McLane Company: Difference between revisions
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==Customers== |
==Customers== |
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Retail chains that receive one or more product categories from McLane include [[Wal-Mart]], [[Sam's Club]], [[Walgreens]], Pilot / Flying J, [[Kangaroo Express]], [[Circle K]], [[Wawa (convenience store)|Wawa]], [[7-Eleven]], [[ExxonMobil]],<ref name="Wal-Mart"/> [[Target Stores]],<ref>"Grocery distributor starts new center in Lackawanna County" "The Associated Press State & Local Wire", April 13, 2007.</ref> [[Love's Travel Stops & Country Stores|Love's]], [[Kmart]], Hess, [[Family Dollar]], and [[Army and Air Force Exchange Service|AAFES]]. |
Retail chains that receive one or more product categories from McLane include [[Wal-Mart]], [[Sam's Club]], [[Walgreens]], Pilot / Flying J, [[Kangaroo Express]], [[Circle K]], [[Wawa (convenience store)|Wawa]], [[7-Eleven]], [[ExxonMobil]],<ref name="Wal-Mart"/> [[Target Stores]],<ref>"Grocery distributor starts new center in Lackawanna County" "The Associated Press State & Local Wire", April 13, 2007.</ref> [[Love's Travel Stops & Country Stores|Love's]], [[Kmart (United States)|Kmart]], Hess, [[Family Dollar]], and [[Army and Air Force Exchange Service|AAFES]]. |
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Restaurant chains supplied by McLane Foodservice are the [[Yum! Brands]] family of concepts: [[Taco Bell]], [[KFC]], [[Pizza Hut]], and former Yum Concepts [[Long John Silvers]]/[[A&W Restaurants]].<ref>[http://www.qsrmagazine.com/articles/news/story.phtml?id=3126 "Tricon pleased by McLane purchase of AmeriServe ""]. ''QSR Magazine,'' December 5, 2000. Retrieved June 13, 2007.</ref> |
Restaurant chains supplied by McLane Foodservice are the [[Yum! Brands]] family of concepts: [[Taco Bell]], [[KFC]], [[Pizza Hut]], and former Yum Concepts [[Long John Silvers]]/[[A&W Restaurants]].<ref>[http://www.qsrmagazine.com/articles/news/story.phtml?id=3126 "Tricon pleased by McLane purchase of AmeriServe ""]. ''QSR Magazine,'' December 5, 2000. Retrieved June 13, 2007.</ref> |
Revision as of 08:06, 14 February 2022
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Logistics and Supply chain |
Founded | 1894Cameron, Texas | in
Headquarters | , United States |
Revenue | US$50 billion (2017) |
Number of employees | 20,545 |
Parent | Berkshire Hathaway |
Subsidiaries | MBM, Transco |
Website | www |
McLane is an American wholesale supply chain services company which distributes grocery and non-food to convenience stores, discount retailers, wholesale clubs, drug stores, military bases, quick service restaurants, and casual dining restaurants throughout the United States. It is also a wholesale distributor of distilled spirits, wine, and beer in some US states. McLane is organised in three segments: grocery distribution, serving about 49,000 retail locations, foodservice distribution, catering to about 36,500 chain restaurants, and beverage distribution, servicing about 24,900 retail locations in the Southeastern US and Colorado.[1]
Walmart, McLane's former parent company, remains its largest client with approximately 25% of its 2017 revenues. Other significant customers include 7-Eleven and Yum! Brands, each of which accounted for approximately 11% of its 2017 revenues.
Mclane was founded in 1894 in Cameron, Texas and has grown from a local merchant to an international distribution and logistics company. The company is headquartered in Temple, Texas, and operates 80 grocery and foodservice distribution centers across the country, as well as one in Brazil.
McLane has been a wholly owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway since 2003.
Key financial figures
The grocery and foodservice businesses generate high sales volumes but very low profit margins. From the 2017 (and 2004) Berkshire Hathaway annual report, key figures are as follows:
2004 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sales | 23,373 | 48,223 | 48,075 | 49,775 |
Pre-tax earnings | 228 | 502 | 431 | 299 |
Income tax | - | 195 | 169 | 94 |
Earnings | - | 307 | 262 | 205 |
Margin | - | 0.6% | 0.5% | 0.4% |
Capital expenditures | 136 | 338 | 258 | 289 |
Depreciation of tangible assets | 107 | 161 | 165 | 193 |
Note: pre-tax earnings include $39 million from asset sales in 2017 and $19 million from the sale of a subsidiary in 2015. The first year is 2004 as it is the first full year of ownership by Berkshire Hathaway. Not all data are publicly available.
Corporate operations
McLane Company operates 21 grocery distribution centers and 18 foodservice distribution centers across the country.[citation needed]
The President & CEO of McLane Company since 2020 is Tony Frankenberger.
History
This section needs additional citations for verification. (September 2020) |
McLane started in 1894 when Robert McLane opened a small retail grocery store in downtown Cameron, Texas. In 1903, he expanded into wholesale trade, supplying grocery stores in neighboring towns via rail and horse-drawn wagons. During the 1920s through the 1940s, with the advent of the automobile and a robust highway system, his business grew rapidly to encompass much of the Central Texas region.
In 1966, McLane Company moved its operations to Temple, Texas, and began tailoring its warehouse operations and distribution methods to better accommodate the retail market, including the rapid growth of the convenience store market.
McLane Company pursued a plan of expansion beyond Texas beginning in 1976 under the leadership of Drayton McLane, Jr., the third generation of family leadership. By 1990, the company had established a national presence.
In December 1990, Drayton McLane sold McLane Company to Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. for 10.4 million shares of Wal-Mart stock and an undisclosed amount of cash.[2]
McLane Company entered the foodservice business in December 2000, when it acquired certain assets from AmeriServe Food Distribution to create McLane Foodservice.[3]
In May 2003, Berkshire Hathaway acquired McLane Company from Wal-Mart for $1.45 billion.[4]
In 2012, McLane opened its 21st grocery distribution center in Republic, Missouri. This is a 350,000 square foot building with state of the art technology including the Schaefer Case Picking system. Their 18th and most recent foodservice distribution center was built in Manassas, Virginia in 2010.[5]
In 2012, McLane acquired Meadowbrook Meat Company (MBM), a Foodservice distributor.[6]
In 2017, McLane plans to open its 22nd grocery distribution center in Findlay, Ohio.[7]
Customers
Retail chains that receive one or more product categories from McLane include Wal-Mart, Sam's Club, Walgreens, Pilot / Flying J, Kangaroo Express, Circle K, Wawa, 7-Eleven, ExxonMobil,[4] Target Stores,[8] Love's, Kmart, Hess, Family Dollar, and AAFES.
Restaurant chains supplied by McLane Foodservice are the Yum! Brands family of concepts: Taco Bell, KFC, Pizza Hut, and former Yum Concepts Long John Silvers/A&W Restaurants.[9] They also provide food to Sonic as of August 2010, Buffalo Wild Wings, and Applebees.
Specialty divisions and companies
McLane Company owns the following specialty divisions and subsidiary companies:
- McLane Foodservice, Inc. is a supplier of food and foodservice items to restaurants throughout the US, serving more than 20,000 customers.[citation needed]
- Salado Sales develops and markets private label products to McLane's convenience store customers. Its lines include various health and beauty care items, film and flash products, light bulbs, motor oil, and work gloves.
- C.D. Hartnett, Inc. is a grocery wholesaler based in Weatherford, Texas. C.D. Hartnett supplies food service accounts, convenience stores, and independent grocers in Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. McLane Company acquired C.D. Hartnett in 2004.[10]
- McCarty-Hull, Inc. is a grocery wholesaler based in Amarillo, Texas. McLane acquired McCarty-Hull in 2006.[10]
- Empire Distributors is a wholesale alcoholic beverage distributor in the Southeast US. In 2010, McLane Company purchased Empire.
- MBM Foodservice, Rocky Mount, NC
References
- ^ "McLane Food Service – Felons Get Hired". www.felonsgethired.com. Retrieved 2020-05-14.
- ^ "Astros sale: Changing of the guard" Houston Chronicle, July 5, 1992.
- ^ "Tricon pleased by McLane purchase of AmeriServe". QSR Magazine, December 5, 2000. Retrieved June 13, 2007.
- ^ a b "Wal-Mart agrees to sell food supplier " New York Times, May 3, 2003.
- ^ http://www.expansionmanagement.com/Industryspotlights/Distribution_Centers/18615 "McLane Company to Build 400,000-square-foot (37,000 m2) Grocery Distribution Center in Jessup, Pennsylvania"]. Expansion Management, April 27, 2007. Retrieved June 13, 2007.
- ^ McLane Company agrees to acquire MBM
- ^ "McLane Prepares to Open New Distribution Center". Convenience Store News. 10 October 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Grocery distributor starts new center in Lackawanna County" "The Associated Press State & Local Wire", April 13, 2007.
- ^ "Tricon pleased by McLane purchase of AmeriServe "". QSR Magazine, December 5, 2000. Retrieved June 13, 2007.
- ^ a b "McLane buys McCarty-Hull" Amarillo Daily News, March 30, 2006.
- Companies based in Texas
- Temple, Texas
- Business services companies established in 1894
- 1894 establishments in Texas
- Multinational companies headquartered in the United States
- Catering and food service companies of the United States
- Berkshire Hathaway
- 2003 mergers and acquisitions
- Wholesalers of the United States