Business Day

Premier Foods in court over name

- Colleen Goko Retail Writer gokoc@businessli­ve.co.za

Premier Foods, in which investment group Brait has a majority stake, is taking Premier Food and Fishing to court over the company’s name.

Premier Foods, in which investment group Brait has a majority stake, is taking Premier Food & Fishing (PFF) to court over the company’s name.

The food producer says the move became necessary after the recently listed African Equity Empowermen­t Investment­s subsidiary failed to change its name by an agreed deadline.

Premier Foods group marketing and strategy executive Siobhan O’Sullivan said the company had taken issue with PFF’s name even before it listed, as Premier Foods had spent decades building goodwill and reputation in its trademarks and trading name.

“The concern was that members of the public may erroneousl­y believe that PFF is associated with Premier’s business, when this is not the case,” O’Sullivan said.

She said the dispute followed an agreement between the parties in which PFF and its parent company undertook to change the name.

In its high court applicatio­n on August 4, Premier Foods claims PFF and African Equity Empowermen­t Investment­s are in breach of the agreement.

CEO of the parent company Khalid Abdulla said on Monday the company was aware of the proceeding­s. “Our attorneys have received the papers and, we will be defending this.”

Gauteng-based and unlisted Premier Foods was founded almost 200 years ago. It expanded its operations in 2012 from traditiona­l milling and baking into confection­ery as well as home and personal care brands. Its brands include Snowflake, Iwisa, Super C and Vulco & Dove cotton wool.

Premier has operations in Lesotho and Swaziland.

Additional­ly, the group exports to 15 countries with 19% of its revenue delivered from outside of the country.

PFF, establishe­d in 1952, is a predominan­tly commercial fishing, fish processing and marketing company. It listed on the JSE in March 2017. It is the largest black-owned and controlled fishing company in SA.

Its products include rock lobster, octopus, squid, abalone, pilchards, hake and environmen­tally friendly agribiotec­hnology products.

PFF’s share price fell more than 3% in intraday trade on Monday, trading at about R4.05.

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