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| Company type | Public limited company |
|---|---|
| Industry | Engineering |
| Founded | 1925 |
| Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
Key people | David Newlands (chairman) James Nicol (CEO) Michael C. Winn(President))[1][2][3] |
| Revenue | US$4,180.1 million (2009)[4] |
| US$84.7 million (2009)[4] | |
| US$(15.6) million (2009)[4] | |
| Owner | Onex and theCanada Pension Plan Investment Board |
Number of employees | circa 30,000[4] |
| Website | www |
Tomkins plc was amultinational engineering company headquartered in London, United Kingdom. In July 2010 Tomkins was acquired by a Canadian consortium ofprivate equity firmOnex Corporation and theCanada Pension Plan Investment Board. In July 2014,The Blackstone Group, the world's largest buyout firm, agreed to acquire The Gates Corporation, the largest division of Tomkins plc fromOnex Corp. (OCX) andCanada Pension Plan Investment Board for $5.4 billion.[5]
Tomkins was founded in 1925 as F.H. Tomkins Buckle Company, a small manufacturer of buckles and fasteners.[6] It was first listed on theLondon Stock Exchange in 1956.
In 1983, ex-Lord Hanson employee Greg Hutchings acquired a 22.9% stake in the company, and subsequently was appointed Chief executive.[7] Hutchings expanded Tomkins in a classicalconglomerate form throughleveraged buyouts, and during the 1980s and early 1990s the company embarked on a succession of acquisitions which rapidly grew its revenue, product range and global reach. Major acquisitions includedSmith & Wesson in 1987,[8]RHM in 1992,[9] the US-basedGates Corporation in 1996,[10] which signalled a move into the industrial and automotive markets, and the Stant[11] and Schrader[12] businesses that further bolstered this division. During this era, Tomkins was regarded as the archetypal multi-industrial conglomerate, with a portfolio of assets that had little or nothing in common with one another – and indeed the media delighted in referring to Tomkins as the "buns-to-guns" company[13] because of its ownership ofRHM (baking) andSmith & Wesson (firearms).
Hutchings was forced to resign from the company in 2000, over a series of false allegations of executive excess.[7] Tomkins sold RHM shortly thereafter,[9] and Smith & Wesson the following year.[8]
After an unsolicited approach, in July 2010 Tomkins was acquired by a Canadian consortium ofprivate equity firmOnex Corporation and theCanada Pension Plan Investment Board for £2.9 billion.[14]
In November 2012, Tomkins sold their portion of the Building Products group that included:Hart and Cooley, Selkirk and Ruskin to the CPPIB.[15]
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