1
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
(X) ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
FOR FISCAL YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 1999
( ) TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from___________to__________
Commission File No. 333-35083
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
PENNSYLVANIA 25-1411751
(State or other jurisdiction of (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization) Identification No.)
See Table of Additional Subsidiary Guarantor Registrants
15 BRADLEY STREET, WARREN, PA 16365
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)
(814) 723-1500
(Registrant's telephone number, including area code)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (b) of the Act:
NONE
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (g) of the Act:
NONE
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required
to be filed by Section 13, or 15 (d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant
was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes X No
--- ---
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405
of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the
best of the registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information
statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any
amendment to this Form 10-K. [ X ]
As of November 29, 1999, 100 shares of the Registrant's common stock, $0.10 par
value per share, were outstanding. All shares of common stock of the
Registrant's are held by an affiliate. Therefore, the aggregate market value of
the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates of the Registrant
is zero.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE: NONE
2
TABLE OF ADDITIONAL REGISTRANTS
State of Other Primary Standard IRS Employer
Jurisdiction of Industrial Identification Commission File
Name Incorporation Classification Number Number Number
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Kiantone Pipeline Corporation New York 4612 25-1211902 333-35083-01
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Kiantone Pipeline Company Pennsylvania 4600 25-1416278 333-35083-03
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
United Refining Company Of Pennsylvania 5541 25-0850960 333-35083-02
Pennsylvania
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
United Jet Center, Inc. Delaware 4500 52-1623169 333-35083-06
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Kwik-Fill, Inc. Pennsylvania 5541 25-1525543 333-35083-05
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Independent Gas and Oil New York 5170 06-1217388 333-35083-11
Company of Rochester, Inc.
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Bell Oil Corp. Michigan 5541 38-1884781 333-35083-07
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
PPC, Inc. Ohio 5541 31-0821706 333-35083-08
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Super Test Petroleum Inc. Michigan 5541 38-1901439 333-35083-09
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Kwik-Fil, Inc. New York 5541 25-1525615 333-35083-04
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
Vulcan Asphalt Refining Delaware 2911 23-2486891 333-35083-10
Corporation
- -------------------------------- ------------------------ ------------------------- --------------------- ---------------------
2
3
ITEM 1. BUSINESS.
INTRODUCTION
The Company is a leading integrated refiner and marketer of petroleum
products in its primary market area, which encompasses western New York and
northwestern Pennsylvania. The Company owns and operates a medium complexity
65,000 barrel per day ("bpd") petroleum refinery in Warren, Pennsylvania where
it produces a variety of products, including various grades of gasoline, diesel
fuel, kerosene, jet fuel, No. 2 heating oil, and asphalt. The Company sells
gasoline and diesel fuel under the "Kwik Fill(R)" brand name at a network of
Company-operated retail units. As of August 31, 1999, the Company operated 303
units, 227 of which it owned. For the year ended August 31, 1999 (sometimes
referred to as "fiscal 1999"), approximately 60% and 21% of the Company's
gasoline and diesel fuel production, respectively, was sold through this
network. The Company operates convenience stores at most of its retail units,
primarily under the "Red Apple Food Mart(R)" brand name. The Company also sells
its petroleum products to long-standing regional wholesale customers.
For the fiscal year ended August 31, 1999, the Company had total
revenues of approximately $757.3 million, of which approximately 53% were
derived from gasoline sales, approximately 34% were from sales of other
petroleum products and approximately 13% were from sales of non-petroleum
products. The Company's capacity utilization rates have ranged from
approximately 90% to approximately 101% over the last five years. In fiscal
1999, approximately 73% of the Company's refinery output consisted of higher
value products such as gasoline and distillates.
The Company believes that the location of its 65,000 bpd refinery in
Warren, Pennsylvania provides it with a transportation cost advantage over its
competitors, which is significant within an approximately 100-mile radius of
it's refinery. For example, in Buffalo, New York over its last five fiscal
years, the Company has experienced an approximately 2.1 cents per gallon
transportation cost advantage over those competitors who are required to ship
gasoline by pipeline and truck from New York Harbor sources to Buffalo. The
Company owns and operates the Kiantone Pipeline, a 78-mile long crude oil
pipeline which connects the refinery to Canadian, U.S. and world crude oil
sources through the Enbridge Pipe Line system. Utilizing the storage facilities
of the pipeline, the Company is able to blend various grades of crude oil from
different suppliers, allowing it to efficiently schedule production while
managing feedstock mix and product yields in order to optimize profitability.
It is the Company's view that the high construction costs and the
stringent regulatory requirements inherent in petroleum refinery operations make
it uneconomical for new competing refineries to be constructed in the Company's
primary market area. The nearest fuels refinery is over 160 miles from Warren,
Pennsylvania and the Company believes that no significant production from such
refinery is currently shipped into its primary market area.
The Company's primary market area is western New York and northwestern
Pennsylvania and its core market area encompasses its Warren County base and the
eight contiguous counties in New York and Pennsylvania. The Company's retail
gasoline and merchandise sales are split approximately 60% / 40% between rural
and urban markets. Margins on gasoline sales are traditionally higher in rural
markets, while gasoline sales volume is greater in urban markets. The Company's
urban markets include Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse, New York and Erie,
Pennsylvania.
As of August 31, 1999, the Company operated 303 retail units, of which
171 are located in New York, 123 in Pennsylvania and 9 in Ohio. The Company
owned 227 of these units. In fiscal 1999, approximately 60% of the refinery's
gasoline production was sold through the Company's retail network. In addition
to gasoline, all units sell convenience merchandise, 37 have delicatessens and
seven of the units are full-service truck stops. Customers may pay for purchases
with credit cards including the Company's own Kwik Fill(R) credit card. In
addition to this credit card, the Company maintains a fleet credit card catering
to regional truck and automobile fleets. Sales of convenience products, which
tend to have constant margins throughout the year, have served to reduce the
effects of the seasonality inherent in gasoline retail margins. The Company has
consolidated its entire retail system under the Red Apple Food Mart(R) and Kwik
Fill(R) brand names, providing the chain with a greater regional brand
awareness.
On June 9, 1997, the Company completed the sale (the "Private
Offering") of $200 million principal amount 10 3/4% Series A Senior Notes due
2007 to Dillon, Read & Co. Inc. and Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. in a transaction
exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
Subsequent to this issue, the Company exchanged the Series A Senior Notes for
its 10 3/4% Series B Senior Notes due 2007 which were previously registered
under the
3
4
Securities Act of 1933, as amended. An aggregate of $200 million in principal
amount of Series A Senior Notes were exchanged for Series B Senior Notes
effective January 16, 1998. The form and terms of the Series B Senior Notes are
identical in all material respects to the form and terms of the Series A Senior
Notes except that the Series B Senior Notes are registered under the Securities
Act and, therefore, do not bear legends restricting the transfer thereof. The
Series B Senior Notes do not represent additional indebtedness of the Company
and are entitled to the benefits of the Indenture, which is the same Indenture
as the one under which the Series A Senior Notes were issued.
Simultaneously with the consummation of the Private Offering, PNC Bank
provided the Company and one of its subsidiaries a new bank credit facility (the
"New Bank Credit Facility"). Subject to borrowing base limitations and the
satisfaction of customary borrowing conditions, the Company and such subsidiary
may borrow up to $35 million under the New Bank Credit Facility.
INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
The Company is a regional refiner and marketer located primarily in
Petroleum Administration for Defense District ("PADD I"). As of January 1, 1999,
there were 17 refineries operating in PADD I with a combined crude processing
capacity of 1.7 million bpd, representing approximately 10% of U.S. refining
capacity. Petroleum product consumption during calendar year 1998 in PADD I
averaged 5.7 million bpd, representing approximately 30% of U.S. demand based on
industry statistics reported by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (the
"EIA"). According to the Lundberg Letter, an industry newsletter, total gasoline
consumption in the region grew by approximately 3.0% during 1998 in response to
improving economic conditions. Refined petroleum production in PADD I is
insufficient to satisfy demand for such products in the region, making PADD I a
net importer of such products.
The Company believes that domestic refining capacity utilization is
close to maximum sustainable limits because of the existing high throughput
coupled with a reduction in refining capacity. The Company believes that high
utilization rates coupled with little anticipated crude capacity expansion is
likely to result over the long term in improved operating margins in the
refining industry.
Asphalt is a residual product of the crude oil refining process, which
is used primarily for construction and maintenance of roads and highways and as
a component of roofing shingles. Distribution of asphalt is localized, usually
within a distance of 150 miles from a refinery or terminal, and demand is
influenced by levels of federal, state, and local government funding for highway
construction and maintenance and by levels of roofing construction activities.
The Company believes that an ongoing need for highway maintenance and domestic
economic growth will sustain asphalt demand.
BUSINESS STRATEGY
The Company's goal is to strengthen its position as a leading producer
and marketer of high quality refined petroleum products within its primary
market area. The Company plans to accomplish this goal through continued
attention to optimizing the Company's operations at the lowest possible cost,
improving and enhancing the profitability of the Company. More specifically,
the Company intends to:
o Maximize the transportation cost advantage afforded the Company by its
geographic location by increasing retail and wholesale market shares
within its primary market area.
o Expand sales of higher margin specialty products such as jet fuel,
premium diesel, roofing asphalt and Strategic Highway Research Program
("SHRP") specification paving asphalt.
o Optimize profitability by managing feedstock costs, product yields, and
inventories through its recently improved refinery feedstock linear
programming model and its system wide distribution model.
4
5
REFINING OPERATIONS
The Company's refinery is located on a 92-acre site in Warren,
Pennsylvania. The refinery has a rated capacity of 65,000 bpd of crude oil
processing. The refinery averaged saleable production of approximately 59,400
bpd during fiscal 1998 and approximately 65,000 bpd during fiscal 1999. The
increase is attributable to greater refinery production since regularly
scheduled maintenance turnarounds and concurrent installation of components of
the Company's upgrade program occurred during fiscal year 1998. The Company
produces three primary petroleum products: gasoline, middle distillates and
asphalt. The Company believes its geographic location in the product short PADD
I is a marketing advantage. The Company's refinery is located in northwestern
Pennsylvania and is geographically distant from the majority of PADD I refining
capacity. The nearest fuels refinery is over 160 miles from Warren, Pennsylvania
and the Company believes that no significant production from such refinery is
currently shipped into the Company's primary market area.
Products
The Company presently produces two grades of unleaded gasoline,
87-octane regular and 93-octane premium. The Company also blends its 87 and 93
octane gasoline to produce a mid-grade 89 octane. In fiscal 1999, approximately
60% of the Company's gasoline production was sold through its retail network and
the remaining 40% of such production was sold to wholesale customers.
Middle distillates include kerosene, diesel fuel, heating oil (No. 2
oil) and jet fuel. In fiscal 1999 the Company sold approximately 85% of its
middle distillate production to wholesale customers and the remaining 15% at its
retail units, primarily at its seven truck stops. The Company also produces
aviation fuels for commercial airlines (Jet-A) and military aircraft (JP-8).
The Company optimizes its bottom of the barrel processing by producing
asphalt, a higher value alternative to residual fuel oil. Asphalt production as
a percentage of all refinery production has increased over the last five fiscal
years due to the Company's ability and decision to process a larger amount of
less costly higher sulfur content crude oil in order to realize higher overall
refining margins.
Refining Process
The Company's production of petroleum products from crude oil involves
many complex steps, which are briefly summarized below.
The Company seeks to maximize refinery profitability by selecting crude
oil and other feedstocks taking into account factors including product demand
and pricing in the Company's market areas as well as price, quality and
availability of various grades of crude oil. The Company also considers product
inventory levels and any planned turnarounds of refinery units for maintenance.
The combination of these factors is optimized by a sophisticated proprietary
linear programming computer model, which selects the most profitable feedstock
and product mix. The linear programming model is continuously updated and
improved to reflect changes in the product market place and in the refinery's
processing capability.
Blended crude is stored in a tank farm near the refinery, which has a
capacity of approximately 200,000 barrels. The blended crude is then brought
into the refinery where it is first distilled at low pressure into its component
streams in the crude and preflash unit. This yields the following intermediate
products: light products consisting of fuel gas components (methane and ethane)
and LPG (propane and butane), naphtha or gasoline, kerosene, diesel or heating
oil, heavy atmospheric distillate, and crude tower bottoms which are further
distilled under vacuum conditions to yield light and heavy vacuum distillates
and asphalt. The present capacity of the crude unit is 65,000 bpd.
The intermediate products are then processed in downstream units that
produce finished products. A naphtha hydrotreater treats naphtha with hydrogen
across a fixed bed catalyst to remove sulfur before further treatment. The
treated naphtha is then distilled into light and heavy naphtha at a
prefractionator. Light naphtha is then sent to an isomerization unit and heavy
naphtha is sent to a reformer in each case for octane enhancement. The
isomerization unit converts the light naphtha catalytically into a gasoline
component with 83 octane. The reformer unit converts the heavy naphtha into
another gasoline component with up to 94 octane depending upon the desired
octane
5
6
requirement for the grade of gasoline to be produced. The reformer also produces
as a co-product all the hydrogen needed to operate hydrotreating units in the
refinery.
Raw kerosene or heating oil is treated with hydrogen at a distillate
hydrotreater to remove sulfur and make finished kerosene, jet fuels and No. 2
fuel oil. A new distillate hydrotreater built in 1993 also treats raw
distillates to produce low sulfur diesel fuel.
The long molecular chains of the heavy atmospheric and vacuum
distillates are broken or "cracked" in the fluidized catalytic cracking unit and
separated and recovered in the gas concentration unit to produce fuel gas,
propylene, butylene, LPG, gasoline, light cycle oil and clarified oil. Fuel gas
is burned within the refinery, propylene is fed to a polymerization unit which
polymerizes its molecules into a larger chain to produce an 87 octane gasoline
component, butylene is fed into an alkylation unit to produce a gasoline
component and LPG is treated to remove trace quantities of water and then sold.
Clarified oil is burned in the refinery or sold. Various refinery gasoline
components are blended together in refinery tankage to produce 87 octane and 93
octane finished gasoline. Likewise, light cycle oil is blended with other
distillates to produce low sulfur diesel and No. 2 fuel oil.
The Company's refining configuration allows the processing of a wide
variety of crude oil inputs. Historically, its inputs have been of Canadian
origin and range from light low sulfur (38 degrees API, 0.5% sulfur) to high
sulfur heavy asphaltic (25 degrees API, 2.8% sulfur). The Company's ability to
market asphalt enables it to purchase selected heavier crude oils at a lower
cost.
The Company's saleable yield has been in excess of 96% for the past five years.
The Company attributes this fact in part to its Capital Improvement Program
(discussed in detail on page 8) along with its planned refinery turnarounds
during fiscal year 1998.
Supply of Crude Oil
Even though the Company's crude supply is currently nearly all
Canadian, it is not dependent on this source alone. Within 60 days, the Company
could shift up to 60% of its crude oil requirements to some combination of
domestic and offshore crude. With additional time, 100% of its crude
requirements could be obtained from non-Canadian sources. The Company processes
Canadian crude because it affords the Company the highest refinery margins
currently available. Sixty percent of the Company's contracts with its crude
suppliers are on a month-to month evergreen basis, with 30-to-60 day
cancellation provisions; thirty-five percent of the Company's crude contracts
are on an annual basis (with month to month pricing provisions). As of August
31, 1999, the Company had supply contracts with 19 different suppliers for an
aggregate of 68,400 bpd of crude oil. The Company has contracts with four
vendors amounting to 48% of daily crude oil supply (none more than 9,000 barrels
per day). As of such date, the Company had no other contract covering more than
10% of its crude oil supply.
The Company accesses crude through the Kiantone Pipeline, which
connects with the Enbridge Pipe Line in West Seneca, New York, which is near
Buffalo. The Enbridge Pipe Line system provides access to most North American
and foreign crude oils through three primary routes: (i) Canadian crude oils are
transported eastward from Alberta and other points in Canada; (ii) various
mid-continent crude oils from Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas are transported
northeast along the Cushing-Chicago Pipeline (foreign crude oils shipped on the
Seaway system can also access this route), which connects to Enbridge at
Griffith, Indiana; and (iii) foreign crude oils unloaded at the Louisiana
Offshore Oil Port are transported north via the Capline and Chicago pipelines
which connect to the Enbridge at Mokena, Illinois.
The Kiantone Pipeline, a 78 mile Company-owned and operated pipeline,
connects the Company's West Seneca, New York terminal at the pipeline's northern
terminus to the refinery's tank farm at its southern terminus. The Company
completed construction of the Kiantone Pipeline in 1971 and has operated it
continuously since then. The Company is the sole shipper on the Kiantone
Pipeline, and can currently transport up to 70,000 bpd along the pipeline. The
Company's right to maintain the pipeline is derived from approximately 265
separate easements, right-of-way agreements, licenses, permits, leases and
similar agreements.
The pipeline operation is monitored by a computer at the refinery.
Shipments of crude arriving at the West Seneca terminal are separated and stored
in one of the terminal's three storage tanks, which have an aggregate storage
capacity of 485,000 barrels. The refinery tank farm has two additional crude
storage tanks with a total capacity of 200,000 barrels. An additional 35,000
barrels can be stored at the refinery.
6
7
Refinery Turnarounds
Turnaround cycles vary for different refinery units. A planned
turnaround of each of the two major refinery units - the crude unit and the
fluid catalytic cracking unit - is conducted approximately every three or four
years, during which time such units are shut down for internal inspection and
repair. A turnaround, which generally takes two to four weeks to complete in the
case of the two major refinery units, consists of a series of moderate to
extensive maintenance exercises. Turnarounds are planned and accomplished in a
manner that allows for reduced production during maintenance instead of a
complete plant shutdown. The Company defers the cost of turnarounds when
incurred and amortizes the costs to operations on a straight-line basis over the
period of benefit. Thus, the Company charges costs to production over the period
most clearly benefited by the turnaround.
MARKETING AND DISTRIBUTION
General
The Company has a long history of service within its market area. The
Company's first retail service station was established in 1927 near the Warren
refinery, and it has steadily expanded its distribution network.
The Company maintains an approximate 60%/40% split between sales at its
rural and urban units. The Company believes this to be advantageous, balancing
the higher gross margins and lower volumes often achievable due to decreased
competition in rural areas with higher volumes and lower gross margins in urban
areas. The Company believes that its rural convenience store units provide an
important alternative to traditional grocery store formats. In fiscal 1999,
approximately 60% and 21% of the Company's gasoline and diesel fuel production,
respectively, was sold through this retail network.
Retail Operations
As of August 31, 1999 the Company operated a retail marketing network
that includes 303 retail units, of which 171 are located in western New York,
123 in northwestern Pennsylvania and 9 in eastern Ohio. The Company owns 227 of
these units. Gasoline at these retail units is sold under the brand name Kwik
Fill(R). Most retail units operate under the brand name Red Apple Food Mart(R).
The Company believes that Red Apple Food Mart(R) and Kwik Fill(R) are
well-recognized names in the Company's marketing areas. The Company believes
that the operation of its retail units provides it with a significant advantage
over competitors that operate wholly or partly through dealer arrangements
because the Company has greater control over pricing and operating expenses,
thus establishing a potential for improved margins.
The Company classifies its stores into four categories: convenience
stores, limited gasoline stations, truck stop facilities and other stores. Full
convenience stores have a wide variety of foods, snacks, cigarettes and
beverages and self-service gasoline. Thirty-seven of such units also have
delicatessens where food (primarily submarine sandwiches, pizza, chicken and
lunch platters) is prepared on the premises for retail sales and also
distribution to other nearby Company units which do not have in-store
delicatessens. Mini convenience stores sell snacks, cigarettes and beverages and
self-service gasoline. Limited gasoline stations sell gasoline, cigarettes, oil
and related car care products and provide full service for gasoline customers.
Truckstop facilities sell gasoline and diesel fuel on a self-service and
full-service basis. All truckstops include either a full or mini convenience
store and one has a truck repair garage. As of August 31, 1999, the average
sales areas of the Company's convenience stores, limited gasoline stations,
truckstops and other stores were 2,000, 200, 1,500 and 2,500 square feet,
respectively.
Total merchandise sales for fiscal year 1999 were $96.6 million, with a
gross profit of approximately $27.5 million. Over the last five fiscal years,
merchandise gross margins have averaged approximately 30% and the Company
believes that merchandise sales will continue to remain a stable source of gross
profit.
7
8
Merchandise Supply
The Company's primary merchandise vendor is Tripifoods, which is
located in Buffalo, New York. During fiscal 1999, the Company purchased
approximately 82% of its convenience merchandise from this vendor. Tripifoods
supplies the Company with tobacco products, candy, deli foods, grocery, health
and beauty products, and sundry items on a cost plus basis for resale. The
Company also purchases dairy products, beer, soda, snacks, and novelty goods
from direct store vendors for resale. The Company annually reviews its
suppliers' costs and services versus those of alternate suppliers. The Company
believes that alternative sources of merchandise supply at competitive prices
are readily available.
Location Performance Tracking
The Company maintains a store tracking mechanism whereby transmissions
are made three times a week to collect operating data including sales and
inventory levels. Data transmissions are made using personal computers, which
are available at each location. Once verified, the data interfaces with a
variety of retail accounting systems, which support daily, weekly and monthly
performance reports. These different reports are then provided to both the field
management and office staff. Upon completion of a capital project, management
tracks "before and after" performance, to evaluate the return on investment
which has resulted from the improvements.
Capital Improvement Program
During the fiscal year ended August 31, 1999, the Company spent
approximately $3.4 million from the capital expenditure escrow account on
capital improvements for the refinery upgrade and $11.9 million on the retail
portion of its Capital Improvement Program. The Company has spent the entire
$48.1 million originally escrowed for capital improvement. The scope of the
retail capital improvement expenditures for the fiscal year ended August 31,
1999 included:
o Twenty-one rebuilds that included ground up construction of a
new building and a complete petroleum upgrade. Five of these
locations also provide fast food and seven of these locations
also include a smoke shop. As of August 31, 1999 three
locations were still under construction with projected retail
opening dates early next fiscal year.
o Ten petroleum upgrades. These upgrades include new drive pads,
canopy, lighting, multi-product dispensers with pay at the
pump technology, new petroleum lines and signage. Petroleum
upgrades have been performed simultaneously with the required
underground storage tank upgrades.
o Underground Storage Tank Compliance. As of December 22, 1998
all required upgrades were completed and the Company met all
deadlines.
o Eight convenience stores were upgraded, as well as, remodeled
to include the addition of smoke shops.
o An aggressive lighting upgrade and capital maintenance program
has been completed.
Wholesale Marketing and Distribution
The Company sold in fiscal year 1999, on a wholesale basis,
approximately 46,900 bpd of gasoline, distillate and asphalt products to
distributor, commercial and government accounts. In addition, the Company sells
approximately 1,000 bpd of propane to liquefied petroleum gas marketers. In
fiscal 1999, the Company's production of gasoline, distillate and asphalt sold
at wholesale was 40%, 85% and 100%, respectively. The Company sells 97.5% of its
wholesale gasoline and distillate products from its Company-owned and operated
product terminals. The remaining 2.5% are sold through third-party exchange
terminals.
8
9
The Company's wholesale gasoline customer base includes 50 branded
dealer/distributor units operating under the Company's proprietary "Keystone(R)"
brand name. Long-term Keystone(R) dealer/distributor contracts accounted for
approximately 12% of the Company's wholesale gasoline sales in fiscal 1999.
Supply contracts generally range from three to five years in length, with
Keystone(R) branded prices based on the prevailing Company wholesale rack price
in Warren.
The Company believes that the location of its refinery provides it with
a transportation cost advantage over its competitors, which is significant
within an approximately 100-mile radius of the Company's refinery. For example,
in Buffalo, New York over its last five fiscal years, the Company has
experienced an approximately 2.1 cents per gallon transportation cost advantage
over those competitors who are required to ship gasoline by pipeline and truck
from New York Harbor sources to Buffalo. In addition to this transportation cost
advantage, the Company's proximity to local accounts allows it a greater range
of shipment options, including the ability to deliver truckload quantities of
approximately 200 barrels versus much larger 25,000 barrel pipeline batch
deliveries, and faster response time, which the Company believes help it provide
enhanced service to its customers.
The Company's ability to market asphalt is critical to the performance
of its refinery, since such marketing ability enables the Company to process
lower cost higher sulfur content crude oils which in turn affords the Company
higher refining margins. Sales of paving asphalt generally occur during the
summer months due primarily to weather conditions. In order to maximize its
asphalt sales, the Company has made substantial investments to increase its
asphalt storage capacity through the installation of additional tanks, as well
as through the purchase or lease of outside terminals. Partially mitigating the
seasonality of the asphalt paving business is the Company's ability to sell
asphalt year-round to roofing shingle manufacturers, which accounted for
approximately 23% of its total asphalt sales over the Company's last five fiscal
years. In fiscal 1999, the Company sold 5.9 million barrels of asphalt while
producing 5.5 million barrels. The refinery was unable to produce enough asphalt
to satisfy the demand and, therefore, purchased .4 million barrels for resale.
The Company has a significant share of the asphalt market in the cities
of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Rochester and Buffalo, New York. The Company
distributes asphalt from the refinery by railcar and truck transport to its
owned and leased asphalt terminals in such cities or their suburbs. The Company
also operates a terminal at Cordova, Alabama giving it a presence in the
Southeast. Asphalt can be purchased in the Gulf Coast area and delivered by
barge to third party or Company-owned terminals near Pittsburgh. The Company's
asphalt terminal network allows the Company to enter into product exchanges.
The Company uses a network of seven terminals to store and distribute
refined products. This network provides gasoline, distillate and asphalt storage
capacities (in thousands of barrels) of approximately 750, 825 and 1,700 barrels
respectively as of August 31, 1999.
During fiscal 1999, approximately 91% of the Company's refined products
were transported from the refinery via truck transports, with the remaining 9%
transported by rail. The majority of the Company's wholesale and retail gasoline
distribution is handled by common carrier trucking companies at competitive
costs. The Company also operates a fleet of ten gasoline tank trucks that supply
approximately 25% of its Kwik Fill(R) retail stations.
Product distribution costs to both retail and wholesale accounts are
minimized through product exchanges. Through these exchanges, the Company has
access to product supplies at 40 sources located throughout the Company's retail
marketing area. The Company seeks to minimize retail distribution costs through
the use of a system wide distribution model.
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS
General
The Company is subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations
relating to pollution and protection of the environment such as those governing
releases of certain materials into the environment and the storage, treatment,
transportation, disposal and clean-up of wastes, including, but not limited to,
the Federal Clean Water Act as amended, the Clean Air Act ("CAA") the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 as amended, Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 as amended ("CERCLA"), and
analogous state and local laws and regulations.
9
10
The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
In 1990 the Clean Air Act ("CAA") was amended to greatly expand the
role of the government in controlling product quality. The legislation included
provisions that have significantly impacted the manufacture of both gasoline and
diesel fuel including the requirement for significantly lower sulfur content and
a limit on aromatics content in diesel fuel. The Company is able to satisfy
these requirements.
Diesel Fuel Sulfur and Aromatics Content
The United States Environmental Protection Agency ("USEPA") issued
rules under the CAA which became effective in October 1993 which limit the
sulfur and aromatics content of diesel fuels nationwide. The rules required
refiners to reduce the sulfur in on-highway diesel fuel from 0.5 Wt.% to 0.05
Wt.%. The Company meets these specifications of the CAA for all of its
on-highway diesel production.
The Company's on-road diesel represented 68% of its total distillate
sales in fiscal 1999. Since the reduction of sulfur in diesel required some new
investment at most refineries, a two-tier market has developed in distillate
sales. Due to capital constraints and timing issues, as well as strategic
decisions not to invest in diesel fuel desulfurization, some other refineries
are unable to produce specification highway diesel.
Reformulated Gasoline ("RFG")
The CAA required that by January 1, 1995 RFG be sold in the nine worst
ozone non-attainment areas of the U.S. None of these areas is within the
Company's marketing area. However, the CAA enabled the USEPA to specify 87
other, less serious ozone non-attainment areas that could opt into this program.
In 1994, the Company spent approximately $7.4 million to enable its refinery to
produce RFG for its marketing area because the Governors of Pennsylvania and New
York had opted into the RFG program. In December 1994 such states elected to
"opt out" of the program.
The CAA also contains provisions requiring oxygenated fuels in carbon
monoxide non-attainment areas to reduce pollution. There are currently no carbon
monoxide non-attainment areas in the Company's primary marketing area.
Conventional Gasoline Quality
In addition to reformulated and oxygenated gasoline requirements, the
United States Environmental Protection Agency has promulgated regulations under
the CAA which relate to the quality of "conventional" gasoline and which require
expanded reporting of the quality of such gasoline by refiners. Substantially
all of the Company's gasoline sales are of conventional gasoline. The Company
closely monitors the quality of the gasoline it produces to assure compliance at
the lowest possible cost with CAA regulations.
Underground Storage Tank Upgrade
As of December 22, 1998, the Company completed a tank
replacement/retrofitting program at its retail units to comply with regulations
promulgated by the USEPA. These regulations require new tanks to meet all
performance standards at the time of installation. Existing tanks can be
upgraded to meet such standards. The upgrade required retrofitting for corrosion
protection (cathodic protection, interior lining or a combination of the two),
spill protection (catch basins to contain spills from delivery hoses) and
overfill protection (automatic shut off devices or overfill alarms). The total
cost of the program was over $11.0 million and resulted in full compliance with
the USEPA regulations.
COMPETITION
Petroleum refining and marketing is highly competitive. The Company's
major retail competitors include British Petroleum, Citgo, Amerada Hess, Mobil
and Sunoco, Inc. With respect to wholesale gasoline and distillate sales, the
Company competes with Sunoco, Inc., Mobil and other major refiners. The Company
primarily competes with Marathon Oil Company and Ashland Oil Company in the
asphalt market. Many of the Company's principal
10
11
competitors are integrated multinational oil companies that are substantially
larger and better known than the Company. Because of their diversity,
integration of operations, larger capitalization and greater resources, these
major oil companies may be better able to withstand volatile market conditions,
compete on the basis of price and more readily obtain crude oil in times of
shortages.
The principal competitive factors affecting the Company's refining
operations are crude oil and other feedstock costs, refinery efficiency,
refinery product mix and product distribution and transportation costs. Certain
of the Company's larger competitors have refineries which are larger and more
complex and, as a result, could have lower per barrel costs or higher margins
per barrel of throughput. The Company has no crude oil reserves and is not
engaged in exploration. The Company believes that it will be able to obtain
adequate crude oil and other feedstocks at generally competitive prices for the
foreseeable future.
The principal competitive factors affecting the Company's retail
marketing network are location of stores, product price and quality, appearance
and cleanliness of stores and brand identification. Competition from large,
integrated oil companies, as well as from convenience stores which sell motor
fuel, is expected to continue. The principal competitive factors affecting the
Company's wholesale marketing business is product price and quality, reliability
and availability of supply and location of distribution points.
EMPLOYEES
As of August 31, 1999 the Company had approximately 1,682 full-time and
1,400 part-time employees. Approximately 2,428 persons were employed at the
Company's retail units, 379 persons at the Company's refinery, Kiantone Pipeline
and at terminals operated by the Company, with the remainder at the Company's
office in Warren, Pennsylvania. The Company has entered into collective
bargaining agreements with International Union of Operating Engineers Local No.
95, United Steel Workers of America Local No. 2122-A, the International Union of
Plant Guard Workers of America Local No. 502 and General Teamsters Local Union
No. 397 covering 216, 7, 20 and 18 employees, respectively. The agreements
expire on February 1, 2001, January 31, 2000, June 25, 2001 and July 31, 2000,
respectively. The Company believes that its relationship with its employees is
good.
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
The Company owns various federal and state service marks used by the
Company, including Kwik-Fill(R), United(R) and Keystone(R). The Company has
obtained the right to use the Red Apple Food Mart(R) service mark to identify
its retail units under a royalty-free, nonexclusive, nontransferable license
from Red Apple Supermarkets, Inc., a corporation which is indirectly wholly
owned by John A. Catsimatidis, the sole stockholder, Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer of the Company. The license is for an indefinite term.
The licensor has the right to terminate this license in the event that the
Company fails to maintain quality acceptable to the licensor. The Company
licenses the right to use the Keystone(R) trademark to approximately 50
independent distributors on a non-exclusive royalty-free basis for contracted
wholesale sales of gasoline and distillates.
The Company does not own any patents. Management believes that the
Company does not infringe upon the patent rights of others, nor does the
Company's lack of patents have a material adverse effect on the business of the
Company.
GOVERNMENTAL APPROVALS
The Company has obtained all necessary governmental approvals, licenses
and permits to operate the refinery and convenience stores.
ITEM 2. PROPERTIES.
The Company owns a 92-acre site in Warren, Pennsylvania upon which it
operates its refinery. The site also contains a building housing the Company's
principal executive office.
11
12
The Company owns various real property in the states of Pennsylvania,
New York and Ohio upon which it operates 227 retail units and two crude oil and
six refined product storage terminals. The Company also owns the 78 mile long
Kiantone Pipeline, a pipeline which connects the Company's crude oil storage
terminal to the refinery's tank farm. The Company's right to maintain the
pipeline is derived from approximately 265 separate easements, right-of-way
agreements, leases, permits, and similar agreements. The Company also has
easements, right-of-way agreements, leases, permits and similar agreements that
would enable the Company to build a second pipeline on property contiguous to
the Kiantone Pipeline.
The Company also leases an aggregate of 76 sites in Pennsylvania, New
York and Ohio upon which it operates retail units. As of August 31, 1999, the
leases had an average remaining term of 42 months, exclusive of option terms.
Annual rents on such retail units range from $3,600 to $79,500.
ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.
In 1995, the Pennsylvania Environmental Defense Foundation ("PEDF")
commenced a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Western District
of Pennsylvania under Section 505 of the federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33
U.S.C. Section 1251, et. seq. The complaint alleges a series of discharges to
the Allegheny River at the Company's refining facility in Warren, Pennsylvania
exceeding the limits contained in the Company's waste water discharge permits.
PEDF seeks to enjoin future discharges in excess of permitted limits, an
assessment of civil penalties up to $25,000 per day as provided in the Act, and
an award of attorneys' fees. The case has been tried to the Court and post-trial
briefs have been filed, and the parties are awaiting the decision of the Court.
The Company believes that this action will not have any material adverse effect
upon its operations or consolidated financial condition.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency ("USEPA") has issued
certain Notices of Violation, an Administrative Order, and has asserted certain
additional claims arising under federal and state statutory and regulatory law
through and including August 5, 1998 (collectively the "Claims"). The Claims
arise from allegations that (1) the Company failed to properly and consistently
monitor, report and control emissions of Volatile Organic Compounds ("VOCs")
from its refining facility in Warren, Pennsylvania; (2) fuel gas used in the
refining process has in the past contained levels of hydrogen sulfide in excess
of permitted parameters, and; (3) the Company in the past has failed to properly
calculate and report emissions of benzene from its refining facility. The USEPA
has also issued a Notice of Violation dated October 18, 1999 asserting certain
additional claims (collectively the "Additional Claims"). The Additional Claims
allege certain violations of statutory and regulatory law in connection with (a)
certain construction activities with the Company's Warren, Pennsylvania physical
plant; and (b) operation by the Company of certain equipment within the
Company's physical plant. The Claims and Additional Claims allege violations of
the federal Clean Air Act, as amended, and associated federal and state
regulatory requirements. USEPA's review of the Company's operations is
continuing. The Claims and Additional Claims seek civil money penalties in
accordance with USEPA's penalty policies in an amount yet to be determined.
Until the scope of the Additional Claims is known, the Company is unable to
determine the aggregate effect of the Claims and Additional Claims upon its
operations and consolidated financial condition.
In addition to the foregoing proceedings, the Company and its
subsidiaries are from time to time parties to various legal proceedings that
arise in the ordinary course of their respective business operations. These
proceedings include various administrative actions relating to federal, state
and local environmental laws and regulations. The Company believes that if these
legal proceedings in which it is currently involved are determined against the
Company, they would not result in a material adverse effect on the Company's
operations or its consolidated financial condition.
12
13
ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.
NONE
ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDERS
MATTERS.
NONE
ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA.
Year Ended August 31,
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
---- ---- ---- ---- ----
(Dollars in thousands)
Income Statement Data:
Net sales $783,686 $ 833,818 $ 871,348 $ 758,623 $ 757,326
Gross margin (1) 151,852 168,440 164,153 151,564 165,946
Refinery operating expenses 56,665 63,218 60,746 60,840 60,990
Selling, general and administrative expenses 69,292 70,968 73,200 75,064 77,487
Operating income 17,696 26,038 21,977 7,340 18,427
Interest expense 18,523 17,606 17,509 22,188 22,377
Interest income 1,204 1,236 1,296 2,701 1,027
Other income (expense) 571 (40) 672 (685) 318
Income (loss) before income tax expense (benefit) 948 9,628 6,436 (12,832) (2,605)
Income tax expense (benefit) 487 3,787 2,588 (5,132) (1,006)
Income (loss) before extraordinary item and
cumulative effect of accounting change 461 5,841 3,848 (7,700) (1,599)
Extraordinary item, net of tax benefit of $4,200 -- -- (6,653) -- --
Cumulative effect of accounting change, net of
taxes of $3,122 -- -- -- -- 4,783
Net income (loss) 461 5,841 (2,805) (7,700) 3,184
Balance Sheet Data (at end of period):
Total assets 301,494 306,104 346,392 342,579 349,240
Total debt 154,095 136,777 201,272 201,309 206,173
Total stockholder's equity 78,186 84,027 52,937 45,237 48,421
- --------------------------------------------
(1) Gross margin is defined as gross profit plus refining operating expenses.
Refinery operating expenses are expenses incurred in refining and included
in cost of goods sold in the Company's financial statements. Refining
operating expense equals refining operating expenses per barrel, multiplied
by the volume of total saleable products per day, multiplied by the number
of days in the period.
13
14
ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.
COMPANY BACKGROUND
General
The Company is engaged in the refining and marketing of petroleum
products. In fiscal 1999, approximately 60% and 21% of the Company's gasoline
and diesel fuel production was sold through the Company's network of service
stations and truckstops. The balance of the Company's refined products were sold
to wholesale customers. In addition to transportation and heating fuels,
primarily gasoline and distillate, the Company is a major regional wholesale
marketer of asphalt. The Company also sells convenience merchandise at
convenience stores located at most of its service stations. The Company's
profitability is influenced by fluctuations in the market prices of crude oils
and refined products. Although the Company's product sales mix helps to reduce
the impact of large short-term variations in crude oil price, net sales and
costs of goods sold can fluctuate widely based upon fluctuations in crude oil
prices. Specifically, the margins on wholesale gasoline and distillate tend to
decline in periods of rapidly declining crude oil prices, while margins on
asphalt and retail gasoline and distillate tend to improve. During periods of
rapidly rising crude oil prices, margins on wholesale gasoline and distillate
tend to improve, while margins on asphalt and retail gasoline and distillate
tend to decline. Gross margins on the sale of convenience merchandise have
consistently been between 28% and 31% for the last five years and are
essentially unaffected by variations in crude oil and petroleum products prices.
In addition to their effect on petroleum product margins, fluctuations
in crude oil prices can affect the Company's reported financial results by
producing significant changes in the value of the Company's working inventories.
The change in the value of working inventory is that portion of the total change
in the Company's inventory value which is due to changes in the pricing of
working inventory volumes. Working inventory volumes are those volumes of
inventory of the Company's various products and feedstocks necessary to support
normal operations. While changes in the value of working inventory affect the
Company's reported gross profit, operating income and net income, they have no
material effect on the Company's operating cash flow.
The Company includes in costs of goods sold operating expenses incurred
in the refining process. Therefore, operating expenses reflect only selling,
general and administrative expenses, including all expenses of the retail
network, and depreciation and amortization.
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
The Company's results in fiscal 1999 were significantly impacted by a
large and sustained decline in worldwide crude oil prices, as indicated by crude
oil contracts traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX). NYMEX crude
oil prices declined from more than $21 per barrel in November 1997 to less than
$12 per barrel for January 1999. While there were some benefits associated with
lower feedstock costs, there were also some offsetting negative impacts
associated with corresponding declines in product prices.
Also, the Company's crude oil cost advantage associated with its
ability to process heavy, high sulfur, Western Canadian crude oils was
significantly diminished. Producers of these crude oils reduced the discounts
they offered for such grades of crude oil versus lighter, lower sulfur grades as
crude oil traded in the low price range in the first half of fiscal 1999 and
drilling and exploration for these crude oils were curtailed. Even though
worldwide crude oil prices as of early November 1999 had recovered to more than
$22, the Company believes the availability of heavy Western Canadian crude oils
and the Company's crude oil cost advantage is still being negatively affected by
the impact of the low crude oil prices earlier in 1999.
The Company believes that, if relatively stable worldwide crude oil
prices can be maintained, availability of heavy, high sulfur crude oils will
expand and the Company's crude oil cost advantage will increase. However, the
Company anticipates that reduced crude oil price discounts will negatively
impact results for the first quarter of fiscal 2000, which ends November 30,
1999, and may continue to negatively impact subsequent fiscal quarters.
14
15
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
Comparison of Fiscal 1999 and Fiscal 1998.
Net Sales. Net sales decreased $1.3 million or 0.2% from $758.6 million
for fiscal 1998 to $757.3 million for fiscal 1999. Retail sales increased $2.7
million, or 0.6% from $435.2 million to $437.9 million, while wholesale sales
decreased $4.0 million or 1.2% from $323.4 million to $319.4 million. Sales
volume increases of 9.2%, 2.6% and 18.5% for wholesale petroleum, retail
petroleum and retail merchandise, respectively, were slightly more than offset
by per unit price decreases of 9.6% and 5.9% for wholesale and retail petroleum,
respectively.
Costs of Goods Sold. Costs of goods sold decreased $15.5 million or
2.3% from $667.9 million for fiscal 1998 to $652.4 million for fiscal 1999.
Retail costs of goods sold decreased $2.4 million or 0.7% from $370.4 million to
$368.0 million, resulting in a retail gross margin of $64.7 million for fiscal
1998 compared to $69.8 million for fiscal 1999. Wholesale costs of goods sold
decreased $13.1 million or 4.4% from $297.4 million to $284.3 million, resulting
in a wholesale gross margin of $26.0 million for fiscal 1998 compared to $35.1
million for fiscal 1999. The decrease in consolidated costs of goods sold was
primarily the result of a decrease in world crude oil prices and reduction of
costs of goods sold by changes in inventory prices, which more than offset a
12.7% increase in crude processing and smaller discounts received on heavy, high
sulfur crude oil purchases. Worldwide crude oil prices, as indicated by NYMEX
contracts ended a prolonged decline in January 1999 and recovered by the end of
fiscal 1999 to levels significantly higher than at the end of fiscal 1998. This
resulted in an increase of $10.5 million in the value of the Company's working
inventories, which reduced costs of goods sold. In fiscal 1998, declining
worldwide crude oil prices had resulted in a $12.8 million decrease in the value
of the Company's working inventories, which increased the Company's costs of
goods sold.
Operating Expenses. Operating expenses increased $3.1 million or 3.7%
from $83.4 million for 1998 to $86.5 million for fiscal 1999. This increase was
primarily due to increased retail expenses for sales promotions and for credit
card processing and to increased depreciation on new capital equipment installed
under the Company's Capital Improvement Plan. Increased retail promotions
expenses were primarily in connection with a "frequent fueler" program which has
been effective in increasing retail gasoline volume. Increased credit card
processing expense was primarily due to increased customer use of major credit
cards at stations offering recently installed "Pay at the Pump" service.
Operating Income. Operating income increased $11.1 million from $7.3
million for fiscal 1998 to $18.4 million for fiscal 1999. This was primarily due
to a decrease in costs of goods sold as the result of lower worldwide crude oil
prices and the result of the reduction to costs of goods sold from a $10.5
million increase in working inventory value.
Interest Expense. Net interest expense (interest expense less interest
income) increased $1.9 million from $19.5 million for fiscal 1998 to $21.4
million for fiscal 1999. The increased net interest expense was due to a
decrease in interest income earned, as a result of lower balances of restricted
cash and investments.
Income Taxes. The Company's effective tax rate for fiscal 1999 was
approximately 38.6% compared to a rate of 40.0% for fiscal 1998.
Comparison of Fiscal 1998 and Fiscal 1997.
Net Sales. Net sales decreased $112.7 million or 12.9% from $871.3
million for fiscal 1997 to $758.6 million for fiscal 1998. Retail sales
decreased $28.7 million or 6.2% from $463.9 million to $435.2 million, while
wholesale sales decreased $84.0 million or 20.6% from $407.5 million to $323.5
million. The consolidated sales decrease was primarily due to a 22.6% decrease
in wholesale gasoline and distillate weighted average net selling prices, 17.4%
lower retail petroleum selling prices, and a 14.5% decrease in average asphalt
selling prices. Also contributing to the revenue decrease was a 4.8% decrease in
wholesale gasoline and distillate volume. However the wholesale gasoline and
distillate volume declines were slightly more than offset by a 1.0% increase in
retail petroleum volume and a 15.5% increase in asphalt sales volume, as overall
petroleum product sales volume increased slightly from 23.69 million barrels in
fiscal 1997 to 23.74 million barrels in fiscal 1998. Also offsetting lower
petroleum selling prices was a 9.5% increase in retail merchandise sales from
$74.5 million in fiscal 1997 to $81.5 million in fiscal 1998. The decreases in
the Company's product prices were primarily due to lower worldwide prices for
petroleum products which accompanied a 23.1% decrease in world crude oil prices,
as indicated by prices of NYMEX crude
15
16
oil contracts. The decreased wholesale gasoline and distillate volume was due
primarily to a 5.9% decrease in crude oil processing resulting from the planned
shutdown of certain refinery processing units for maintenance and upgrading in
October 1997 and May 1998.
Costs of Goods Sold. Costs of goods sold decreased $100.0 million or
13.0% from $767.9 million for fiscal 1997 to $667.9 million for fiscal 1998.
Retail costs of goods sold decreased $27.5 million or 6.9% from $398.0 million
to $370.5 million, resulting in a retail gross margin of $65.9 million for
fiscal 1997 compared to $64.7 million for fiscal 1998. Wholesale costs of goods
sold decreased $72.6 million or 19.6% from $370.0 million to $297.4 million,
resulting in a wholesale gross margin of $37.5 million for fiscal 1997 compared
to $26.0 million for fiscal 1998. The decrease in consolidated costs of goods
sold was primarily the result of a 23.1% decrease in world crude oil prices, as
well as lower refinery crude oil input volume. Partially offsetting lower crude
oil prices were increases in costs of goods sold from changes in inventory
prices. The per barrel value of the Company's inventories declined during fiscal
1998 as a result of declining world petroleum prices. The declining prices
reduced the value of the Company's working inventories by approximately $12.8
million. These reductions in inventory value contributed to corresponding
increases to costs of goods sold. For fiscal 1997, the corresponding changes in
inventory prices had the effect of decreasing the Company's costs of goods sold
by approximately $0.3 million. The Company maintains certain volumes of working
inventory necessary to support normal operations, and changes in valuation of
this inventory occur with fluctuations in world petroleum prices. The lower
pricing of the Company's working inventories at the end of fiscal 1998, for
example, was the result of world petroleum prices which ended fiscal 1998
approximately 32% below their level at the end of fiscal 1997.
Operating Expenses. Operating expenses increased $2.0 million or 2.4%
from $81.4 million for 1997 to $83.4 million for fiscal 1998. This increase was
primarily due to increased retail expenses for sales promotions, retail station
wages and maintenance and environmental expense. Increased retail station wages
were primarily due to an increase in the federal minimum wage, while increased
retail environmental expenses were primarily connected with the upgrading of
underground storage tanks to new federal standards. Increased retail promotions
expenses were primarily in connection with a "frequent fueler" program which has
been effective in increasing retail gasoline volume.
Operating Income. Operating income decreased $14.6 million from $22.0
million for fiscal 1997 to $7.3 million for fiscal 1998. This was primarily due
to a decline in gross profit as the result of a $12.8 million negative impact on
costs of goods sold for changes in working inventory value. Also contributing to
the decline in gross profit and operating income was the reduction in refinery
production resulting from the scheduled maintenance shutdowns in October 1997
and May 1998.
Interest Expense. Net interest expense (interest expense less interest
income) increased $3.3 million from $16.2 million for fiscal 1997 to $19.5
million for fiscal 1998. The increase was primarily due to an increase in the
amount of long-term debt outstanding following the Company's sale of $200
million of Senior Unsecured Notes in June 1997. This was partially offset by a
reduction in the average interest rate for long-term debt outstanding and by
interest income received on restricted cash and investment.
Income Taxes. The Company's effective tax rate for fiscal 1998 was
approximately 40.0% compared to a rate of 40.2% for fiscal 1997.
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
Working capital (current assets minus current liabilities) at August
31, 1999, was $53.2 million and at August 31, 1998 was $57.9 million. The
Company's current ratio (current assets divided by current liabilities) was
1.8:1 at August 31, 1999, and was 1.9:1 at August 31, 1998.
Net cash used in operating activities totaled $13.8 million for fiscal
1999 compared to net cash provided by operating activities of $15.4 million in
fiscal 1998. This decrease is primarily the result of an increase in accounts
receivable and inventories, and a decrease in sales, use and fuel taxes payable,
offset by an increase in accounts payable. Changes in the carrying value of the
Company's inventory are the result of fluctuations in world petroleum prices and
do not have a material effect on the Company's operating cash flow.
Net cash used in investing activities totaled $8.3 million for the year
ended August 31, 1999 as compared to net cash provided by investing activities
of $.3 million for fiscal 1998. For the fiscal year ended August 31, 1999
16
17
and 1998 respectively, investments included $17.6 million and $15.3 million in
government securities and commercial paper maturing through December 1999 and
1998 respectively. Net cash used in investing activities for purchases of
property, plant and equipment and other assets totaled $26.0 million and $33.5
million for fiscal 1999 and 1998 respectively.
The Company reviews its capital expenditures on an ongoing basis.
During fiscal 1999, the Company invested approximately $26.0 million for capital
improvements; of which approximately $15.3 million was funded from the capital
expenditure escrow account established in conjunction with the Company's
offering in 1997 and the remaining expenditures were funded from cash flow. The
Company currently has budgeted approximately $5.0 million for capital
expenditures in fiscal 2000. Maintenance and non-discretionary capital
expenditures have averaged approximately $4 million annually over the last three
years for the refining and marketing operations.
Future liquidity, both short and long-term, will continue to be
primarily dependent on realizing a refinery margin sufficient to cover fixed and
variable expenses, including planned capital expenditures. The Company expects
to be able to meet its working capital, capital expenditure and debt service
requirements out of cash flow from operations, cash on hand and borrowings under
the Company's $35,000,000 secured revolving credit facility (the "Facility")
with PNC Bank as Agent Bank. The Facility expires on June 9, 2002 and is secured
by certain qualifying cash accounts, accounts receivable, and inventory. The
interest rate on borrowings varies with the Company's earnings and is based on
the higher of the bank's prime rate or Federal funds rate plus 1/2% for base
rate borrowings and the LIBOR rate for Euro-Rate borrowings, which was 7.63%, as
of August 31, 1999. Although the Company is not aware of any pending
circumstances which would change its expectation, changes in the tax laws, the
imposition of and changes in federal and state clean air and clean fuel
requirements and other changes in environmental laws and regulations may also
increase future capital expenditure levels. Future capital expenditures are also
subject to business conditions affecting the industry. The Company continues to
investigate strategic acquisitions and capital improvements to its existing
facilities.
Federal, state and local laws and regulations relating to the
environment affect nearly all the operations of the Company. As is the case with
all the companies engaged in similar industries, the Company faces significant
exposure from actual or potential claims and lawsuits involving environmental
matters. Future expenditures related to environmental matters cannot be
reasonably quantified in many circumstances due to the uncertainties as to
required remediation methods and related clean-up cost estimates. The Company
cannot predict what additional environmental legislation or regulations will be
enacted or become effective in the future or how existing or future laws or
regulations will be administered or interpreted with respect to products or
activities to which they have not been previously applied.
SEASONAL FACTORS
Seasonal factors affecting the Company's business may cause variation
in the prices and margins of some of the Company's products. For example, demand
for gasoline tends to be highest in spring and summer months, while demand for
home heating oil and kerosene tends to be highest in winter months. As a result,
the margin on gasoline prices versus crude oil costs generally tends to increase
in the spring and summer, while margins on home heating oil and kerosene tend to
increase in winter.
INFLATION
The effect of inflation on the Company has not been significant during
the last five fiscal years.
YEAR 2000 COMPUTER ISSUES
The year 2000 presents many challenges to our industry with respect to,
among other things, date-related functions in some computer systems.
Historically, certain computer programs have been written using two digits
rather than four to define the applicable year, which could result in the
computer recognizing a date using "00" as the year 1900 rather than the year
2000. This in turn could result in major system failures or miscalculations and
is generally referred to as the "year 2000" problem.
Year 2000 risks exist in both information technology ("IT") systems
which employ computer hardware and
17
18
software and in non-information technology systems such as embedded computer
chips or microcontrollers that control the operation of the equipment in which
they are installed. Potential computer failures due to the Year 2000 problem
could adversely affect the Company either in its operations and record keeping
or from suppliers and/or customers of the Company that experience Year 2000
computer problems.
The Company is examining all areas of our business to ensure Year 2000
readiness, including computer hardware and software application testing. The
Company is addressing Year 2000 issues primarily with internal resources to
ensure that the transition to the Year 2000 will not disrupt the Company's
operations or record keeping.
The Company has completed an inventory of its non-IT systems for Year
2000 compliance relative to embedded equipment used in the Company's operations.
The Company believes that these systems have been identified and those at risk
for failure due to Year 2000 problems have been corrected through replacement or
remediation with Year 2000 compliant third party software and/or devices.
Because of the nature of the non-IT systems, there can be no assurance that the
Company has correctly identified all non-IT systems that are subject to failure
due to the Year 2000 problem. Any failure of non-IT systems resulting from the
Year 2000 problem could adversely affect the Company's operations and record
keeping. Costs incurred by the Company to date to implement its plan have not
been material and are not expected to have a material effect on the Company's
financial condition or results of operations.
The Company has a contingency plan to respond to the possible effects
of the Year 2000 problem on third parties that are important to the Company's
operations. The Company has communicated with its critical suppliers, vendors,
customers, utilities, financial institutions and telecommunication providers
with whom it does significant business to identify any Year 2000 issues. The
Company will continue to communicate with and review the progress of these third
party enterprises in resolving their Year 2000 issues. The ability to accurately
assess the Company's third parties' readiness is dependent in large part upon
the reliability and completeness of their representations.
The Company feels the most significant risk to its results of
operations and financial condition is that third party supplier(s) of essential
inputs (such as power to operate the refinery) would be unable to perform their
normal services for an extended period of time because of difficulties created
by the Year 2000 problem. This type scenario could cause the Company to suspend
the affected operations until the supplier solves the problem or in some cases
until an alternative supply could be arranged. The Company, in the event that a
particular supplier appears to be vulnerable, will seek to obtain alternative
supplies to the extent they are available. However, in the case of some inputs,
alternative supplies may not realistically be available even if the supply
problem is identified months in advance. In other cases, an unexpected third
party failure could occur despite extensive prior communication and assurances
from key suppliers. To the extent possible, the Company has either tested or
received certifications with respect to all significant IT and non-IT systems.
While the Company believes that it has made adequate arrangements to deal with
these contingencies, it continues to update such plans as additional information
becomes available.
RECENT ACCOUNTING STANDARDS
In June 1998, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 133 ("Statement 133"),
"Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities". Statement 133
establishes accounting and reporting standards for derivative instruments,
including certain derivative instruments embedded in other contracts, and for
hedging activities. It requires that an entity recognize all derivatives as
either assets or liabilities in the statement of financial position and measure
these instruments at fair value. The accounting for changes in the fair value of
a derivative, that is, gains and losses, depends on the intended use of the
derivative and its resulting designation.
Statement 133 is effective for all fiscal quarters of fiscal years
beginning after June 15, 2000. Management believes that the adoption of
Statement 133 will not have a material effect on the Company's financial
position or results of operations.
ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK.
N/A
18
19
ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA.
INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Page
----
Report of Independent Certified Public Accountants 20
Consolidated Financial Statements:
Balance Sheets 21
Statements of Operations 22
Statements of Stockholder's Equity 23
Statements of Cash Flows 24
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 25 thru 40
19
20
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
The Board of Directors and Stockholder
United Refining Company
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of United Refining
Company and subsidiaries as of August 31, 1999 and 1998, and the related
consolidated statements of operations, stockholder's equity and cash flows for
each of the three years in the period ended August 31, 1999. These consolidated
financial statements are the responsibility of the management of United Refining
Company and its subsidiaries. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on
these consolidated financial statements based on our audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of United Refining
Company and subsidiaries as of August 31, 1999 and 1998, and the results of
their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period
ended August 31, 1999 in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.
As discussed in Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company
changed its method of accounting for turnaround costs in 1999.
/s/ BDO SEIDMAN, LLP
New York, New York
October 29, 1999
20
21
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(IN THOUSANDS)
================================================================================
AUGUST 31,
------------------------
1999 1998
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASSETS
CURRENT:
Cash and cash equivalents $ 8,925 $ 26,400
Accounts receivable, net 33,239 27,017
Inventories 70,728 55,124
Prepaid expenses and other assets 10,146 7,727
Deferred income taxes -- 5,024
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS 123,038 121,292
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT:
Cost 279,895 256,895
Less: accumulated depreciation 66,473 58,918
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT 213,422 197,977
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RESTRICTED CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AND INVESTMENTS -- 15,289
DEFERRED FINANCING COSTS, NET 6,370 7,244
OTHER ASSETS 6,410 777
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$349,240 $342,579
===============================================================================================
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
CURRENT:
Revolving credit facility $ 5,000 $ --
Current installments of long-term debt 217 283
Accounts payable 34,727 25,298
Accrued liabilities 12,374 11,823
Sales, use and fuel taxes payable 16,856 26,026
Deferred income taxes 661 --
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES 69,835 63,430
LONG TERM DEBT: LESS CURRENT INSTALLMENTS 200,956 201,026
DEFERRED INCOME TAXES 13,515 16,889
DEFERRED GAIN ON SETTLEMENT OF PENSION PLAN OBLIGATIONS 1,990 2,205
DEFERRED RETIREMENT BENEFITS 14,055 12,350
OTHER NONCURRENT LIABILITIES 468 1,442
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL LIABILITIES 300,819 297,342
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY:
Common stock, $.10 par value per share - shares authorized
100; issued and outstanding 100 -- --
Additional paid-in capital 7,150 7,150
Retained earnings 41,271 38,087
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY 48,421 45,237
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$349,240 $342,579
===============================================================================================
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
21
22
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(IN THOUSANDS)
================================================================================
YEAR ENDED
AUGUST 31,
-------------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET SALES (INCLUDES CONSUMER EXCISE TAXES OF
$148,007, $145,316 AND $139,371) $ 757,326 $ 758,623 $ 871,348
COSTS OF GOODS SOLD 652,370 667,899 767,941
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROSS PROFIT 104,956 90,724 103,407
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EXPENSES:
Selling, general and administrative expenses 77,487 75,064 73,200
Depreciation and amortization expenses 9,042 8,320 8,230
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL OPERATING EXPENSES 86,529 83,384 81,430
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATING INCOME 18,427 7,340 21,977
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER INCOME (EXPENSE):
Interest income 1,027 2,701 1,296
Interest expense (22,377) (22,188) (17,509)
Other, net 318 (685) 672
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(21,032) (20,172) (15,541)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE (BENEFIT) (2,605) (12,832) 6,436
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCOME TAX EXPENSE (BENEFIT):
Current (194) (319) 3,463
Deferred (812) (4,813) (875)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1,006) (5,132) 2,588
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE EXTRAORDINARY ITEM AND
CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF ACCOUNTING CHANGE (1,599) (7,700) 3,848
EXTRAORDINARY ITEM, NET OF TAX BENEFIT OF $4,200 -- -- (6,653)
CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF ACCOUNTING CHANGE,
NET OF TAXES OF $3,122 4,783 -- --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET INCOME (LOSS) $ 3,184 $ (7,700) $ (2,805)
======================================================================================================
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
22
23
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)
================================================================================
ADDITIONAL TOTAL
COMMON STOCK PAID-IN RETAINED STOCKHOLDER'S
SHARES AMOUNT CAPITAL EARNINGS EQUITY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at September 1, 1996 100 $ -- $ 7,150 $ 76,877 $ 84,027
Net loss -- -- (2,805) (2,805)
Dividends -- -- (28,285) (28,285)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at August 31, 1997 100 -- 7,150 45,787 52,937
Net loss -- -- (7,700) (7,700)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at August 31, 1998 100 -- 7,150 38,087 45,237
Net income -- -- 3,184 3,184
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at August 31, 1999 100 $ -- $ 7,150 $ 41,271 $ 48,421
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
23
24
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(IN THOUSANDS)
================================================================================
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
------------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
Net income (loss) $ 3,184 $ (7,700) $ (2,805)
Adjustments to reconcile net income (loss) to net
cash provided by (used in) operating activities:
Cumulative effect of accounting change (7,905) -- --
Depreciation and amortization 12,143 8,973 8,564
Write-off of deferred financing costs -- -- 1,118
Post-retirement benefits 1,705 1,553 2,413
Change in deferred income taxes 2,311 (4,813) (875)
Write-off of insurance claim -- -- 1,251
(Gain) loss on asset dispositions (783) 503 4
Cash provided by (used in) working capital items (24,489) 16,892 (11,676)
Other, net 13 (42) (305)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL ADJUSTMENTS (17,005) 23,066 494
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY (USED IN) OPERATING ACTIVITIES (13,821) 15,366 (2,311)
======================================================================================================================
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
(Increase) decrease in restricted cash and cash equivalents 15,289 32,879 (48,168)
and investments
Additions to property, plant and equipment (26,047) (33,516) (5,824)
Proceeds from asset dispositions 2,417 913 422
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY (USED IN) INVESTING ACTIVITIES (8,341) 276 (53,570)
======================================================================================================================
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Net borrowings on revolving credit facility 5,000 -- --
Cash dividends -- -- (5,000)
Principal reductions of long-term debt (313) (250) (135,512)
Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt -- 287 200,000
Deferred financing costs -- (303) (8,094)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY (USED IN) FINANCING ACTIVITIES 4,687 (266) 51,394
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS (17,475) 15,376 (4,487)
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, BEGINNING OF YEAR 26,400 11,024 15,511
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS, END OF YEAR $ 8,925 $ 26,400 $ 11,024
======================================================================================================================
CASH PROVIDED BY (USED IN) WORKING CAPITAL ITEMS:
Accounts receivable, net $ (6,222) $ 2,745 $ (2,686)
Inventories (15,499) 11,972 (14,852)
Prepaid expenses and other assets (2,419) (941) (344)
Accounts payable 9,429 (3,712) 6,623
Accrued liabilities (608) (6,142) 1,354
Sales, use and fuel taxes payable (9,170) 12,970 (1,771)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL CHANGE $(24,489) $ 16,892 $ (11,676)
======================================================================================================================
CASH PAID DURING THE PERIOD FOR:
Interest $ 22,084 $ 22,454 $ 16,280
Income taxes $ 207 $ 266 $ 195
======================================================================================================================
NON-CASH FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
Dividends $ -- $ -- $ 23,285
Capital leases $ 177 $ -- $ --
======================================================================================================================
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
24
25
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Basis of Presentation
United Refining Company is a wholly-owned subsidiary of United
Refining, Inc. ("United"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of United Acquisition
Corporation ("UAC") which, in turn is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Red Apple
Group, Inc. (the "Parent").
The consolidated financial statements include the accounts of United
Refining Company and its subsidiaries (collectively, the "Company"), United
Refining Company of Pennsylvania and its subsidiaries, and Kiantone Pipeline
Corporation.
All significant intercompany balances and transactions have been
eliminated in consolidation.
Cash and Cash Equivalents
For purposes of the consolidated statements of cash flows, the Company
considers all highly liquid investment securities with maturities of three
months or less at date of acquisition to be cash equivalents.
Inventories and Exchanges
Inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market, with cost being
determined under the Last-in, First-out (LIFO) method for crude oil and
petroleum product inventories and the First-in, First-out (FIFO) method for
merchandise. Supply inventories are stated at either lower of cost or market or
replacement cost and include various parts for the refinery operations. If the
cost of inventories exceeds their market value, provisions are made currently
for the difference between the cost and the market value. Due to fluctuating
market conditions for certain petroleum product inventories, LIFO cost exceeded
market by approximately $3,800,000 and $11,200,000 as of August 31, 1999 and
1998, respectively, resulting in the valuation of certain inventories at market.
Inventories consist of the following:
AUGUST 31,
-------------------------
1999 1998
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Crude Oil $24,222 $12,042
Petroleum Products 23,277 22,513
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
Total @ LIFO 47,499 34,555
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
Merchandise 9,953 7,479
Supplies 13,276 13,090
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
Total @ FIFO 23,229 20,569
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
Total Inventory $70,728 $55,124
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
25
26
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
Included in petroleum product inventories are exchange balances either
held for or due from other petroleum marketers. These balances are not
significant.
The Company does not own sources of crude oil and depends on outside
vendors for its needs.
Property, Plant and Equipment
Property, plant and equipment is stated at cost and depreciated by the
straight-line method over the respective estimated useful lives.
Routine current maintenance, repairs and replacement costs are charged
against income. Turnaround costs, which consist of complete shutdown and
inspection of significant units of the refinery at intervals of two or more
years for necessary repairs and replacements, are deferred when incurred and
amortized on a straight-line basis over the period of benefit (see Change in
Accounting Principle). Expenditures which materially increase values, expand
capacities or extend useful lives are capitalized. A summary of the principal
useful lives used in computing depreciation expense is as follows:
ESTIMATED USEFUL
LIVES (YEARS)
- ------------------------------------------------------
Refinery Equipment 20-30
Marketing 15-30
Transportation 20-30
- ------------------------------------------------------
Restricted Cash and Cash Equivalents and Investments
Restricted cash and cash equivalents and investments consisted of cash
and cash equivalents and investments in government securities and commercial
paper held in trust and committed only for expanding and upgrading the refinery,
rebuilding and refurbishing existing retail units and for acquiring new retail
units and other capital projects. These funds represented the unused proceeds
from the $200,000,000 10 3/4% Senior Unsecured Notes offering completed in June,
1997 and were carried at cost, which approximates market.
Revenue Recognition
Revenues from wholesale sales are recognized upon shipment or when
title passes. Retail revenues are recognized immediately upon sale to the
customer.
Income Taxes
The Company accounts for income taxes using the asset and liability
method. Under the asset and liability method, deferred tax assets and
liabilities are recognized for the future tax consequences attributable to
differences between the financial statement carrying amounts of existing assets
and liabilities and their respective tax bases. Deferred tax assets and
liabilities are measured using enacted tax rates expected to apply to taxable
income in the years in which those temporary differences are
26
27
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
expected to be recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax assets and
liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in income in the period that
includes the enactment date.
The Company joins with the Parent and the Parent's other subsidiaries
in filing a Federal Income tax return on a consolidated basis. Income taxes are
calculated on a separate return basis with consideration of the tax sharing
agreement between the Parent and its subsidiaries. Pursuant to the tax sharing
agreement, included in prepaid expenses and other assets are amounts due from
the Parent of approximately $1,600,000 as of August 31, 1999 and 1998,
respectively.
Post-retirement Healthcare Benefits
The Company provides at no cost to retirees, post-retirement healthcare
benefits to salaried and certain hourly employees. The benefits provided are
hospitalization, medical coverage and dental coverage for the employee and
spouse until age 65. After age 65, benefits continue until the death of the
retiree, which results in the termination of benefits for all dependent
coverage. If an employee leaves the Company as a terminated vested member of a
pension plan prior to normal retirement age, the person is not entitled to any
post-retirement healthcare benefits.
The Company accrues post-retirement benefits other than pensions during
the years that the employee renders the necessary service, of the expected cost
of providing those benefits to an employee and the employee's beneficiaries and
covered dependents. The Company has elected to amortize the transition
obligation of approximately $12,000,000 on a straight-line basis over a 20-year
period.
Use of Estimates
The preparation of consolidated financial statements in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates
and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the consolidated
financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during
the reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
In August 1997, the Company recorded a charge to earnings of $1,251,000
relating to a change in estimate. This accounting change results from the
write-off of a portion of an insurance claim receivable and is included in cost
of goods sold.
Concentrations of Credit Risk
The Company extends credit based on evaluation of the customer's
financial condition, generally without requiring collateral. Exposure to losses
on receivables is principally dependent on each customer's financial condition.
The Company monitors its exposure for credit losses and maintains allowances for
anticipated losses.
Environmental Matters
The Company expenses environmental expenditures related to existing
conditions resulting from past or current operations and from which no current
or future benefit is discernible. Expenditures, which extend the life of the
related property or mitigate or prevent future environmental contamination are
capitalized. The Company determines its liability on a site by site basis and
records a liability at the time when it is probable and can be reasonably
estimated. The Company's estimated liability is reduced to
27
28
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
reflect the anticipated participation of other potentially responsible parties
in those instances where it is probable that such parties are legally
responsible and financially capable of paying their respective shares of the
relevant costs. The estimated liability of the Company is discounted, but is not
reduced for possible recoveries from insurance carriers (Note 14).
Long-Lived Assets
Long-lived assets, such as intangible assets and property and
equipment, are evaluated for impairment when events or changes in circumstances
indicate that the carrying amount of the assets may not be recoverable through
the estimated undiscounted future cash flows from the use of these assets. When
any such impairment exists, the related assets will be written down to fair
value.
Change in Accounting Principle
Effective September 1, 1998, the Company changed its method of
accounting for major maintenance turnarounds and recorded a $4,783,000 credit,
net of income taxes of $3,122,000 as the cumulative effect change as of
September 1, 1998. Under the new accounting principle, the Company defers the
cost of turnarounds when incurred and amortizes the costs to operations on a
straight-line basis over the period of benefit. Previously, turnaround costs
were estimated and accrued and charged to operations over the period preceding
the next scheduled turnaround. The change was due to the increasingly difficult
estimation process of determining the accurate costs charged to operations, due
in part to the numerous and ever changing environmental rules and regulations.
This change enables the Company to more accurately charge costs to production
over the period most clearly benefited by the turnaround. As of August 31, 1999,
net deferred turnaround costs included in other assets amounted to $5,743,000,
net of accumulated amortization of $3,528,000.
Pro forma amounts assuming the new accounting method is applied
retroactively are as follows (in thousands):
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
1998 1997
----------------------------- -------------------------
As Proforma As Proforma
reported adjusted reported adjusted
- -------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- --------------- ------------ ------------
Income (loss) before income tax expense (benefit)
and extraordinary item $ (12,832) $ (11,916) $ 6,436 $ 7,140
Net income (loss) before extraordinary item $ (7,700) $ (7,150) $ 3,848 $ 4,282
======================================================================================================================
Segment Disclosures
Effective in 1999, the Company adopted Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 131 ("Statement 131"), "Disclosure about Segments of an
Enterprise and Related Information." Statement 131 standardizes the way that
public companies report information about operating segments in annual and
interim financial statements issued to the public. It also establishes standards
for disclosures regarding products and services, geographic areas and major
customers. Statement 131 requires segments to be determined based upon how
operations are managed and evaluated internally. Prior years results have been
restated to conform to the 1999 presentation (Note 16).
28
29
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
Employee Benefit Plan Disclosures
Effective in 1999, the Company adopted Statement of Financial
Accounting Standards No. 132, "Employers' Disclosures about Pensions and other
Post-retirement Benefits," which standardizes the disclosure requirements for
pension and other post-retirement benefit plans. In addition, the statement
requires additional information on changes in the benefit obligations and fair
values of plan assets and eliminates certain disclosures that are no longer
useful. Certain prior period disclosures have been restated to conform to the
new reporting requirements and additional information has been added.
Recent Accounting Standards
In June 1998, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 133 ("Statement 133"),
"Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities." Statement 133
establishes accounting and reporting standards for derivative instruments,
including certain derivative instruments embedded in other contracts, and for
hedging activities. It requires that an entity recognize all derivatives as
either assets or liabilities in the statement of financial position and measure
these instruments at fair value. The accounting for changes in the fair value of
a derivative, that is, gains and losses, depends on the intended use of the
derivative and its resulting designation.
Statement 133 is effective for all fiscal quarters of fiscal years
beginning after June 15, 2000. Management believes that the adoption of
Statement 133 will not have a material effect on the Company's financial
position or results of operations.
2. ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE, NET
As of August 31, 1999 and 1998, accounts receivable were net of
allowance for doubtful accounts of $365,000 and $405,000 respectively.
3. PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
Property, plant and equipment is summarized as follows:
AUGUST 31,
-----------------------------
1999 1998
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Refinery equipment,
Including construction-in-progress $169,941 $162,703
Marketing (i.e. retail outlets) 102,905 87,230
Transportation 7,049 6,962
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
279,895 256,895
Less: Accumulated depreciation 66,473 58,918
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$213,422 $197,977
================================================================================
29
30
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
4. ACCRUED LIABILITIES
Accrued liabilities include the following:
AUGUST 31,
--------------------------
1999 1998
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Interest $ 4,923 $ 4,631
Payrolls and benefits 6,197 6,359
Other 1,254 833
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$12,374 $11,823
=========================================================================================
5. LEASES
The Company occupies premises, primarily retail gas stations and
convenience stores and office facilities under long-term leases which require
minimum annual rents plus, in certain instances, the payment of additional rents
based upon sales. The leases generally are renewable for one to three five-year
periods.
As of August 31, 1999 and 1998, capitalized lease obligations, included
in long-term debt, amounted to $719,000 and $635,000, respectively, net of
current portion of $88,000 and $93,000 respectively. The related assets (retail
gas stations and convenience stores) as of August 31, 1999 and 1998 amounted to
$550,000 and $448,000 respectively, net of accumulated amortization of $196,000
and $123,000, respectively.
Lease amortization amounting to $72,000, $85,000, and $117,000 for the
years ended August 31, 1999, 1998, and 1997 respectively, is included in
depreciation and amortization expense.
30
31
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
Future minimum lease payments as of August 31, 1999 are summarized as
follows:
CAPITAL OPERATING
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, LEASES LEASES
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
2000 $ 186 $ 2,899
2001 131 2,166
2002 108 1,580
2003 110 970
2004 115 645
Thereafter 1,071 1,012
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total minimum lease payments 1,721 9,272
Less: Minimum sublease rents -- 184
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net minimum sublease payments 1,721 $ 9,088
=============
Less: Amount representing interest 1,002
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Present value of net minimum
lease payments $ 719
==========================================================================
Net rent expense for operating leases amounted to $3,386,000,
$3,338,000 and $3,238,000 for the years ended August 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997
respectively.
6. CREDIT FACILITY
In June 1997, the Company negotiated a $35,000,000 secured revolving
credit facility (the "Facility") with a syndicate of banks that provides for
revolving credit loans and for the issuance of letters of credit. The Facility
expires on June 9, 2002 and is secured by certain qualifying cash accounts,
accounts receivable, and inventory, which amounted to $54,964,000 as of August
31, 1999. Until maturity, the Company may borrow, repay and reborrow on an
amount not exceeding certain percentages of secured assets. The interest rate on
borrowings varies with the Company's earnings and is based on the higher of the
bank's prime rate or Federal funds rate plus 1/2% for base rate borrowings and
the LIBOR rate for Euro-Rate borrowings, which was 7.63% as of August 31, 1999.
As of August 31, 1999 no letters of credit and $5,000,000 of borrowings were
outstanding under the agreement. No other borrowings or letters of credit were
outstanding for any other period presented. The Company pays a commitment fee of
3/8% per annum on the unused balance of the Facility.
7. LONG-TERM DEBT
During June 1997, the Company sold $200,000,000 of 10 3/4% Senior
Unsecured Notes due 2007, Series A. Subsequent to this issue, the Company
exchanged these notes for its 10 3/4% Senior Unsecured Notes due 2007, Series B.
Such notes are fully and unconditionally guaranteed on a senior unsecured basis
by all of the Company's subsidiaries (Note 17). The proceeds of the offering
were used to retire all of its outstanding senior notes, pay prepayment
penalties related thereto and to retire the amount outstanding under the
Company's existing secured revolving credit facility. The excess proceeds from
the offering of approximately $48,100,000 were deposited in an escrow account to
be used for expanding and upgrading the refinery, rebuilding and refurbishing
existing retail units, and for acquiring new retail units and other capital
expenditure projects. As of August 31, 1998 the unused funds were classified as
"Restricted Cash and Cash Equivalents and Investments".
31
32
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
Both the senior unsecured notes and secured credit facility require
that the Company maintain certain minimum levels of tangible net worth, working
capital ratios and cash flow and restrict the amount available to distribute
dividends. The Company is currently in compliance with its loan covenants.
A summary of long-term debt is as follows:
AUGUST 31,
-------------------------------
1999 1998
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Long-term debt:
10.75% senior unsecured notes due June 9, 2007,
Series B $ 200,000 $ 200,000
Other long-term debt 454 674
Capitalized lease obligations (Note 5) 719 635
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
201,173 201,309
Less: Current installments of long-term debt 217 283
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total long-term debt, less current installments $ 200,956 $ 201,026
====================================================================================================
The principal amount of long-term debt outstanding as of August 31,
1999, matures as follows:
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
2000 $ 217
2001 121
2002 95
2003 76
2004 84
Thereafter 200,580
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$201,173
===============================================================================
32
33
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
The following financing costs have been deferred and are being
amortized to expense over the term of the related debt:
AUGUST 31,
----------------------------
1999 1998
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Beginning balance $ 7,244 $ 7,807
Current year additions -- 303
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total financing costs 7,244 8,110
Amortization (874) (866)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$ 6,370 $ 7,244
===============================================================================
8. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
Substantially all employees of the Company are covered by
noncontributory defined benefit retirement plans. The benefits are based on each
employee's years of service and compensation. The Company's policy is to
contribute the minimum amounts required by the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974, as amended. The assets of the plans are invested in an
investment trust fund and consist of interest-bearing cash and bank
common/collective trust funds.
In addition to the above, the Company provides certain post-retirement
healthcare benefits to salaried and certain hourly employees. These
post-retirement benefit plans are unfunded and the costs are shared by the
Company and its retirees.
Net periodic pension cost and post-retirement healthcare benefit cost
consist of the following components for the years ended August 31, 1999, 1998,
and 1997:
PENSION BENEFITS OTHER POST-RETIREMENT BENEFITS
----------------------------------- --------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997 1999 1998 1997
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Service cost $ 1,430 $ 1,381 $ 1,283 $ 689 $ 620 $ 670
Interest cost on benefit obligation 2,014 1,897 1,632 931 892 905
Expected return on plan assets (2,315) (1,921) (1,509) -- -- --
Amortization of transition obligation 140 140 140 597 597 597
Amortization and deferrals (121) (175) (105) (179) (211) (140)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net periodic benefit cost $ 1,148 $ 1,322 $ 1,441 $ 2,038 $ 1,898 $ 2,032
=========================================================================================================================
33
34
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
The following table summarizes the change in benefit obligations and
fair values of plan assets for the years ended August 31, 1999 and 1998:
OTHER
POST-RETIREMENT
PENSION BENEFITS BENEFITS
-------------------------------------------------------
1999 1998 1999 1998
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
CHANGE IN BENEFIT OBLIGATION:
Benefit obligation @ beginning of year $ 25,079 $ 24,017 $ 12,450 $ 12,668
Service cost 1,430 1,381 689 620
Interest cost 2,014 1,897 931 892
Actuarial (gains) losses 2,434 (1,401) 195 (1,295)
Benefits paid (982) (815) (469) (435)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefit obligation @ end of year 29,975 25,079 13,796 12,450
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CHANGE IN PLAN ASSETS:
Fair values of plan assets @ beginning of year 24,965 23,534 -- --
Actual return on plan assets 5,059 1,436 -- --
Company contributions 1,108 810 469 435
Benefits paid (982) (815) (469) (435)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fair values of plan assets @ end of year 30,150 24,965 -- --
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Funded status (175) 114 13,796 12,450
Unrecognized actuarial gains 7,233 7,120 4,303 4,677
Unrecognized prior service cost (844) (920) -- --
Unrecognized transition obligation (1,190) (1,330) (8,355) (8,952)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accrued benefit cost $ 5,024 $ 4,984 $ 9,744 $ 8,175
==========================================================================================================
WEIGHTED AVERAGE ASSUMPTIONS:
Discount rate 7.5% 8.0% 7.5% 8.0%
=========================
Expected return on plan assets 9.0% 8.0%
Rate of compensation increase 3.0%-4.5% 3.0%-4.5%
=============================================================================
For measurement purposes, the assumed annual rate of increase in the
per capita cost of covered medical and dental benefits was 7.1% and 5%,
respectively for 1999; the rates were assumed to decrease gradually to 5% for
both medical and dental benefits until 2008 and remain at that level thereafter.
The healthcare cost trend rate assumption has a significant effect on the
amounts reported. To illustrate, a 1 percentage point change in the assumed
healthcare cost trend rate would have the following effects:
1% POINT 1% POINT
INCREASE DECREASE
---------- --------
Effect on total of service and interest cost components $ 297 $ (267)
Effect on post-retirement benefit obligation 2,283 (2,088)
The Company also contributes to voluntary employee savings plans
through regular monthly contributions equal to various percentages of the
amounts invested by the participants. The Company's contributions to these plans
amounted to $576,000, $548,000 and $498,000 for the years ended August 31, 1999,
1998 and 1997, respectively.
34
35
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
9. INCOME TAXES
Income tax expense (benefit) consists of:
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
-----------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
- ----------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Federal:
Current $ (185) $ (600) $ 2,928
Deferred (668) (2,971) (491)
- ----------------------------------------------------------
(853) (3,571) 2,437
- ----------------------------------------------------------
State:
Current (9) 281 535
Deferred (144) (1,842) (384)
- ----------------------------------------------------------
(153) (1,561) 151
- ----------------------------------------------------------
$(1,006) $(5,132) $ 2,588
==========================================================
Reconciliation of the differences between income taxes computed at the
Federal statutory rate and the provision for income taxes attributable to income
before income tax expense (benefit) and extraordinary item is as follows:
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
U. S. federal income taxes at the statutory rate of 34% $ (886) $(4,363) $ 2,188
State income taxes, net of Federal benefit (172) (664) 363
Reduction of taxes provided in prior year -- (51) (62)
Nondeductible expenses 16 174 317
Other 36 (228) (218)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income tax attributable to income (loss)
before income tax expense, extraordinary
item and cumulative effect $(1,006) $(5,132) $ 2,588
======================================================================================================
35
36
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
Deferred income tax liabilities (assets) are comprised of the
following:
AUGUST 31,
------------------------
1999 1998
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Current deferred income tax liabilities (assets):
Inventory valuation $ 2,610 $ (2,501)
Accounts receivable allowance (141) (165)
Accrued liabilities (1,775) (2,513)
Other (33) 155
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
661 (5,024)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Deferred income tax liabilities:
Property, plant and equipment 29,898 28,971
Accrued liabilities (6,725) (6,216)
Tax credits and carryforwards (7,146) (4,300)
State net operating loss carryforwards (3,437) (2,513)
Valuation allowance 854 870
Other 71 77
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
13,515 16,889
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Net deferred income tax liability $ 14,176 $ 11,865
=======================================================================
The Company's results of operations are included in the consolidated
Federal tax return of the Parent. The Company has a net operating loss for
regular tax purposes of $8,000,000 which will expire after 2019. For financial
reporting purposes, valuation allowances of $854,000 and $870,000 at August 31,
1999 and 1998 were recognized for state net operating loss carryforwards not
anticipated to be realized before expiration.
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 created a separate parallel tax system
called the Alternative Minimum Tax ("AMT") system. AMT is calculated separately
from the regular U.S. Federal income tax and is based on a flat rate of 20%
applied to a broader tax base. The higher of the two taxes is paid. The excess
AMT over regular tax is a tax credit, which can be carried forward indefinitely
to reduce regular tax liabilities in excess of AMT liabilities of future years.
The Company generated AMT credits in prior years of approximately $4,200,000
that is available to offset the regular tax liability in the future years.
10. DISCLOSURES ABOUT FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the fair
value of each class of financial instruments for which it is practicable to
estimate that value.
The carrying amount of cash and cash equivalents, trade accounts and
notes receivable and current liabilities approximate fair value because of the
short maturity of these instruments.
The fair value of long-term debt (Note 7) was determined using the fair
market value of the individual debt instruments. As of August 31, 1999, the
carrying amount and estimated fair value of these debt instruments approximated
$201,173,000 and $149,447,000, respectively.
36
37
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
11. CONTINGENCIES
In addition to the environmental matter discussion in Note 13, the
Company is a defendant in various claims, legal actions and complaints arising
in the ordinary course of business. In the opinion of management, all such
matters are adequately covered by insurance, or if not so covered, are without
merit or are of such kind, or involve such amounts that an unfavorable
disposition would not have a material adverse effect on the consolidated
financial position of the Company.
12. TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATED COMPANIES
In June 1997, the Company declared a dividend of $28,285,000 of which
$5,000,000 was paid in cash and $23,285,000 was forgiveness of debt from related
parties. Additionally, the Company offset $2,017,000 of amounts due from related
parties with deferred tax benefits previously received.
The Company paid a service fee relating to certain costs incurred by
its Parent for the Company's New York office. During the years ended August 31,
1999, 1998 and 1997, such fees amounted to approximately $995,000, $980,000 and
$2,712,000 respectively.
An affiliate of the Company leases nine retail gas station and
convenience stores to the Company under various operating leases which all
expire in 2001. Rent expense relating to these leases was $264,000 for each of
the years ended August 31, 1999, 1998 and 1997.
13. ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS
The Company is subject to federal, state, and local laws and
regulations relating to pollution and protection of the environment such as
those governing releases of certain materials into the environment and the
storage, treatment, transportation, disposal and clean-up of wastes, including,
but not limited to, the Federal Clean Water Act, as amended, the Clean Air Act,
as amended, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended, the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980, as
amended, and analogous state and local laws and regulations.
Due to the nature of the Company's business, the Company is and will
continue to be subject to various environmental claims, legal actions and
complaints. The Company is unable to determine the aggregate effect of the
claims asserted by the United States Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to
certain Notices of Violation and an Administrative Order upon its operations or
consolidated financial condition until the scope of the claims is fully known.
In the opinion of management, all current matters are without merit or are of
such kind or involve such amounts that an unfavorable disposition would not have
a material adverse effect on the consolidated financial position and results of
operations of the Company.
Management of the Company believes that remediation or related
environmental costs incurred during the normal course of business are not
expected to be material.
14. OTHER EXPENSE
During 1994, the Company incurred a loss of $1,598,000 in connection
with the settlement of a claim dating back to a period prior to the acquisition
by the Parent (Note 1). The related settlement amount of $2,300,000 ($1,598,000
after being discounted at 13% per annum) is payable in quarterly installments of
$125,000 commencing on January 13, 1995, and continuing to October 13, 1998, at
which time annual payments of $160,000 will be required until the remaining
outstanding balance is liquidated on October 13, 2002.
37
38
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
The undiscounted amounts due as of August 31, 1999 are as follows:
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
---------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
2000 $ 160
2001 160
2002 160
2003 160
---------------------------------------------------------
$ 640
=========================================================
15. EXTRAORDINARY ITEM
In June 1997, the Company incurred an extraordinary loss of $6,653,000
(net of an income tax benefit of $4,200,000) as a result of "make-whole
premiums" paid and financing costs written-off in connection with the early
retirement of its 11.50% and 13.50% senior unsecured notes.
16. SEGMENTS OF BUSINESS
The Company is a petroleum refiner and marketer in its primary market
area of Western New York and Northwestern Pennsylvania. Operations are organized
into two business segments: wholesale and retail.
The wholesale segment is responsible for the acquisition of crude oil,
petroleum refining, and the marketing of petroleum products to wholesale and
industrial customers. The retail segment sells petroleum products and
convenience and grocery items through company owned gasoline stations and
convenience stores under the Kwik Fill(R) and Red Apple Food Mart(R) brand
names.
The accounting policies of the reportable segments are the same as
those described in Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements. Intersegment
revenues are calculated using estimated market prices and are eliminated upon
consolidation. Summarized financial information regarding the Company's
reportable segments is presented in the following table.
38
39
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
-------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Net Sales
Retail $437,884 $ 435,151 $463,895
Wholesale 319,442 323,472 407,453
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
$757,326 $ 758,623 $871,348
=======================================================================
Intersegment Sales
Wholesale $142,039 $ 156,959 $198,129
=======================================================================
Operating income (Loss)
Retail $ 91 $ (2,333) $ 3,267
Wholesale 18,336 9,673 18,710
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
$ 18,427 $ 7,340 $ 21,977
=======================================================================
Total Assets
Retail $113,599 $ 95,654 $ 80,124
Wholesale 235,641 246,925 266,268
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
$349,240 $ 342,579 $346,392
=======================================================================
Depreciation and Amortization
Retail $ 2,341 $ 1,985 $ 1,906
Wholesale 6,701 6,335 6,324
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
$ 9,042 $ 8,320 $ 8,230
=======================================================================
Capital Expenditures
Retail $ 18,698 $ 16,880 $ 3,095
Wholesale 7,526 16,636 2,729
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
$ 26,224 $ 33,516 $ 5,824
=======================================================================
17. SUBSIDIARY GUARANTORS
Summarized financial information for the Company's wholly-owned
subsidiary guarantors (Note 7) is as follows:
AUGUST 31,
--------------------------------
1999 1998
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Current Assets $ 45,027 $ 39,901
Noncurrent Assets 88,431 73,666
Current Liabilities 125,789 103,977
Noncurrent Liabilities 10,312 10,651
=========================================================================
39
40
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
================================================================================
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31,
---------------------------------------
1999 1998 1997
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
Net Sales $ 442,908 $ 439,563 $468,570
Gross Profit 72,746 66,157 68,524
Operating Income (Loss) 2,334 (1,582) 5,185
Net Income (Loss) (1,693) (4,129) 1,624
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
Separate financial statements of the wholly-owned subsidiary guarantors
are not presented because management believes they would not be meaningful to
investors.
18. QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED)
===============================================================================
INCOME
(LOSS) BEFORE
GROSS CUMULATIVE
NET SALES PROFIT EFFECT CHANGE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(IN THOUSANDS)
1999
First Quarter $187,092 $25,209 $ (450)
Second Quarter 144,662 16,954 (6,435)
Third Quarter 185,313 32,845 4,214
Fourth Quarter 240,259 29,948 1,072
1998
First Quarter $213,302 $27,181 $ 725
Second Quarter 163,263 8,949 (9,557)
Third Quarter 175,246 22,705 (2,314)
Fourth Quarter 206,812 31,889 3,446
===============================================================================
40
41
ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE.
NONE
PART III
ITEM 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT.
Set forth below is certain information as of November 29, 1999 with respect to
all directors and executive officers of the Company.
DIRECTOR
NAME AGE SINCE POSITION PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION FOR THE PAST 5 YEARS
---- --- ----- -------- -----------------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis 51 1986 Chairman of the Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive
Board, Chief Officer and President of Red Apple Group,
Executive Inc. (a holding company for certain
Officer, businesses, including corporations which
Director operate supermarkets in New York); Chief
Executive Officer and Director of Gristede's
Foods, Inc., a public company whose common
stock is listed on the American Stock Exchange
and operates supermarkets in New York; a
director of News Communications, Inc., a public
company whose stock is traded over-the-counter
and Fonda Paper Company, Inc., a privately held
company.
Myron L. Turfitt 47 1988 President, Chief President and Chief Operating Officer of the
Operating Company since September 1996. From June
Officer, 1987 to September 1996 he was Chief
Director Financial Officer and Executive Vice
President of the Company.
Thomas C. Covert 65 1988 Vice Chairman Vice Chairman of the Company since September
And Director 1996. From December 1987 to September 1996
he was Executive Vice President and Chief
Operating Officer of the Company.
Ashton L. Ditka 58 --- Senior Vice Senior Vice President - Marketing of the
President - Company since July 1990.
Marketing
41
42
Director
Name Age Since Position Principal Occupation for the Past 5 Years
---- --- ----- -------- -----------------------------------------
Thomas E. Skarada 56 --- Vice President - Vice President - Refining of the Company
Refining since February 1996. From September 1994
to February 1996 he was Assistant Vice
President - Refining.
Frederick J. Martin, Jr. 45 --- Vice President - Vice President - Supply and Transportation
Supply and of the Company since February 1993.
Transportation
James E. Murphy 54 --- Vice President Chief Financial Officer of the Company
and Chief since January 1997. He was Vice President
Financial - Finance from April 1995 to December 1996.
Officer
John R. Wagner 40 --- Vice President, Vice President, General Counsel and
General Secretary of the Company since August
Counsel and 1997. Prior to joining the Company, Mr.
Secretary Wagner served as Counsel to Dollar Bank,
F.S.B. from 1988 until assuming his current
position.
Dennis E. Bee, Jr. 57 --- Treasurer Treasurer of the Company since May 1988.
Martin R. Bring 56 1988 Director A member of the law firm of Wolf, Block,
Schorr and Solis-Cohen, LLP, New York since
1978. He also serves as a Director of
Gristede's Foods, Inc., a supermarket
chain.
Evan Evans 73 1997 Director Chairman of Holvan Properties, Inc., a
privately owned petroleum industry consulting
firm since 1983. He is also a director of
U.S. Energy Systems, Inc., a public company
whose common stock is quoted on the Nasdaq
SmallCap Market, and of Alexander-Allen,
Inc., a privately owned company which owns a
refinery in Alabama which is currently
shutdown. He has been a director of both of
these companies since 1994.
Kishore Lall 52 1997 Director Director of Gristede's Foods, Inc., since
October 1997. Consultant to Red Apple Group
Inc. from January 1997 to October 1997.
Private investor from June 1994 to December
1996.
42
43
Director
Name Age Since Position Principal Occupation for the Past 5 Years
---- --- ----- -------- -----------------------------------------
Douglas Lemmonds 52 1997 Director Independent consultant since August of 1999.
Prior to becoming a consultant, he was
Managing Director and the Chief Operating
Officer, Private Banking-Americas of the
Deutsche Bank Group from May 1996. From June
1991 to May 1996 Mr. Lemmonds was the
Regional Director of Private Banking of the
Northeast Regional Office of the Bank of
America and from August 1973 to June 1991 he
held various other positions with Bank of
America.
Andrew Maloney 67 1997 Director Partner of Brown & Wood LLP, a New York law
firm, since December 1992. From June 1986
to December 1992 he was the United States
Attorney for the Eastern District of New York.
Dennis Mehiel 56 1997 Director Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The
Fonda Group, Inc., since 1988. Since 1966 he
has been the Chairman of Four M, a converter
and seller of interior packaging, corrugated
sheets and corrugated containers which he
co-founded, and since 1977 (except during a
leave of absence from April 1994 through July
1995) he has been the Chief Executive Officer
of Four M. Mr. Mehiel is also the Chairman of
MannKraft Corporation, a manufacturer of
corrugated containers, and Chief Executive
Officer and Chairman of Creative Expressions,
Group, Inc.
SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
Not Applicable
43
44
SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE
Not Applicable
ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
The following table sets forth for the three fiscal years ended August
31, 1996, 1997 and 1998 the compensation paid by the Company to its Chairman of
the Board and Chief Executive Officer and each of the four other executive
officers of the Company whose salary and bonus exceeded $100,000 for the fiscal
year ended August 31, 1999.
SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER ANNUAL OTHER
ANNUAL COMPENSATION COMPENSATION COMPENSATION
NAME & PRINCIPAL POSITION YEAR SALARY ($) BONUS ($) ($) (1) ($) (2)
- ------------------------- ---- -------------------------- ------- -------
John A. Catsimatidis 1999 $360,000 $290,000 $ - $8,488
Chairman of the Board & 1998 360,000 265,000 - 8,052
Chief Executive Officer 1997 360,000 265,000 - 7,802
Myron L. Turfitt 1999 $235,000 $225,000 $4,780 $6,796
President & 1998 235,000 200,000 5,325 6,932
Chief Operating Officer 1997 235,000 280,000 2,780 6,562
Ashton L. Ditka 1999 $140,000 $ 20,000 $2,712 $7,427
Senior Vice President 1998 140,000 11,200 2,985 7,214
Marketing 1997 135,042 31,405 3,241 6,731
Thomas E. Skarada 1999 $110,000 $ 20,000 $6,750 $5,893
Vice President 1998 110,000 8,800 6,781 5,490
Refining 1997 105,000 29,900 7,580 4,470
Frederick J. Martin, Jr. 1999 $100,000 $ 8,000 $5,564 $4,042
Vice President 1998 100,000 8,000 4,915 4,036
Supply & Transportation 1997 94,300 4,620 4,210 3,835
(1) Amounts include automobile allowances.
(2) Amounts include Company matching contributions under the Company's
401(K) Incentive Savings Plan and health and term life insurance
benefits.
44
45
PENSION PLAN
The Company maintains a defined benefit pension plan for eligible
employees. The following table shows estimated annual benefits payable upon
retirement in specified compensation categories and years of service
classifications.
PENSION PLAN TABLE
YEARS OF SERVICE
----------------
AVERAGE EARNINGS 15 20 25 30 35
- ----------------
$100,000 $16,027 $21,370 $26,712 $32,055 $37,397
$125,000 20,715 27,620 34,525 41,430 48,335
$150,000 25,402 33,870 42,337 50,805 59,272
$160,000 or more 27,277 36,370 45,462 54,555 63,647
The benefit formula is based on the average earnings of the participant
for the three years in which such participant's earnings were the highest.
Earnings include salary and bonus up to a maximum of $160,000 per year. Benefits
are calculated by multiplying the sum of (a) 1% of average earnings up to the
Social Security compensation base, plus (b) 1.25% of average earnings in excess
of the Social Security compensation base, by (c) the number of years of service.
Payments of retirement benefits are not reduced by any Social Security benefits
received by the participant. The Social Security compensation base for 1999 is
$72,600.
Assuming that the following officers continue to be employed by the
Company until they reach age 65, their credited years of service will be as
follows:
CURRENT YEARS YEARS OF SERVICE
NAME OF INDIVIDUAL OF SERVICE AT AGE 65
JOHN A. CATSIMATIDIS 13 27
MYRON L. TURFITT 21 39
ASHTON L. DITKA 23 30
THOMAS E. SKARADA 6 14
FREDERICK J. MARTIN, JR. 19 39
COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS
Non-officer directors receive a stipend of $15,000 per year and $1,000
for each meeting attended.
45
46
EMPLOYMENT AND CONSULTING AGREEMENTS
Thomas C. Covert entered into a consulting agreement with the Company,
the initial term of which commenced on September 1, 1996 and expired on August
31, 1998. The Agreement provides that its term shall be extended for two
additional one year periods unless the Company or Mr. Covert gives written
notice of cancellation to the other party within specified time periods. Under
such provision the term of the Agreement has been extended to August 31, 2000.
Under the agreement Mr. Covert is obligated to render services to the Company on
a limited time basis of between 30-40 hours per month in such capacities as the
Board of Directors of the Company may designate. Under the agreement the Company
has agreed to pay Mr. Covert $170 per hour for services rendered, but in no
event less than $6,800 per month for each month during the term of the
agreement.
Mr. Covert has also entered into a Deferred Compensation Agreement with
the Company pursuant to which since the date of his retirement on September 1,
1996, the Company has been paying Mr. Covert a retirement benefit at the rate of
approximately $12,300 per year. The benefit is payable to Mr. Covert until his
death, whereupon Mr. Covert's wife is entitled to a benefit of approximately
$6,150 per year until her death if she does not predecease him.
ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT.
The following table sets forth certain information regarding ownership
of Common Stock on November 29, 1999 by: (i) each stockholder known to the
Company to own beneficially more than 5% of the outstanding shares of Common
Stock; (ii) each of the Company's directors; and (iii) all officers and
directors of the Company as a group. The Company believes that ownership of the
shares by the persons named below is both of record and beneficial and such
persons have sole voting and investing power with respect to the shares
indicated.
Name and Address of
Beneficial Owner Number of Shares Percent of Class
John Catsimatidis
823 Eleventh Avenue 100 100%
New York, NY 10019
All officers and directors 100 100%
as a group (15 persons)
ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS.
The Company paid a service fee relating to certain costs incurred by
its parent, Red Apple Group, Inc., ("RAG"), for the Company's New York office
for fiscal 1999 amounting to approximately $995,000. Pursuant to a Servicing
Agreement entered into between the Company and RAG in June 1997, the Company
will pay up to a $1,000,000 per year fee relating to these costs. The term of
the Servicing Agreement expires on June 9, 2000, but the term shall be
automatically extended for periods of one year if neither party gives notice of
termination of the Servicing Agreement prior to the expiration of the then
current term.
As of the date hereof, United Refining, Inc., owned by John A.
Catsimatidis, was leasing to the Company nine retail units. The term of each
lease expires on April 1, 2001. The annual rentals payable under the leases
aggregate $264,000, which the Company believes are market rates. As of the date
hereof, the Company was current on all rent obligations under such leases.
RAG files a consolidated tax return with affiliated entities, including
the Company. Commencing in June 1997, RAG, the Company and certain of their
affiliates entered into a tax sharing agreement (the "Tax Sharing Agreement").
Under the Tax Sharing Agreement the parties established a method for allocating
the consolidated federal income tax liability and combined state tax liability
of the RAG affiliated group among its members; for reimbursing RAG for payment
of such tax liability; for compensating any member for use of its net operating
loss or tax credits in arriving at such tax liability; and to provide for the
allocation and payment of any refund arising from a
46
47
carryback of net operating loss or tax credits from subsequent taxable years.
Pursuant to the tax sharing agreement included in prepaid expenses and other
assets are amounts due from the Parent of approximately $1,600,000 as of August
31, 1999 and 1998, respectively.
During fiscal 1999, the Company made payments for services rendered to
it by Wolf, Block, Schorr and Solis-Cohen, LLP, ("WBS&S-C"), a law firm of which
Martin R. Bring, a director of the Company, is a member. The Company believes
that the fees paid to WBS&S-C for legal services are comparable to fees it would
pay to a law firm for similar services, none of whose members are officers,
directors or principal stockholders of the Company.
PART IV
ITEM 14. EXHIBITS AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K.
(a) (1) Financial Statements
A list of all financial statements filed as part of this report is contained in
the index to Item 8, which index is incorporated herein by reference.
(2) Financial Statement Schedules
Report of Independent Certified Public Accountants
Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts
(3) Exhibits
Number Description
- ------ -----------
3.1 Certificate of Incorporation of United Refining Company ("URC").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Registrant's
Registration Statement on Form S-4 (File No. 333-35083) (the
"Registration Statement").
3.2 Bylaws of URC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the
Registration Statement.
3.3 Certificate of Incorporation of United Refining Company of Pennsylvania
("URCP"). Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.3 to the Registration
Statement.
3.4 Bylaws of URCP. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 to the
Registration Statement.
3.5 Certificate of Incorporation of Kiantone Pipeline Corporation ("KPC").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.5 to the Registration Statement.
3.6 Bylaws of KPC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.6 to the
Registration Statement.
3.7 Certificate of Incorporation of Kiantone Pipeline Company ("KPCY").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.7 to the Registration Statement.
3.8 Bylaws of KPCY. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.8 to the
registration Statement.
3.9 Certificate of Incorporation of Kwik Fill, Inc. ("KFI"). Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 3.9 to the Registration Statement.
3.10 Bylaws of KFI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.10 to the
Registration Statement.
3.11 Certificate of Incorporation of Independent Gasoline & Oil Company of
Rochester, Inc. ("IGOCRI"). Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.11
to the Registration Statement.
3.12 Bylaws of IGOCRI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.12 to the
Registration Statement.
3.13 Certificate of Incorporation of Bell Oil Corp. ("BOC"). Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 3.13 to the Registration Statement.
3.14 Bylaws of BOC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.14 to the
Registration Statement.
3.15 Certificate of Incorporation of PPC, Inc. ("PPCI"). Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 3.15 to the Registration Statement.
3.16 Bylaws of PPCI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.16 to the
Registration Statement.
3.17 Certificate of Incorporation of Super Test Petroleum, Inc. ("STPI").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.17 to the Registration
Statement.
3.18 Bylaws of STPI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.18 to the
Registration Statement.
47
48
3.19 Certificate of Incorporation of Kwik-Fil, Inc. ("K-FI"). Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 3.19 to the Registration Statement.
3.20 Bylaws of K-FI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.20 to the
Registration Statement.
3.21 Certificate of Incorporation of Vulcan Asphalt Refining Corporation
("VARC"). Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.21 to the Registration
Statement.
3.22 Bylaws of VARC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.22 to the
Registration Statement.
3.23 Certificate of Incorporation of United Jet Center, Inc. ("UJCI").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.23 to the Registration
Statement.
3.24 Bylaws of UJCI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.24 to the
Registration Statement.
4.1 Indenture dated as of June 9, 1997 between URC, URCP, KPC, KPCY, KFI,
IGOCRI, BOC, PPCI, STPI, K-FI, VARC, UJCI and IBJ Schroder Bank & Trust
Company ("Schroder"), relating to the 10 3/4% Series A Senior Notes due
2007. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Registration
Statement.
4.2 Form of Note. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the
Registration Statement.
10.1 Purchase Agreement dated June 4, 1997 between URC, URCP, KPC, KPCY,
KFI, IGOCRI, BOC, PPCI, STPI, K-FI, VARC, UJCI, Dillion, Read & Co.
Inc. ("DRCI") and Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. ("BSCI"). Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Registration Statement.
10.2 Registration Rights Agreement dated June 9, 1997 between URC, URCP,
KPC, KPCY, KFI, IGOCRI, BOC, PPCI, STPI, K-FI, VARC, UJCI, DRCI, and
BSCI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Registration
Statement.
10.3 Escrow Agreement dated June 9, 1997 between Schroder, as Escrow Agent,
Schroder, as Trustee, and URC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit
10.3 to the Registration Statement.
10.4 Servicing Agreement dated June 9, 1997 between URC and Red Apple Group,
Inc. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Registration
Statement.
10.5 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated February 1, 1996 between URC and
International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 95. Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Registration Statement.
10.6 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated June 23, 1993 between URC and
International Union, United Plant Guard Workers of America and Local
No. 502. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Registration
Statement.
10.7 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated February 1, 1997 between URC and
United Steel Workers of America Local Union No. 2122-A. Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10.7 to the Registration Statement.
10.8 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated August 1, 1995 between URC and
General Teamsters Local Union No. 397. Incorporated by reference to
Exhibit 10.8 to the Registration Statement.
10.9 Credit Agreement dated as of June 9, 1997 by and among, URC, URCP, KPC
and the Banks party thereto and PNC Bank, National Association, as
Agent. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.9 to the Registration
Statement.
10.10 Continuing Agreement of Guaranty and Suretyship dated as of June 9,
1997 by URC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.10 to the
Registration Statement.
10.11 Continuing Agreement of Guaranty and Suretyship dated as of June 9,
1997 by URCP. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.11 to the
Registration Statement.
10.12 Continuing Agreement of Guaranty and Suretyship dated as of June 9,
1997 by KPC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to the
Registration Statement.
10.13 Security Agreement dated as of June 9, 1997 by and among, URC, URCP,
KPC and the Banks party thereto and PNC Bank, National Association, as
Agent. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.13 to the Registration
Statement.
10.14 Waiver and Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of July 15, 1998 by
and among, URC, URCP, KPC and the banks party thereto and PNC Bank,
National Association, as Agent. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit
10.14 of Registrant's Annual Report on Form 10K for fiscal year ended
August 31, 1998.
10.15 Consulting Agreement dated September 1, 1996 with Thomas C. Covert.
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 of Registrant's Annual
Report on Form 10K for fiscal year ended August 31, 1998.
10.16 Deferred Compensation Agreement dated September 1, 1996 with Thomas C.
Covert. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 of Registrant's
Annual Report on Form 10K for fiscal year ended August 31, 1998.
48
49
10.17 Waiver and Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of April 13, 1999 by
and among URC, URCP, KPC and the banks party thereto and PNC Bank,
National Association, as Agent.*
21.1 Subsidiaries of the Registrants. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit
21.1 to the Registration Statement.
27.1 Financial data schedule for the twelve months ended August 31, 1999.*
(b) Reports on Form 8-K
NONE
* Filed herewith
49
50
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
To the Board of Directors and
Stockholder of United Refining Company
The audits referred to in our report dated October 29, 1999 relating to
the consolidated financial statements of United Refining Company and
Subsidiaries included the audits of the financial statement Schedule II -
Valuation and Qualifying Accounts for each of the three years in the period
ended August 31, 1999. This financial statement schedule is the responsibility
of management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on this schedule
based on our audits.
In our opinion, such financial statement Schedule - Valuation and
Qualifying Accounts, presents fairly, in all material respects, the information
set forth therein.
/s/ BDO SEIDMAN, LLP
New York, New York
October 29, 1999
50
51
UNITED REFINING COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
SCHEDULE II - VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
(in thousands)
Balance at Charged to
Beginning of Costs and Balance at End
Description Period Expenses Deductions Of Period
- -------------------------------------- ------------ ----------- ---------- --------------
Year ended August 31, 1997:
Reserves and allowances deducted
from asset accounts:
Allowance for uncollectible
Accounts $541 $407 $(437) $511
==== ==== ===== ====
Year ended August 31, 1998:
Reserves and allowances deducted
from asset accounts:
Allowance for uncollectible
Accounts $511 $258 $(364) $405
==== ==== ===== ====
Year ended August 31, 1999:
Reserves and allowances deducted
from asset accounts:
Allowance for uncollectible
Accounts $405 $195 $(235) $365
==== ==== ===== ====
51
52
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
UNITED REFINING COMPANY
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
-----------------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
President and Chief Operating Officer
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
President, Chief Operating Officer
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
/s/ Thomas C. Covert Vice Chairman and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Thomas C. Covert
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
/s/ Martin R. Bring Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Martin R. Bring
/s/ Evan Evans Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Evan Evans
/s/ Kishore Lall Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Kishore Lall
/s/ Douglas Lemmonds Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Douglas Lemmonds
/s/ Andrew Maloney Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Andrew Maloney
/s/ Dennis Mehiel Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Dennis Mehiel
52
53
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
UNITED REFINING COMPANY OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
President and Chief Operating Officer
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt President, Chief Operating Officer November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
53
54
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
KIANTONE PIPELINE CORPORATION
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
President and Chief Operating Officer
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
President, Chief Operating Officer
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
54
55
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
KIANTONE PIPELINE COMPANY
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
--------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
55
56
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
UNITED JET CENTER, INC.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
56
57
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
VULCAN ASPHALT REFINING
CORPORATION
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
57
58
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
KWIK-FIL, INC.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
58
59
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
KWIK-FILL, INC.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
59
60
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
INDEPENDENT GASOLINE & OIL
COMPANY OF ROCHESTER, INC.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
60
61
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
BELL OIL CORP.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
61
62
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
PPC, INC.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
62
63
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant caused this report to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
SUPER TEST PETROLEUM, INC.
Dated: November 29, 1999 By: /s/ Myron L. Turfitt
------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Executive Vice President
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated:
SIGNATURE TITLE DATE
Chairman of the Board, Chief
/s/ John A. Catsimatidis Executive Officer and Director November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
John A. Catsimatidis
/s/ Myron L. Turfitt Executive Vice President November 29, 1999
- -------------------------------
Myron L. Turfitt
Vice President and Chief Financial
/s/ James E. Murphy Officer (Principal Accounting
- ------------------------------- Officer)
James E. Murphy November 29, 1999
63
64
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION TO BE FURNISHED WITH REPORTS FILED PURSUANT TO SECTION
15(d) OF THE ACT BY REGISTRANTS WHICH HAVE NOT REGISTERED SECURITIES PURSUANT TO
SECTION 12 OF THE ACT
No annual report or proxy material was sent to security holders by the
Corporation during the fiscal year ended August 31, 1999.
EXHIBITS
Number Description
- ------ -----------
3.1 Certificate of Incorporation of United Refining Company ("URC").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Registrant's
Registration Statement on Form S-4 (File No. 333-35083) (the
"Registration Statement").
3.2 Bylaws of URC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the
Registration Statement.
3.3 Certificate of Incorporation of United Refining Company of Pennsylvania
("URCP"). Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.3 to the Registration
Statement.
3.4 Bylaws of URCP. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 to the
Registration Statement.
3.5 Certificate of Incorporation of Kiantone Pipeline Corporation ("KPC").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.5 to the Registration Statement.
3.6 Bylaws of KPC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.6 to the
Registration Statement.
3.7 Certificate of Incorporation of Kiantone Pipeline Company ("KPCY").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.7 to the Registration Statement.
3.8 Bylaws of KPCY. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.8 to the
registration Statement.
3.9 Certificate of Incorporation of Kwik Fill, Inc. ("KFI"). Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 3.9 to the Registration Statement.
3.10 Bylaws of KFI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.10 to the
Registration Statement.
3.11 Certificate of Incorporation of Independent Gasoline & Oil Company of
Rochester, Inc. ("IGOCRI"). Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.11
to the Registration Statement.
3.12 Bylaws of IGOCRI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.12 to the
Registration Statement.
3.13 Certificate of Incorporation of Bell Oil Corp. ("BOC"). Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 3.13 to the Registration Statement.
3.14 Bylaws of BOC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.14 to the
Registration Statement.
3.15 Certificate of Incorporation of PPC, Inc. ("PPCI"). Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 3.15 to the Registration Statement.
3.16 Bylaws of PPCI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.16 to the
Registration Statement.
3.17 Certificate of Incorporation of Super Test Petroleum, Inc. ("STPI").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.17 to the Registration
Statement.
3.18 Bylaws of STPI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.18 to the
Registration Statement.
3.19 Certificate of Incorporation of Kwik-Fil, Inc. ("K-FI"). Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 3.19 to the Registration Statement.
3.20 Bylaws of K-FI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.20 to the
Registration Statement.
3.21 Certificate of Incorporation of Vulcan Asphalt Refining Corporation
("VARC"). Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.21 to the Registration
Statement.
3.22 Bylaws of VARC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.22 to the
Registration Statement.
3.23 Certificate of Incorporation of United Jet Center, Inc. ("UJCI").
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.23 to the Registration
Statement.
3.24 Bylaws of UJCI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.24 to the
Registration Statement.
4.1 Indenture dated as of June 9, 1997 between URC, URCP, KPC, KPCY, KFI,
IGOCRI, BOC, PPCI, STPI, K-FI, VARC, UJCI and IBJ Schroder Bank & Trust
Company ("Schroder"), relating to the 10 3/4% Series A Senior Notes due
2007. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Registration
Statement.
4.2 Form of Note. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the
Registration Statement.
64
65
10.1 Purchase Agreement dated June 4, 1997 between URC, URCP, KPC, KPCY,
KFI, IGOCRI, BOC, PPCI, STPI, K-FI, VARC, UJCI, Dillion, Read & Co.
Inc. ("DRCI") and Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc. ("BSCI"). Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Registration Statement.
10.2 Registration Rights Agreement dated June 9, 1997 between URC, URCP,
KPC, KPCY, KFI, IGOCRI, BOC, PPCI, STPI, K-FI, VARC, UJCI, DRCI, and
BSCI. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Registration
Statement.
10.3 Escrow Agreement dated June 9, 1997 between Schroder, as Escrow Agent,
Schroder, as Trustee, and URC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit
10.3 to the Registration Statement.
10.4 Servicing Agreement dated June 9, 1997 between URC and Red Apple Group,
Inc. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the Registration
Statement.
10.5 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated February 1, 1996 between URC and
International Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 95. Incorporated
by reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Registration Statement.
10.6 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated June 23, 1993 between URC and
International Union, United Plant Guard Workers of America and Local
No. 502. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Registration
Statement.
10.7 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated February 1, 1997 between URC and
United Steel Workers of America Local Union No. 2122-A. Incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 10.7 to the Registration Statement.
10.8 Collective Bargaining Agreement dated August 1, 1995 between URC and
General Teamsters Local Union No. 397. Incorporated by reference to
Exhibit 10.8 to the Registration Statement.
10.9 Credit Agreement dated as of June 9, 1997 by and among, URC, URCP, KPC
and the Banks party thereto and PNC Bank, National Association, as
Agent. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.9 to the Registration
Statement.
10.10 Continuing Agreement of Guaranty and Suretyship dated as of June 9,
1997 by URC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.10 to the
Registration Statement.
10.11 Continuing Agreement of Guaranty and Suretyship dated as of June 9,
1997 by URCP. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.11 to the
Registration Statement.
10.12 Continuing Agreement of Guaranty and Suretyship dated as of June 9,
1997 by KPC. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to the
Registration Statement.
10.13 Security Agreement dated as of June 9, 1997 by and among, URC, URCP,
KPC and the Banks party thereto and PNC Bank, National Association, as
Agent. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.13 to the Registration
Statement.
10.14 Waiver and Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of July 15, 1998 by
and among, URC, URCP, KPC and the banks party thereto and PNC Bank,
National Association, as Agent. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit
10.14 of Registrant's Annual Report on Form 10K for fiscal year ended
August 31, 1998.
10.15 Consulting Agreement dated September 1, 1996 with Thomas C. Covert.
Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 of Registrant's Annual
Report on Form 10K for fiscal year ended August 31, 1998.
10.16 Deferred Compensation Agreement dated September 1, 1996 with Thomas C.
Covert. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 of Registrant's
Annual Report on Form 10K for fiscal year ended August 31, 1998.
10.17 Waiver and Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of April 13, 1999 by
and among URC, URCP, KPC and the banks party thereto and PNC Bank,
National Association, as Agent.*
21.1 Subsidiaries of the Registrants. Incorporated by reference to Exhibit
21.1 to the Registration Statement.
27.1 Financial data schedule for the twelve months ended August 31, 1999.*
(c) Reports on Form 8-K
NONE
* Filed herewith
65