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RBA $73.37

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Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers
Type
Public
Traded as NYSE: RBA
TSX: RBA
Industry Auctions & Industrial products distribution
Founded Kelowna, British Columbia
Headquarters Burnaby, British Columbia
Key people
David Edward Ritchie, Founder, Beverley Briscoe, Chairman, Ravi Saligram (CEO)
Products Auctions & Industrial products distribution
Number of employees
1,200+
Website www.rbauction.com

Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers is an industrial auctioneer. The company is headquartered in Burnaby, a suburb of Metro Vancouver, and has 110 locations in 25 countries and 44 auction sites worldwide. The company sells through unreserved public auctions a broad range of used and unused industrial assets, including equipment, trucks and other assets utilized in the construction, transportation, agricultural, material handling, mining, forestry, petroleum, and marine industries.

Ritchie Bros. is a public company. Its common shares are traded on the New York and Toronto stock exchanges under the ticker symbol RBA.

Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers was established in Kelowna, B.C., Canada. The three Ritchie brothers – Ken, John and Dave Ritchie – took over the OK Used Furniture Store from their father in 1955. They entered the auction business in 1958 when they needed CA$2,000 to pay a bank debt on short notice. A friend suggested they conduct an auction to get rid of some surplus inventory from the furniture store. They conducted their first auction at the Scout Hall in Kelowna in 1958 and discovered a new way of doing business.

Starting with that first auction at the Scout Hall, Ritchie Bros. maintained a strict policy of conducting unreserved auctions – meaning there were no minimum bids and no reserve prices. The brothers also established a policy of not allowing bid-ins or buybacks by the sellers.

The brothers began conducting auctions more regularly and in 1958 incorporated Ritchie Bros. Auction Galleries Ltd. to formalize their new business. Ritchie Bros. began selling used equipment in the 1960s. In 1963 Dave Ritchie moved to Vancouver, B.C. and rented an auction site on S.E. Marine Drive. He set up the company's first equipment auction in Vancouver shortly after.

The Ritchie brothers conducted their first major unreserved industrial auction in Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia on June 7, 1963. They sold CA$663,000 of equipment in one day – by far the largest auction in the company's history.

The success of the Radium Hot Springs auction convinced the brothers that they could make more money auctioning used equipment than selling furniture, so they sold their furniture store in Kelowna and went into the auction business full-time.

Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers established one of the trademarks of its auctions at the Radium Hot Springs auction. It was raining on the day of the auction. Instead of making the bidders walk around in the rain during the auction, they set up the auction under the eaves of a nearby shop and drove the equipment in to be sold piece by piece. The crowd stayed dry and the ramp-and-stage method became a fixture at Ritchie Bros. auctions thereafter.

On June 7, 2013, Ritchie Bros. celebrated 50 years since the company’s first major unreserved industrial auction in Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia. It was at this Radium Hot Springs auction that Ritchie Bros. adopted the ramp-and-stage approach for selling all mobile equipment. This approach involves a staging area —designed as a ramp— located in front of a viewing theater, where bidders sit waiting for mobile equipment to come to “center stage.” Each piece of equipment is numbered and, once it comes to rest at the center of the ramp, the auctioneer begins asking for bids. The crowd of bidders signals their bid increments to roving “bid catchers,” who in turn signal the auctioneer when a bid is made. The auctioneer increases the call price until there are no more bids being placed. At a Ritchie Bros. auction, bids are called until no more are forthcoming in approximately one minute, when the auctioneer calls that the item has been “sold!” to the highest bidder.

The Company has pioneered the ramp-and-stage method and unreserved industrial auctions around the world ever since the auction at Radium Hot Springs on June 7, 1963.

Most of the company's earliest auctions were held in British Columbia. Ritchie Bros. began expanding into other parts of Canada in the mid-1960s, conducting its first auctions in Alberta (in 1964), the Yukon (1964), Saskatchewan (1965), Manitoba (1968), and other parts of Eastern Canada shortly thereafter.

In 1965, Ken Ritchie left the company to spend more time with his family and the company’s name was changed from Ritchie Bros. Auction Galleries Ltd. to Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Ltd. Ken established his own auction company, but returned to work with his brothers in 1968. He stayed with Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers until 1980.

In 1968, Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers held its first auction with gross proceeds in excess of CA$1 million, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Edmonton was also the site of the company’s first permanent auction site (on company-owned land), which was established in 1976. Until then, Ritchie Bros. had been conducting its auctions on leased land.

Ritchie Bros. established its first presence outside Canada in 1969 when it became incorporated in Washington, USA. The company held its first auction outside Canada in 1970, in Beaverton, Oregon, and gradually began expanding throughout the United States.

In 1974, John Ritchie left the company, selling his share of the business to his brother Dave. In 1975, Dave Ritchie – the sole company shareholder – decided to sell partnerships in Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers to some of his key employees: Dick Bartel, C. Russell (“Russ”) Cmolik, Ken Ritchie, and Bill Gronberg. Over the coming years, the partnership expanded to include Bob Carswell, Marvin Chantler, Ed Banser, Roger Rummel, Bob Brawley, Ken Asbury, John Wild, Marty Pope, Mark Clarke, Don Chalmers, Sylvain Touchette, Frank McFadden, and Mike Ritchie. When Ritchie Bros. went public in 1998, Ken Ritchie and Bill Gronberg no longer owned shares in the company.

By 1985, Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers had sold more than US$1 billion of equipment through unreserved auctions. It took only three more years for the company to gross another US$1 billion in sales.

In the late 1980s Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers began to look overseas for further growth opportunities. The company conducted its first auctions outside North America in 1987, in Liverpool, the U.K., and Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The equipment sold at the Liverpool auction had been used to rebuild the Falkland Islands following the war there. Further international expansion followed with the company's first auctions in Australia (1990), Mexico (1995), the Middle East (1997), Africa (2003), China (2013), and Finland (2013).

In 1991, the company achieved another milestone when it conducted its 1,000th unreserved auction. It conducted its 2,000th auction in the year 2000.

In 1989, Ritchie Bros. became the first industrial auction company to enable remote bidding via video when it broadcast its Edmonton auction live at the Agricom trade show in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Video simulcasts were held at trade shows in 1993 and 1995, followed in 1997 by a three-way videoconferenced auction that linked separate auction sites in St. Paul, Minnesota; Kansas City, Missouri; and Clinton, Wisconsin. Equipment was located at all three sites, and interested buyers could bid at any of the sites, which were linked via video.

The company launched its website, rbauction.com, at the ConExpo trade show in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA in 1996. The site featured a searchable database that enabled customers to see all of the equipment being sold in upcoming Ritchie Bros. auctions.

In March 1999, Ritchie Bros. broadcast an auction over the Internet for the first time. In March 2002, Ritchie Bros. introduced its real-time Internet bidding service, rbauctionBid-Live.

On September 22, 2008, Ritchie Bros. launched a comprehensive online resource tool for the construction, mining, transportation, agricultural and forestry industries at MINExpo International in Las Vegas. The tool is called RitchieWiki and is associated with an equipment specification engine called RitchieSpecs.

In 1998, the year that Ritchie Bros. went public, the company’s annual gross auction proceeds exceeded US$1 billion for the first time ever. Its common shares were listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol RBA in March 1998, followed by listing on the Toronto Stock Exchange in April 2004.

Investing in permanent auction sites has been a company priority since the 1970s. Ritchie Bros. opened its first permanent auction site in Nisku (Edmonton), Alberta, Canada in 1976. Before going public in 1998, the company opened additional permanent auction sites in Vancouver, B.C. (in 1979); Prince George, B.C. (1980); Denver, Colorado (1985) – the first site in the U.S.; Phoenix, Arizona (1987); Toronto, Ontario (1988); Tampa, Florida (1995); Atlanta, Georgia (1996); Minneapolis, Minnesota (1991); Houston, Texas (1993); Fort Worth, Texas (1994); Olympia, Washington (1994); and Halifax, Nova Scotia (1997).

Since then, Ritchie Bros. has added auction sites in eight other countries. Today, the company has 44 auction sites in 13 countries worldwide:

In 1999, Ritchie Bros. acquired Forke Brothers, an equipment auction company based in Nebraska, USA and one of its major competitors. The company moved its U.S. headquarters to Lincoln, Nebraska following the acquisition. Ritchie Bros. made its foray into the agricultural equipment auction business with the acquisitions of All Peace Auctions of Grande Prairie, Alberta, Canada in 2002; LeBlanc Auction Service of Estevan, Saskatchewan, Canada in 2004; Dennis Biliske Auctioneers of Buxton, North Dakota, USA in 2006; Clarke Auctioneers of Rouleau, Saskatchewan, Canada in 2007; and Martella Auction Company of Tipton, CA in 2009.

Among the notable auctions conducted by Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers: construction and other equipment used to rebuild the airport, shipyard and other facilities after the Falkland Islands war (1987); almost 9,800 items and pieces of equipment used in the US$1 billion cleanup operation following the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska (1990) and the equipment used to build the Confederation Bridge that links the province of Prince Edward Island with the Canadian mainland (1997).

Ritchie Bros. also conducted the world’s largest industrial equipment auction in Orlando, FL in February 2012. The company sold more than US$203 million worth of equipment and trucks over six days (February 13 – 18, 2012). The auction featured more than 10,000 heavy equipment items and trucks and attracted more than 8,600 bidders from 88 countries.

Ritchie Bros. celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2008. As a gift to the heavy equipment industries it launched RitchieWiki in September 2008 at MINExpo International in Las Vegas, Nevada.

In 2008 Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Inc. conducted 340 unreserved industrial and agricultural auctions generating gross auction proceeds of US$3.58 billion. The company sold more than 253,000 lots from 37,000 consignments and processed 277,000 bidder registrations. Of those, 84,000 were successful buyers with a total of 16,000 buyers purchasing their equipment online.

In 2014, US$4.2 billion of heavy equipment was bought and sold at Ritchie Bros. unreserved public auctions, including:

The board of directors of Ritchie Brothers, as of June 2014 is:

Q reports

Period Date Adjusted Actuals EPS GAAP EPS
Q3 2022 2022-11-02 Future report Set alerts
Q2 2022 2022-08-04 Future report Set alerts
Q1 2022 2022-05-09 1.60 1.60
Q4 2021 2022-02-17 0.00 0.00
Q3 2021 2021-11-04 0.35 0.35
Q2 2021 2021-08-05 0.00 0.00
Q1 2021 2021-05-10 0.27 0.27
Q4 2020 2021-02-18 0.49 0.49
Q3 2020 2020-11-05 0.00 0.00
Q2 2020 2020-08-06 0.54 0.49

Ratings

2016-05-27 Initiated Coverage KeyBanc Sector Weight
2016-05-27 Initiated Coverage KeyCorp Sector Weight
2016-05-19 Reiterated Rating RBC Capital Outperform
2016-05-19 Reiterated Rating Royal Bank Of Canada Outperform
2016-05-10 Reiterated Rating TD Securities Reduce $23.00 to $26.00
2016-05-10 Reiterated Rating Jefferies Group Buy $35.00
2016-05-10 Reiterated Rating BMO Capital Markets Hold $30.50
2016-04-11 Reiterated Rating Raymond James Outperform $29.50 to $31.00
2016-04-11 Reiterated Rating Raymond James Financial Inc. Outperform $29.50 to $31.00
2016-04-09 Reiterated Rating Robert W. Baird Buy
2016-04-08 Boost Price Target BMO Capital Markets Market Perform $25.00 to $27.00
2016-04-08 Reiterated Rating Bank of America Sell $22.00
2016-04-08 Reiterated Rating Bank of America Corp. Sell $22.00
2016-02-29 Reiterated Rating BMO Capital Markets Market Perform $26.00 to $25.00
2016-02-29 Lower Price Target Raymond James $33.25 to $29.50
2016-02-19 Initiated Coverage William Blair Buy
2016-01-14 Reiterated Rating Canaccord Genuity Buy $32.00 to $28.00
2016-01-12 Lower Price Target RBC Capital Outperform $32.00 to $28.00
2015-12-29 Reiterated Rating Oppenheimer Hold
2015-12-29 Reiterated Rating Oppenheimer Holdings Inc. Hold
2015-11-10 Reiterated Rating Oppenheimer Market Perform
2015-11-08 Reiterated Rating Canaccord Genuity Buy $32.00
2015-10-16 Downgrade RBC Capital Best Ideas List to Market-Perform
2015-10-08 Lower Price Target BMO Capital Markets Market Perform $28.00 to $27.00
2015-10-08 Reiterated Rating Canaccord Genuity Buy $32.00
2015-10-01 Initiated Coverage Macquarie Neutral
2015-09-26 Reiterated Rating Raymond James Outperform
2015-09-09 Reiterated Rating William Blair Outperform
2015-08-10 Boost Price Target Scotiabank $30.00 to $32.00
2015-08-10 Upgrade Canaccord Genuity Hold to Buy $27.00 to $32.00
2015-08-07 Reiterated Rating Oppenheimer Market Perform
2015-07-20 Boost Price Target Canaccord Genuity Hold $26.00 to $27.00
2015-07-09 Reiterated Rating Canaccord Genuity Hold $26.00
2015-07-09 Reiterated Rating William Blair Outperform
2015-06-18 Set Price Target Jefferies Group Buy $30.00 to $35.00
2015-06-11 Downgrade Northcoast Research Buy to Neutral
2015-05-12 Reiterated Rating RBC Capital Outperform $31.00 to $32.00
2015-05-11 Upgrade Canaccord Genuity Hold $26.00
2015-05-11 Boost Price Target Raymond James Outperform $28.00 to $32.00
2015-05-04 Upgrade Jefferies Group Hold to Buy $24.00 to $30.00
2015-03-31 Set Price Target Canaccord Genuity Sell $23.00
2015-03-09 Reiterated Rating Oppenheimer Market Perform
2015-02-23 Set Price Target Canaccord Genuity Sell $23.00
2015-02-12 Initiated Coverage RBC Capital Outperform $31.00
2015-01-20 Downgrade Canaccord Genuity Sell
2015-01-13 Initiated Coverage Oppenheimer Hold
2015-01-13 Downgrade BMO Capital Markets Outperform to Market Perform
2015-01-13 Upgrade Raymond James Market Perform to Outperform $25.00 to $30.00
2014-12-23 Reiterated Rating Oppenheimer Hold
2014-11-05 Reiterated Rating Bank of America Underperform $18.00 to $20.00
2014-10-17 Downgrade OTR Global Positive
2014-10-08 Reiterated Rating Scotiabank Sector Outperform
2014-08-06 Boost Price Target Jefferies Group $22.00 to $24.00
2014-08-06 Reiterated Rating Canaccord Genuity Hold $27.00
2014-07-21 Upgrade Raymond James $26.00
2014-07-16 Boost Price Target RBC Capital $24.00 to $25.00
2014-06-17 Boost Price Target Canaccord Genuity $25.00 to $27.50
2014-06-09 Upgrade Cantor Fitzgerald Hold to Buy $24.00 to $26.00
2014-05-06 Boost Price Target TD Securities $18.00 to $19.00
2014-05-06 Boost Price Target Raymond James Market Perform $21.00 to $23.00
2014-04-28 Upgrade Robert W. Baird Neutral to Outperform $26.00 to $29.00
2014-02-04 Upgrade Cantor Fitzgerald Sell to Hold
2014-01-30 Initiated Coverage Scotiabank Outperform
2014-01-15 Downgrade Cantor Fitzgerald Hold to Sell
2013-11-07 Downgrade Credit Suisse Neutral to Underperform $18.00 to $17.00
2013-10-24 Upgrade BMO Capital Markets Market Perform to Outperform $18.00 to $22.50
2013-10-09 Reiterated Rating Credit Suisse Neutral $20.00 to $18.00
2011-10-03 Reiterated RBC Capital Mkts Underperform $18 to $17
2011-04-06 Downgrade BMO Capital Markets Outperform to Market Perform
2010-07-20 Downgrade Oppenheimer Outperform to Perform
2010-07-16 Downgrade RBC Capital Mkts Sector Perform to Underperform $18 to $16
2009-12-21 Downgrade Barrington Research Outperform to Mkt Perform
2009-12-09 Downgrade Sterne Agee Buy to Neutral $24
2009-06-24 Initiated Sterne Agee Buy $27
2009-03-31 Downgrade Raymond James Outperform to Mkt Perform
2008-12-23 Reiterated Barrington Research Outperform $29 to $27
2016-05-27 Initiated Coverage KeyBanc Sector Weight
2016-05-27 Initiated Coverage KeyCorp Sector Weight
2016-05-19 Reiterated Rating RBC Capital Outperform
2016-05-19 Reiterated Rating Royal Bank Of Canada Outperform
2016-05-10 Reiterated Rating TD Securities Reduce $23.00 to $26.00

There is presents forecasts of rating agencies and recommendations for investors about this ticker

Major Shareholders

Name Relationship Total Shares Holding stocks