennecott Copper, rolling all of his South African holdings into a new joint investment company with the Oppen-heimers called Rand Selection Corporation Limited. Engelhard had by that time become a figure of recognized importance in South African affairs, an honor that brings with it involvement in all of the moral and political difficulties besetting that country. After the Sharpeville massacre of 1960, Engelhard became more open in his criticisms of apartheid and somewhat curtailed his active investment in the country. Engelhard did not seem to bother himself with apologies or explanations of the relation between his fortune and apartheid. As a businessman and as a strong supporter and confidante of Democratic politicians, he appears to have viewed apartheid as inefficient and doomed but did not further concern himself with its injustices.
A Major Deal, 1963
In 1963 Engelhard put together the deal that would determine the future of his company. At the urging of Andre Meyer of the investment-banking house Lazard Freres, Engelhard took a 20 percent interest in Minerals & Chemicals Philipp (MCP), a recently formed partnership between a rather small producer of nonmetallic minerals such as kaolin and fuller’s earth, and Philipp Brothers, a powerful trading firm specializing in the buying and selling of ores on the international market. Again Engelhard made a stock swap an important part of the deal, giving up 8 percent of Engelhard Hanovia as partial payment for his 20 percent interest in MCP, which in 1964 had sales of $447 million, the bulk of it generated by Philipp Brothers’s fast-growing ore trading. In fact, Engelhard’s purchase of MCP stock soon proved prescient, as worldwide demand for precious and industrial metals began to take off, and Philipp’s sales skyrocketed, gaining as much as 45 percent in a single year.
By 1966 MCP sales had reached $709 million, while Engelhard Industries did only about 40 percent of that figure. Engelhard nevertheless worked out a merger of the two companies, in September 1967, creating Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corporation (EMCC), with the Engelhard family controlling about 40 percent of the new giant’s stock. Given the relative size of the partners in this transaction, and Harry Oppenheimer’s increasing role in the Engelhard family interests, it is probable that the merger was made possible by the financial power of Oppenheimer’s Anglo American Corporation. EMCC was already a large corporation, but its potential was not yet apparent to many observers. Nearly one-half of the company’s 1967 net income of $28 million was generated by the Philipp trading division, with the Engelhard metal processing contributing 34 percent, and minerals and chemicals about 19 percent. Philipp’s trading worked on a small profit margin but was soon to enjoy phenomenal growth, as the world turned increasingly to spot traders to move scarce natural resources around the globe quickly and efficiently. By 1972 EMCC’s sales hit $2 billion, about 80 percent of it supplied by Philipp, and in 1974 revenue reached the astonishing figure of $5 billion and continued to climb.
Charles Engelhard, Jr. did not live to see the success of his combination, however. When the “platinum king,” as he was called, died in early 1971, his family’s Engelhard Hanovia owned 43 percent of the increasingly profitable EMCC; but by that time 70 percent of Hanovia was controlled by Anglo American, which promptly exchanged its Hanovia shares for 30 percent of EMCC, leaving the Engelhard family with 10 percent of EMCC and all of its other interests. The friendship of Engelhard and Oppenheimer thus ended with a rough parity of gain—with the help of Oppenheimer, Engelhard had built an enormous metals combination, but when the dust settled it was Oppenheimer who would reap the long-term benefits.
In the absence of an Engelhard heir interested in business, Milton Rosenthal was appointed chairman of EMCC. Rosenthal had been president of EMCC since the 1967 merger, and after Engelhard’s death inaugurated a tightening of controls and general overhaul of the company. In part, this was an inevitable concomitant of the executive change, which saw Engelhard’s largely blue-blood management give way to a team dominated by Philipp Brothers’s trading veterans, chief among them Ludwig Jesselson. Neither side of the merger particularly enjoyed working with the other, and when the MCP men gained control of the company many of the Engelhard people left or were fired, and an air of hardworking sobriety settled over the firm. Rosenthal and his advisors cut back on luxuries but expanded mightily their trading business, which, soon after the 1973 oil crisis, began handling oil on the spot market. Commodities traded on the spot market, as opposed to the futures market, are for immediate delivery. From modest beginnings, the oil spot market quickly reached critical importance during the 1970s, a decade in which all natural resources seemed in short supply, and by 1978 Philipp was trading $4.5 billion in oil alone. Its $9 billion in total sales dwarfed the minerals-and-chemicals and precious-metals business of its partners, even as the latter became increasingly successful in the development of fluid catalytic cracking materials and exhaust emission control converters.
Philipp Brothers owed its success primarily to the scarcity of its commodities and the skill of its traders. By keeping tabs on the needs of both producers and consumers of over 100 kinds of raw materials, Philipp was able to buy and sell large quantities of goods for small but almost instant profits, and even offered its clients the use of a company bank in Switzerland to help finance the construction of new plants or to make unusually large purchases. As the markets for raw materials became increasingly widespread, Philipp’s business continued to grow at a fantastic rate, and from 1978 to 1980 EMCC’s sales jumped from $10 billion to $26.5 billion, about 90 percent of which was due to Philipp. So great a disparity between former partners naturally strained corporate relations, as minerals-and-chemicals people along with those in precious metals felt overshadowed by their trading counterparts and had trouble justifying time spent managing assets that grew at so comparatively slow a rate. In the spring of 1981, therefore, the metals-and-minerals and precious-metals divisions of EMCC were spun off as a new, publicly traded entity to be called Engelhard Corporation, while Philipp Brothers went its way as Phibro toward an eventual merger with Salomon Inc. Harry Oppenheimer’s Anglo American Corporation maintained a 30 percent stake in both companies, a double wild card waiting to be played at any time.
Engelhard Starts Anew
The new Engelhard Corporation set about revising its mix of sales. In 1983, for example, when the company did about $2 billion in sales, 85 percent of the sales were generated by the precious-metals business, but the much smaller minerals and chemicals division produced 60 percent of Engelhard’s net income. As a result, in that year the company began referring to itself as a specialty chemicals firm, and two years later regrouped its businesses according to function rather than the raw material involved. Thus, all catalytic businesses became part of the specialty-chemicals division, regardless of whether they made use of kaolin or platinum for their catalysis; while the specialty-metals division worked strictly with metals technology and metals management services. This gradual redefinition and housecleaning continued up to the 1990s, with Engelhard announcing that it would sell off some of its remaining gold and silver businesses and begin deep cuts in its salaried staff, in anticipation of which the company took a special charge of $160 million in 1989.
At the end of the 1980s Engelhard Corporation derived the lion’s share of its sales from the remaining portion of its precious-metals fabrication business, $1.6 billion, but far more profitable was the catalysts-and-chemicals division, which earned $43 million on sales of $450 million in 1989. Much of that was generated by fluid catalytic cracking materials made for the petroleum industry. Even more promising was the performance of the company’s third product grouping, now known as pigments and additives. This group, a descendent of the EMCC merger partner that produces paper coatings and pigments for the plastic and paint industries, along with several businesses purchased in 1988 from the Harshaw/Filtrol Partnership, netted $53 million on only $360 million in sales. It was no surprise, therefore, that despite its heritage as one of the world’s premier users of precious metals, Engelhard was steadily moving toward the more lucrative fields of catalysis and specialty chemicals.
Ups and Downs During the 90s
Throughout the 1990s, Engelhard tried to grow through acquisitions and the introduction of new products. Revenues hit a high in 1990 of $2.93 billion, but would not reach that level again until 1996. Under CEO Orin Smith in 1992 Engelhard acquired the remaining 50 percent of its German auto catalyst subsidiary, Kali-Chemie; formed Salem Engelhard in a joint partnership with Salem Industries, a maker of pollution-control systems; formed Heraeus Engelhard Electrochemistry with Heraeus Inc.; and founded Acreon Catalysts with Procatalyse.
In 1993 it sold off its interest in metal plating firm M&T Harshaw and in 1994 struck a deal with ICC Technologies, Inc. to develop and market air conditioning and air-treatment systems based on Engelhard’s new desiccant technology, in which the use of ozone-depleting refrigerants could be avoided by drying the air before it is cooled. The same year, it also purchased the assets of Solvay Catalysts GmbH of Germany and of General Plasma, Advanced Plasma, and Jet-Corn, manufacturers of thermal spray coatings for emissions-control applications which Engelhard intended to develop into a major line of emission systems technology products for cars, trucks, and buses. As part of a major reorganization plan, in 1994 Engelhard closed, relocated, or consolidated five of its U.S. facilities and two European sites.
In 1995 Engelhard formed a joint venture named Metreon with W.R. Grace to develop advanced metallic-substrate catalytic converters for the auto industry, purchased the rest of its Salem Engelhard joint venture, expanded the production capacity of its Acreon venture, and formed a joint venture with CLAL, a French precious metal fabricator. It also expanded from its historical participation in the precious metals brokerage industry by entering base metals dealing and brokering through a new subsidiary, Engelhard International Ltd. and founded Engelhard Power Marketing to resell electric power to U.S. utilities. In 1996, it formed Engelhard-Highland to produce high-performance color pigments in India, formed a joint venture with its Japanese affiliate N.E. Chemcat to manufacture auto catalysts in Thailand for sale throughout southeast Asia, and acquired the assets of infrared gas sensor manufacturer Telaire Systems, which it renamed Engelhard Sensor Technologies. In May 1996, it made its largest acquisition ever by acquiring Mearl Corporation, a maker of pearlescent pigments and iridescent film for the automotive and cosmetic industries.
Engelhard’s major product launches in the 1990s included a “molecular sieve” water filter capable of significantly reducing contamination of household tap water, an auto emissions-control device that traps polluting hydrocarbons during the two minutes after engine startup in which the catalytic converter is ineffective, a new trimetal catalyst technology named Trimax, a new catalyst for the heavy feedstocks demanded by Pacific Rim refineries, and an all-palladium auto catalyst that could be placed closer to the engine and activated more quickly. Perhaps its most promising innovation, however, was Prem-Air, a catalytic filter that when coated on a car’s radiator promised to destroy 90 percent of the ozone passing over it. However, after testing the product on 20 of its cars Ford Motor decided that Prem-Air was not as effective as advertised and decided not to adopt it. Despite the blow, Engelhard continued to refine the product for other uses and positioned itself to become not only a supplier of auto emission catalysts but of “total solutions,” including sensors, multicomponent packages, and catalyst substrates.
In 1996 Engelhard enjoyed its sixth consecutive year of record earnings and looked hopefully to emerging catalytics and pigments demand in Eastern Europe and the Pacific Rim. By the mid-1990s 41 percent of Engelhard’s sales were outside the United States and its engineered materials and commodities dealing operation was accounting for 60 percent of its revenues. The manufacture of catalysts/chemicals and pigments/additives together accounted for the remainder.
Principal Subsidiaries
Engelhard-Kalichemie (Germany); Hankuk-Engelhard (Republic of Korea; 50%); N.E. Chemcat (Japan; 38.8%); Engelhard West, Inc.; Engelhard Canada, Ltd.; Engelhard Industries International, Ltd. (Canada); Engelhard Technologies, Ltd. (Canada); EC Delaware, Inc.; El Corporation; Engelhard Asia Pacific, Inc.; Engelhard C Cubed Corporation; Engelhard DT, Inc.; Engelhard EM Holding Company; Engelhard Energy Corporation; Engelhard MC, Inc.; Engelhard Metal Plating, Inc.; Engelhard Pollution Control, Inc.; Engelhard Power Marketing, Inc.; Engelhard Sensor Technologies, Inc.; Engelhard Strategic Investments, Inc.; Engelhard Supply Corporation; Mustang Property Corporation; Engelhard Pigments OY (Finland); Engelhard Pyrocontrole S.A. (France); Engelhard S.A. (France); Engelhard Holdings GmbH (Germany); Engelhard Process Chemicals GmbH (Germany); Engelhard Technologies GmbH (Germany); Engelhard Technologies Verwaltsung GmbH (Germany); Engelhard Italiana S.P.A.; Engelhard Metals Japan, Ltd.; Engelhard DeMeern, B.V. (Netherlands); Engelhard Netherlands, B.V.; Engelhard Terneuzen, B.V. (Netherlands); Harshaw Chemical Company; Mearl Corporation; Engelhard Peru S.A.; Engelhard South Africa, Ltd.; Engelhard Metals A.G. (Switzerland); Dnipro Kaolin (Ukraine); Engelhard International, Ltd. (U.K.); Engelhard Limited (U.K.); Engelhard Metals, Ltd. (U.K.); Engelhard Sales, Ltd. (U.K.); Engelhard Technologies, Ltd. (U.K.); Sheffield Smelting Co., Ltd. (U.K.); Engelhard Export Corporation; Engelhard-CLAL, Ltd. Partnership; Metreon; Engelhard-CLAL SAS (France); NE Chemcat Corporation (Japan); Engelhard/Colortronics; Engelhard/ICC; Heesung-Engelhard Corporation (South Korea); Acreon Catalysts.
Further Reading
“Carwash,” Economist, July 8, 1995, p. 78.
“The Engelhard Touch,” Forbes, August 1, 1965.
“Getting Cold Cars to Clean Up Their Act,” Business Week, November 29, 1993.
Marcial, Gene, “A Scorching Play on Cool Air,” Business Week, July 11, 1994.
—Jonathan Martin
—updated by Paul S. Bodine
Engelhard Corporation
Engelhard Corporation
101 Wood Avenue
Iselin, New Jersey 08830
U.S.A.
Telephone: (732) 205-5000
Toll Free: (800) 758-9567
Fax: (732) 906-0337
Web site: http://www.engelhard.com
Public Company
Incorporated: 1938 as Porocel Corporation
Employees: 6,500
Sales: $4.17 billion (2004)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: EC
NAIC: 212324 Kaolin and Ball Clay Mining; 325131 Inorganic Dye and Pigment Manufacturing; 325132 Synthetic Organic Dye and Pigment Manufacturing; 325188 All Other Basic Inorganic Chemical Manufacturing; 327992 Ground or Treated Mineral and Earth Manufacturing; 336399 All Other Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing; 421510 Metals Service Centers and Offices; 421940 Jewelry, Watch, Precious Stone, and Precious Metal Wholesalers
Engelhard Corporation is a leading supplier of catalysts used in the petroleum, chemical, and food industries. An unusually diversified company, Engelhard also produces a variety of industrial products such as paper coating agents, color pigments, temperature sensing devices, and precious metal-coated anodes, as well as materials for consumer goods such as cosmetics and automotive paints. A unifying thread of its many activities is surface and materials science—chemically or mechanically engineering ingredients to give them specific properties. For most of the 20th century, the name Engelhard was been associated with the glamorous, and sometimes notorious, world of precious metals: gold, silver, and those metals in the platinum group. Since pioneering catalytic converters for automobiles in the 1970s, Engelhard has become involved in a very broad range of industries. It has numerous international subsidiaries. A little more than half of the company's sales come from outside the United States.
Immigrant Roots
The company's roots in the precious-metals industry extend back to 1891, the year in which Charles Engelhard immigrated to the United States from his native Germany to work as a foreign sales agent for his employer, a marketer of platinum. Engelhard decided to remain in the United States and soon was able to secure equity positions in a number of precious metals companies, chief among them Baker & Co., Irvington Smelting, Hanovia Company, and American Platinum Works. Engelhard, who in Forbes, August 1, 1965, was described by his son as a "tough businessman" and "very Germanic," united the companies into a comprehensive precious-metals fabricator under the name of Engelhard Industries. The Engelhard interests bought, refined, and sold the full range of precious metals, but, with Baker & Co. taking the lead, soon developed a special expertise in platinum.
Platinum is valuable not only for its beauty but because it exhibits a number of unusual and useful physical properties, among them its virtually complete resistance to corrosion by chemicals or heat and a molecular formation that accommodated various types of catalysis. By the early 1900s, Engelhard had begun to exploit the metal's industrial value as well as its importance to the jewelry and dental trades, helping develop its use as a heat resistant liner for chemical vessels and as filaments in electric light bulbs. As platinum was scarce, however, the metals industry did not much pursue its industrial applications. Engelhard Industries remained a supplier of precious metals primarily for ornamentation and dentistry. It was not until the 1920s that a secure supply of platinum encouraged further study of the metal's engineering value. A Canadian concern, Inco, formerly called International Nickel Company, demonstrated that platinum could be produced as a byproduct of nickel mining, thus temporarily stabilizing the supply of platinum and prompting intensive research into its properties. Charles Engelhard became Inco's exclusive dealer of platinum in the United States, and in the early 1930s created a research-and-development department of his own to pioneer new uses for the metal. In conjunction with Du Pont, Engelhard's Baker & Co. came up with a revolutionary process for the manufacture of nitric acid that employed a platinum and rhodium catalyst. The process was soon adopted throughout the chemicals industry. Engelhard Industries began a long evolution that would first transform the company into the world leader in precious-metals fabricating and later encourage its present focus on catalysis in many of its forms.
The 1930s saw the development of the platinum spinnerette, a platinum nozzle perforated by thousands of microscopic holes designed to spin out synthetic fibers for the manufacture of textiles. World War II fostered other uses of platinum, such as the platinum-tipped sparkplug for aircraft engines, which was able to withstand high temperatures for long periods without corroding. In the early 1950s, platinum began to be used in the petroleum industry for the catalysis of high-octane gasoline and to refine heavy crude oils. Engelhard Industries continued to derive the large majority of its sales from nonindustrial markets such as jewelry, but in the 1940s Charles Engelhard added to his growing assortment of companies with the purchase of D.E. Makepeace Company of Massachusetts, makers of gold and silver sheet, tube, and wire; Amersil Company, industrial appliers of fused quartz; and National Electric Instruments Company, a manufacturer of medical instruments. With these and other industrial acquisitions, Engelhard laid the groundwork for the later expansion of his business carried out by his son, Charles Engelhard, Jr. Born in 1917, Charles served as a pilot in World War II and afterward joined his father in the metals business. Anxious to make his own mark, young Engelhard soon moved to South Africa and began exploring opportunities in that mineral-rich country, source of much of the world's gold, platinum, and diamonds.
The South African Connection
From the time he took over the business until 1971, the history of Engelhard Corporation was largely the story of Charles Engelhard, Jr. The founder's son had the unusual good fortune to succeed in both of the roles available to a wealthy scion. On the one hand, he became an international socialite and, on the other, led his father's company to greater success. Upon settling in South Africa, Engelhard started a gold-exporting business to supply his father's companies with raw material and turn a profit as well. At the time, gold could not be traded except in the form of art objects, so Engelhard shipped his gold in the shape of dishes, jewelry, and even solid gold pulpit tops, much of which was later melted down by the customer. Engelhard incorporated his firm, Precious Metals Development, in London in 1949, using the services of Robert Fleming & Co. At Fleming & Co. Engelhard met Ian Fleming, the creator of James Bond, who is believed to have used the portly, gold-toting Engelhard as the model for his famous villain Auric Goldfinger. When his father died in 1950, the younger Engelhard assumed control of a complex, heterogenous mix of companies headquartered in Newark, New Jersey. He once again made the United States his home, bringing with him connections with many of the leading figures in South African mining.
Charles Engelhard, Jr. found that his autocratic father had run his various metals businesses virtually without administrative help and thus set about centralizing authority while also delegating its daily implementation. In 1953, he brought in Gordon Richdale as president of Engelhard Industries, the main operating company for the family interests. Richdale had experience in mining in the Transvaal region of South Africa and was a good friend of Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, the chairman of that country's dominant mining company, Anglo American Corporation of South Africa. Engelhard had become friends with Oppenheimer's son Harry as well, and when the Oppenheimers needed a partner for a 1957 bailout of Central Mining and Investment Corporation they turned to Engelhard. Central Mining was a large, London-based oil and mining company with extensive South African holdings that was in danger of a hostile takeover, which it hoped to prevent with Engelhard's help. For a relatively small amount of cash, $3.5 million, Engelhard was able to gain a 30 percent share of Rand American Investments Limited, an Oppenheimer creation that then won the proxy fight at Central Mining and took control of its 12 gold mines, timber holdings, lime quarries, and 13 newspapers, with a total estimated value of $500 million. Engelhard was named chairman of Rand American, having parlayed a youthful lark in South Africa into an intimate partnership with one of the most powerful families in international business.
Company Perspectives:
Diverse markets. Diverse customers. Diverse products. All from a single focus on surface and materials science. No other company in the world possesses Engelhard's unique combination of capabilities. Fundamentally, we manipulate basic materials—typically minerals—to alter their structure and surface characteristics. We manipulate them mechanically and chemically, altering their size, shape, porosity and chemical characteristics to produce a wide range of functionality with important business uses. We enable our customers, for instance, to change the appearance, image and functionality of everything from product packaging to automotive finishes by controlling the way light is absorbed or reflected from the surface of a particle. Manipulating that same particle to absorb or repel water produces an entirely new set of applications. And that's only the half of it. Because we then use surface chemistry to expand the performance profile and functionality of these engineered materials—creating specialized chemical formulations to tailor their acidity, thermal stability, gloss and other characteristics. The formulations are typically metal-based, predominantly platinum group metals. The result may be a catalyst that cleans a car's exhaust or a pigment that gives eye shadow its pearlescent sheen. Either outcome is made possible by the very same capabilities in materials science and surface chemistry. Whether delivering more cost-effective crop protection or helping a petroleum refiner get the most from a barrel of crude oil, we're in the business of making our customers' products and processes more effective, less costly, more productive, more attractive, safer and more environmentally friendly. No wonder customers turn to Engelhard to change the nature of their products. They get results that change their markets and our world.
The South African venture was kept separate from Engelhard's stable of U.S. companies, which in 1957 had sales of $173 million, more than one-third of them derived from platinum fabricating. Engelhard Industries also did about $32 million in gold fabricating and $55 million in silver, making it a world leader in all three of the major precious-metals markets. Industrial applications of precious metals were on the rise, and Engelhard Industries was well positioned to profit from their growing importance. Charles Engelhard, Jr. also continued to pursue his valuable South African connections. As part of the 1957 take-over of Central Mining, Engelhard and Harry Oppenheimer had agreed to a stock swap, each of them taking 10 percent of the other's family holding company. Engelhard thus gained a very valuable piece of Ernest Oppenheimer and Sons, the force behind Anglo American Corporation and the De Beers diamond mines, while Harry Oppenheimer took a similar chunk of Engelhard Hanovia, the family-owned corporation that, in turn, controlled 72 percent of Engelhard Industries. The trade would appear to have been one-sided, as Anglo American was a much larger concern than the Engelhard interests. Over the next two decades, however, Harry Oppenheimer continued to buy stock in Engelhard Hanovia and by 1970 came to own 70 percent, at which time his investment proved to have been very wise indeed.
In the meantime, Engelhard upped his investments in South Africa. In 1958, he set up the American-South African Investment Company Ltd., with $34 million in assets. American-South African was an investment trust trading in South African gold stocks and was the first South African company listed on the New York Stock Exchange. As chairman of Rand Mines, one of the former Central Mining companies, Engelhard greatly expanded the firm's holding into uranium, coal, and copper refining. In 1961, he paid $17 million for two gold mines owned by Kennecott Copper, rolling all of his South African holdings into a new joint investment company with the Oppenheimers called Rand Selection Corporation Limited. Engelhard had by that time become a figure of recognized importance in South African affairs, an honor that brought with it involvement in all of the moral and political difficulties besetting that country. After the Sharpeville massacre of 1960, Engelhard became more open in his criticisms of apartheid and somewhat curtailed his active investment in the country. Engelhard did not seem to bother himself with apologies or explanations of the relation between his fortune and apartheid. As a businessman and as a strong supporter and confidante of Democratic politicians, he appears to have viewed apartheid as inefficient and doomed but did not further concern himself with its injustices.
A Major Deal in 1963
In 1963, Engelhard put together the deal that would determine the future of his company. At the urging of Andre Meyer of the investment-banking house Lazard Freres, Engelhard took a 20 percent interest in Minerals & Chemicals Philipp (MCP), a recently formed partnership between a rather small producer of nonmetallic minerals such as kaolin and fuller's earth, and Philipp Brothers, a powerful trading firm specializing in the buying and selling of ores on the international market. Again, Engelhard made a stock swap an important part of the deal, giving up 8 percent of Engelhard Hanovia as partial payment for his 20 percent interest in MCP, which in 1964 had sales of $447 million, the bulk of it generated by Philipp Brothers's fast-growing ore trading. In fact, Engelhard's purchase of MCP stock soon proved prescient, as worldwide demand for precious and industrial metals began to take off, and Philipp's sales skyrocketed, gaining as much as 45 percent in a single year.
By 1966, MCP sales had reached $709 million, while Engelhard Industries did only about 40 percent of that figure. Engelhard nevertheless worked out a merger of the two companies in September 1967, creating Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corporation (EMCC), with the Engelhard family controlling about 40 percent of the new giant's stock. Given the relative size of the partners in this transaction, and Harry Oppenheimer's increasing role in the Engelhard family interests, it is probable that the merger was made possible by the financial power of Oppenheimer's Anglo American Corporation. EMCC was already a large corporation, but its potential was not yet apparent to many observers. Nearly one-half of the company's 1967 net income of $28 million was generated by the Philipp trading division, with the Engelhard metal processing contributing 34 percent and minerals and chemicals about 19 percent. Philipp's trading worked on a small profit margin but was soon to enjoy phenomenal growth as the world turned increasingly to spot traders to move scarce natural resources around the globe quickly and efficiently. By 1972, EMCC's sales hit $2 billion, about 80 percent of it supplied by Philipp, and in 1974 revenue reached the astonishing figure of $5 billion and climbing.
Key Dates:
- 1891:
- Metals trader Charles Engelhard emigrates to the United States from Germany.
- 1950:
- Engelhard's son, Charles, Jr., inherits family metals empire.
- 1957:
- Engelhard joins Harry Oppenheimer in takeover of Central Mining.
- 1963:
- Engelhard acquires 20 percent share of the newly formed Minerals & Chemicals Philipp.
- 1967:
- Engelhard Industries merges with MCP to form Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corp. (EMCC).
- 1971:
- Anglo American trades 70 percent holding in Engelhard's parent company for 30 percent of EMCC.
- 1973:
- Engelhard develops its first production catalytic converter.
- 1981:
- EMCC's metals-and-minerals and precious-metals divisions spun off as Engelhard Corporation.
- 1994:
- Engelhard reorganizes its facilities after several acquisitions.
- 2000:
- Volvo and Nissan models incorporate Engelhard's "smog-eating" PremAir radiator technology.
- 2001:
- Orin Smith is succeeded as CEO by Barry Perry, the company's president and COO since 1997.
- 2003:
- Engelhard sets up an emissions catalysts venture in China.
- 2004:
- The company broadens its involvement with the personal care industry by acquiring The Collaborative Group of New Jersey.
- 2005:
- Engelhard acquires a controlling interest in Coletica SA, a French producer of cosmetics ingredients.
Charles Engelhard, Jr., did not live to see the success of his combination, however. When the "platinum king," as he was called, died in early 1971, his family's Engelhard Hanovia owned 43 percent of the increasingly profitable EMCC. By that time, however, 70 percent of Hanovia was controlled by Anglo American, which promptly exchanged its Hanovia shares for 30 percent of EMCC, leaving the Engelhard family with 10 percent of EMCC and all of its other interests. The friendship of Engelhard and Oppenheimer thus ended with a rough parity of gain. With the help of Oppenheimer, Engelhard had built an enormous metals combination, but when the dust settled it was Oppenheimer who would reap the long-term benefits.
In the absence of an Engelhard heir interested in business, Milton Rosenthal was appointed chairman of EMCC. Rosenthal had been president of EMCC since the 1967 merger, and after Engelhard's death inaugurated a tightening of controls and general overhaul of the company. In part, this was an inevitable concomitant of the executive change, which saw Engelhard's largely blue-blood management give way to a team dominated by Philipp Brothers's trading veterans, chief among them Ludwig Jesselson. Neither side of the merger particularly enjoyed working with the other, and when the MCP men gained control of the company, many of the Engelhard people left or were fired. Afterward, an air of hardworking sobriety settled over the firm. Rosenthal and his advisors cut back on luxuries but expanded mightily their trading business, which, soon after the 1973 oil crisis, began handling oil on the spot market. Commodities traded on the spot market, as opposed to the futures market, are for immediate delivery. From modest beginnings, the oil spot market quickly reached critical importance during the 1970s, a decade in which all natural resources seemed in short supply, and by 1978 Philipp was trading $4.5 billion in oil alone. Its $9 billion in total sales dwarfed the minerals-and-chemicals and precious-metals business of its partners, even as the latter became increasingly successful in the development of fluid catalytic cracking materials and exhaust emission control converters.
Philipp Brothers owed its success primarily to the scarcity of its commodities and the skill of its traders. By keeping tabs on the needs of both producers and consumers of over 100 kinds of raw materials, Philipp was able to buy and sell large quantities of goods for small but almost instant profits and even offered its clients the use of a company bank in Switzerland to help finance the construction of new plants or to make unusually large purchases. As the markets for raw materials became increasingly widespread, Philipp's business continued to grow at a fantastic rate, and from 1978 to 1980 EMCC's sales jumped from $10 billion to $26.5 billion, about 90 percent of which was due to Philipp. So great a disparity between former partners naturally strained corporate relations, as minerals-and-chemicals people along with those in precious metals felt overshadowed by their trading counterparts and had trouble justifying time spent managing assets that grew at so comparatively slow a rate. In the spring of 1981, therefore, the metals-and-minerals and precious-metals divisions of EMCC were transferred to an existing subsidiary, Porocel, an Arkansas bauxite producer which had been founded in 1938 and acquired in 1967. Porocel was renamed Engelhard Corporation and became a public company (the bauxite business itself would continue to operate under the Porocel name and was sold to private investors in 1996). Philipp Brothers went its way as Phibro toward an eventual merger with Salomon Inc. Harry Oppenheimer's Anglo American Corporation maintained a 30 percent stake in both Philbro and Engelhard, a double wild card waiting to be played at any time.
Engelhard Starts Anew in the 1980s
The new Engelhard Corporation set about revising its mix of sales. In 1983, for example, when the company did about $2 billion in sales, 85 percent of the sales were generated by the precious-metals business, but the much smaller minerals and chemicals division produced 60 percent of Engelhard's net income. As a result, in that year the company began referring to itself as a specialty chemicals firm and two years later regrouped its businesses according to function rather than the raw material involved. Thus, all catalytic businesses became part of the specialty-chemicals division, regardless of whether they made use of kaolin or platinum for their catalysis, while the specialty-metals division worked strictly with metals technology and metals management services. This gradual redefinition and housecleaning continued up to the 1990s, with Engelhard announcing that it would sell off some of its remaining gold and silver businesses and begin deep cuts in its salaried staff in anticipation of which the company took a special charge of $160 million in 1989.
At the end of the 1980s, Engelhard Corporation derived the lion's share of its sales from the remaining portion of its precious-metals fabrication business, $1.6 billion, but far more profitable was the catalysts-and-chemicals division, which earned $43 million on sales of $450 million in 1989. Much of that was generated by fluid catalytic cracking materials made for the petroleum industry. Even more promising was the performance of the company's third product grouping, now known as pigments and additives. This group, a descendent of the EMCC merger partner that produced paper coatings and pigments for the plastic and paint industries, along with several businesses purchased in 1988 from the Harshaw/Filtrol Partnership, netted $53 million on only $360 million in sales. It was no surprise, therefore, that despite its heritage as one of the world's premier users of precious metals, Engelhard was steadily moving toward the more lucrative fields of catalysis and specialty chemicals.
Ups and Downs in the 1990s
Throughout the 1990s, Engelhard tried to grow through acquisitions and the introduction of new products. Revenues hit a high in 1990 of $2.93 billion but would not reach that level again until 1996. Under CEO Orin Smith, in 1992 Engelhard acquired the remaining 50 percent of its German auto catalyst subsidiary, Kali-Chemie, and formed Salem Engelhard in a joint partnership with Salem Industries, a maker of pollution-control systems, as well as forming Heraeus Engelhard Electrochemistry with Heraeus Inc. and founding Acreon Catalysts with Procatalyse. In 1993, it sold off its interest in metal plating firm M&T Harshaw and in 1994 struck a deal with ICC Technologies, Inc. to develop and market air conditioning and air-treatment systems based on Engelhard's new desiccant technology, in which the use of ozone-depleting refrigerants could be avoided by drying the air before it is cooled. The same year, it also purchased the assets of Solvay Catalysts GmbH of Germany and of General Plasma, Advanced Plasma, and Jet-Com, manufacturers of thermal spray coatings for emissions-control applications which Engelhard intended to develop into a major line of emission systems technology products for cars, trucks, and buses. As part of a major reorganization plan, in 1994 Engelhard closed, relocated, or consolidated five of its U.S. facilities and two European sites.
In 1995, Engelhard formed a joint venture named Metreon with W.R. Grace to develop advanced metallic-substrate catalytic converters for the auto industry, purchased the rest of its Salem Engelhard joint venture, expanded the production capacity of its Acreon venture, and established a joint venture with CLAL, a French precious metal fabricator. It also expanded from its historical participation in the precious metals brokerage industry by entering base metals dealing and brokering through a new subsidiary, Engelhard International Ltd., and founded Engelhard Power Marketing to resell electric power to U.S. utilities. In 1996, it formed Engelhard-Highland to produce high-performance color pigments in India, entered into a joint venture with its Japanese affiliate N.E. Chemcat to manufacture auto catalysts in Thailand for sale throughout Southeast Asia, and acquired the assets of infrared gas sensor manufacturer Telaire Systems, which it renamed Engelhard Sensor Technologies. In May 1996, it made its largest acquisition ever by acquiring Mearl Corporation, a maker of pearlescent pigments and iridescent film for the automotive and cosmetic industries, for $272.7 million.
Engelhard's major product launches in the 1990s included a "molecular sieve" water filter capable of significantly reducing contamination of household tap water, an auto emissions-control device that traps polluting hydrocarbons during the two minutes after engine startup in which the catalytic converter is ineffective, a new trimetal catalyst technology named Trimax, a new catalyst for the heavy feedstocks demanded by Pacific Rim refineries, and an all-palladium auto catalyst that could be placed closer to the engine and activated more quickly. Perhaps its most promising innovation, however, was Prem-Air, a catalytic filter that when coated on a car's radiator promised to destroy 90 percent of the ozone passing over it. However, after testing the product on 20 of its cars, Ford Motor decided that Prem-Air was not as effective as advertised and decided not to adopt it. Despite this blow, Engelhard continued to refine the product for other uses and positioned itself to become not only a supplier of auto emission catalysts but of "total solutions," including sensors, multi-component packages, and catalyst substrates.
In 1996, Engelhard enjoyed its sixth consecutive year of record earnings and looked hopefully to emerging catalytics and pigments demand in Eastern Europe and the Pacific Rim. By the mid-1990s, 41 percent of Engelhard's sales were outside the United States, and its engineered materials and commodities dealing operation was accounting for 60 percent of its revenues. The manufacture of catalysts/chemicals and pigments/additives together accounted for the remainder.
Engelhard furthered its operations in India in 1997, forming a joint venture to produce catalytic converters for the booming automotive market there. Its partner was UCAL Fuel Systems Ltd.
In 1998, Engelhard paid $210 million to acquire Catalyst Resources from Mallinckrodt Inc. Catalyst Resources was a $100 million a year business producing catalysts used in manufacturing polypropylene. Engelhard sold off its half interest in Paris-based Procatalyse in November of the year.
In 1999, one of Engelhard's main shareholders, Minorco of Luxembourg, divested its 31.8 percent stake in Engelhard. Minorco was seeking to be acquired by Anglo American, which was reportedly not interested in owning shares in an American, non-mining company such as Engelhard. As a result of this sale, Engelhard bought back 18 million of its shares for $340 million, offering the other 28 million to the public.
Engelhard's "smog-eating" radiator technology was revived for the 2000 model year, when Volvo and Nissan used it in some models. At $50 each, this version of the PremAir system was now one-tenth the cost for which it sold in 1995, thanks to the substitution of a cheaper catalytic agent than platinum, reported the New York Times.
New CEO in 2001
In January 2001, longtime CEO Orin Smith was succeeded by Barry Perry, the company's president and COO since 1997. Perry was a 22-year veteran of General Electric Co. His main focus was distributing technologies across the company's four operating groups: Environmental Technologies; Process Technologies; Appearance and Performance Technologies (created from the former Paper Pigments and Specialty Pigments and Additives groups); and Materials Services. Perry also steered the groups into working to further corporate, rather than divisional, aims.
The core of Engelhard's involvement in the dozens of industries it served was its expertise in surface and materials science, chemically or mechanically engineering ingredients to give them new properties. The company also had knowledge in platinum group metals chemistry. The same tools found applications in a range of areas from emissions controls to cosmetics pigments.
Emissions technologies from the automotive industry were beginning to appear in leaf blowers and the like. Engelhard was even researching the environmental impact of hair dryers. Involvement in a wide variety of industries cushioned the company against market cycles. Looking to the future, it was developing several different aspects of fuel cell technology through partnerships with a dozen different companies.
Also in 2001, Engelhard scaled back its kaolin operations in Georgia, cutting about 20 percent of the 1,100-strong work-force. In 2003, it purchased the Chinese kaolin producer Shouzho Anpeak Kaolin Co. Ltd.
Engelhard was also poised to benefit from the progression of automotive air quality standards to developing countries such as China and the Philippines. Anticipating growth in the Asian auto industry, Engelhard set up an emissions catalysts venture in China in late 2003.
The company broadened its involvement with the personal care industry by acquiring The Collaborative Group of New Jersey in July 2004. Collaborative made liposome ingredients for skincare products. Revenues exceeded $4 billion in 2004.
In 2005, Engelhard acquired a controlling interest in Coletica SA, a French producer of cosmetics ingredients. It was also buying a Chinese synthesis catalyst business.
Principal Subsidiaries
Corporacion Engelhard De Venezuela, C.A.; CTN Assurance Company; EC Delaware Incorporated; ECT Environmental Technologies AB (Sweden); Engelhard (BVI) Corporation; Engelhard (Shanghai) Co. Ltd. (China); Engelhard Asia Pacific (China) Ltd.; Engelhard Asia Pacific (Korea) Ltd.; Engelhard Asia Pacific India Private Ltd.; Engelhard Asia Pacific Mauritius Ltd.; Engelhard Belgium BVBA; Engelhard C Cubed Corporation; Engelhard Canada, ULC; Engelhard Catalyst Center-Tarragona, S.L. (Spain); Engelhard Chemcat (Thailand) Ltd.; Engelhard De Meern, B.V. (Netherlands); Engelhard Do Brasil Industria E Commercio LTDA (Brazil); Engelhard DT, Inc.; Engelhard EM Holding Company; Engelhard Energy Corporation; Engelhard Environmental Systems India Ltd; Engelhard Equity Corporation; Engelhard Europe Finance Ltd. (United Kingdom); Engelhard European Holdings Ltd. (United Kingdom); Engelhard Export Corporation (U.S. Virgin Islands); Engelhard Financial Corporation; Engelhard France SARL; Engelhard Hexcore, L.P.; Engelhard Holdings GmbH (Germany); Engelhard International Holdings Company (Cayman Islands); Engelhard International, Ltd. (United Kingdom); Engelhard Investment Europe B.V. (Netherlands); Engelhard Italiana S.P.A. (Italy); Engelhard Limited (United Kingdom); Engelhard Luxembourg Sarl; Engelhard Metals A.G. (Switzerland); Engelhard Metals Holding Corporation; Engelhard Metals Japan, Ltd.; Engelhard Mexicana S.A. de C.V. (Mexico); Engelhard Netherlands, B.V.; Engelhard Pension Trustees Limited (United Kingdom); Engelhard Performance Technologies (Shanxi) Co., Ltd. (China); Engelhard Peru S.A.; Engelhard Pigments and Additives Europe, B.V. (Netherlands); Engelhard Pigments OY (Finland); Engelhard PM, L.P.; Engelhard Pollution Control, Inc.; Engelhard Power Marketing, Inc.; Engelhard Process Chemicals GmbH (Germany); Engelhard S.A. (France); Engelhard Sales, Ltd. (United Kingdom); Engelhard South Africa Proprietary, Ltd.; Engelhard Srl (Italy); Engelhard Strategic Investments Incorporated; Engelhard Supply Corporation; Engelhard Technologies GmbH (Germany); Engelhard Technologies, Ltd. (United Kingdom); Engelhard Terneuzen, B.V. (Netherlands); Engelhard Trustee Co. Ltd. (United Kingdom); Engelhard West, Inc.; H. Drijfhout & Zoon's Edelmetaalbedrijen B.V. (Netherlands); Harshaw Chemical Company; Heesung-Engelhard (South Korea); Mearl, LLC; Mustang Property Corporation; NE Chemcat Corporation; Prodrive-Engelhard, LLC; The Sheffield Smelting Co., Ltd. (United Kingdom).
Principal Divisions
Environmental Technologies; Process Technologies; Appearance and Performance Technologies; Materials Services.
Principal Competitors
BASF AG; Heraeus Holding GmbH; Johnson Matthey Plc; W.R. Grace & Co.
Further Reading
Baldo, Anthony, "Engelhard's Renewed Lease on Life," Treasury & Risk Management, April 1999, pp. 28–32.
"Carwash," Economist, July 8, 1995, p. 78.
"The Engelhard Touch," Forbes, August 1, 1965.
Flannery, William, "Mallinckrodt Says It's Selling Catalyst Business to Engelhard," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, February 25, 1998, p. C9.
"Getting Cold Cars to Clean Up Their Act," BusinessWeek, November 29, 1993.
Hall, Alan, "A Roving Ambassador for Clean Technology," BusinessWeek, May 1, 2000.
Herzlich, Jamie, "New Jersey's Engelhard Corp. Buys Stony Brook, N.Y., Bioscience Firm," Newsday, July 31, 2004.
Jusko, Jill and Patrick Hernan, "Looking for Trouble," Industry Week, April 2002, pp. 15ff.
Kutler, Jeffrey, "Mettle Detector: This Prosaic-Seeming Chemicals and Metals Maker Is into Some Cutting-Edge Technology. But the CEO Is Not Going to Boast About It Until the Engineering Proves Out. (Barry Perry Of Engelhard Corp.)," Institutional Investor, October 2003, pp. 22f.
McKay, David, "Minorco Sheds Engelhard Ahead of Anglo Merger," Business Day (South Africa), March 3, 1999, p. 17.
McKay, Martha, "New Jersey Chemical Company Engelhard Stresses Commitment to Stock Buyback," Home News Tribune (New Jersey), May 7, 1999.
Marcial, Gene, "A Scorching Play on Cool Air," BusinessWeek, July 11, 1994.
Motavalli, Jim, "Carmakers to Put 'Smog-Eating' Radiator in Some Models," New York Times, Autos on Friday/Technology Sec., January 14, 2000.
Mullin, Rick, "Perry's Antifederalist Manifesto," Chemical Specialties, May 2001, p. 40.
Reisch, Marc S., "Precious Mettle," Chemical & Engineering News, November 15, 2004, pp. 24f.
Seewald, Nancy, "Engelhard Sees R&D As Catalyst to Success," Chemical Week, November 10, 2004, pp. 27f.
Taninecz, George, "Perry's All Four One: Engelhard Corp.'s Chairman and CEO Is Assembling Four Operating Units into a Seamless, Yet Diversified Organization," Industry Week, August 2002, pp. 43ff.
Velshi, Ali, Pat Kiernan, and Greg Clarkin, "Stock of the Day: Engelhard," CNNfn, CEOWire, January 14, 2004.
—Jonathan Martin
—updates: Paul S. Bodine;
Frederick C. Ingram