Rip Curl Europe founder ups stake
THE co-founder of Rip Curl's European arm has increased his stake in the company, joining founders Brian Singer and Doug Warbrick as an owner of the key voting shares.
THE co-founder of Rip Curl's European arm has increased his stake in the company, joining founders Brian Singer and Doug Warbrick as an owner of the key voting shares.Frederic Basse has upped his holding from just 13,809 class-A shares he acquired in May, to more than 200,000 shares at the end of last month.A-class shares are entitled to receive dividends. The company paid a dividend of $1.12 in January and is expected to pay a similar one next month.Other senior executives, including financial chief Rodney Adams, French chief Henri Colliard and Spanish chief Raquel Perez, do not own A-class shares.Details of the transaction were revealed in yesterday's filings to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission by the only privately held company among Australia's big three home-grown surfwear brands.Mr Basse, who founded Rip Curl's European business in 1983 with Francois Payot, is a former French national surfing champion.He is based in the French surfing town of Hossegor as head of product development and is credited with having developed seamless boardshorts.He reports to European chief executive Olivier Cantet, who has held the position since July.Mr Basse also has 4112 E-class shares, which are non-voting.Meanwhile, listed rival Billabong announced it had bought a minority interest in the Australian online surfwear retailer Surfstitch, which operates from a shop on Sydney's northern beaches. Surfstitch sells all brands, including rivals Rip Curl and Quiksilver, and is owned by Lex Pedersen, who set up the website from his surf shop in September last year.Billabong told the Australian Securities Exchange that the purchase price was not material and was confidential.Rip Curl is based in Torquay and is the third-biggest player in an $8 billion market dominated by Billabong and Quiksilver.Rip Curl Group sold $443 million worth of surf and snow gear, watches, shoes and accessories in 2008-09 in the US, Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.It owns businesses in Thailand, Switzerland, France and Belgium, and has a joint venture in Canada. It also licenses its products in other countries.The business generated a net profit of $33.9 million, up from $14.4 million the previous year.
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