BC Business Magazine

The TOP 100

While some of B.C.'S BIGGEST COMPANIES struggled to make the numbers work in a tough year, others struck gold

- by PETER MITHAM

The economies of B.C. and the world may never be the same after the watershed events of 2020. Public health protocols accelerate­d a new, digital era as face-to-face dealings became risky business. Thanks to pandemic-related closures and disruption­s, the greatest shock since the 2008 financial crisis clipped the province's real gross domestic product by 5.3 percent.

Government­s stepped up with billions in support, though, helping keep the economy rolling. Aggregate revenue for the province's Top 100 companies grew 0.5 percent despite the slowdown. Consumers worried about COVID-19, but their confidence was muzzled, not maimed. RBC Economics forecasts a 5.1-percent rebound in economic growth for B.C. this year and another 5.2 percent in 2022 as restrictio­ns lift and people—and their cash—start circulatin­g.

But consumers spent money differentl­y last year. Although Telus Corp., Jim Pattison Group and Teck Resources maintained their firm hold on the list's top three positions, many forestry companies posted higher revenue as people invested in home improvemen­ts that made them feel comfortabl­e.

Consumer goods businesses also benefited as retail spending continued online if not in person. Clothing brands Aritzia and Lululemon Athletica chalked up big gains, while Trade Mango Solutions—better known as online furniture purveyor Article—ranked among the province's fastest-growing companies as e-commerce flourished among lockeddown citizens.

At the same time, staycation­s hit the province's tourism and travel sector hard. Revenue at British Columbia Ferry Services increased marginally—in-province travel wasn't limited for most of last year— but restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel and reduced domestic service pared traffic through Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport, cutting revenue by 51 percent. Suppliers to the air sector, such as KF Aerospace and Longview Aviation Capital Corp., felt the knock-on effects.

Yet the chaos caused by the pandemic created opportunit­ies for mergers, acquisitio­ns and corporate reorganiza­tions. Takeovers announced in 2019 removed Catalyst Paper Corp. and Leagold Mining Corp. from the Top 100 list, while MDA, spun out of Maxar Technologi­es in 2019, went through another transforma­tion that took the former Richmond tech company to Ontario. Resources companies enjoyed particular­ly brisk business, with SSR Mining merging with Alacer Gold Corp. and moving to Colorado.

Other transition­s reflected sectorial issues. In retail, a private equity firm from California snapped up the province's iconic purveyor of outdoor goods, Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC). Cannabis consolidat­ion saw list contenders Zenabis Global and Tilray, the largest B.c.-based pot producer, absorbed earlier this year.

What remains as a new normal settles over the province are companies built on stability and innovation. On one hand are the homegrown providers of the basics— telecommun­ications, utilities, and critical infrastruc­ture such as health care and transporta­tion. On the other: providers of goods and services that have adapted to a clicks-and-mortar world.

“It's omnichanne­l,” says Andrew Harries, Tom Foord Professor of Prac

tice in Entreprene­urship and Innovation with SFU'S

Beedie School of Business, pointing to Aritzia. The clothing retailer saw in-store sales drop in 2020 compared to the previous year, but it reaped the rewards of an online sales platform whose business surged 90 percent.

“Some have gotten really good at that,” Harries says. “And some haven't innovated. They're the ones we read about that are closing down.”

While retailers were the poster child for the shift, Harries expects consumers to return to PRE-COVID habits when they're allowed. But the pandemic confirmed the wisdom of embracing technology. “Despite the challenges, we benefited from earlier investment­s in our digital capabiliti­es,” heavy equipment dealer Finning Internatio­nal noted in its annual report. “We improved our execution in South America, reduced our cost base in Canada, built a strong backlog of projects in the U.K. and significan­tly lowered our finance costs.”

Abcellera Biologics, whose market capitaliza­tion stood at more than US$6 billion in mid-june, is using data science and machine learning to speed up the discovery of drug treatments for COVID and other diseases. Cymax Group Technologi­es, an e-commerce platform provider 71-percent-owned by Plenty of Fish founder Markus Frind, has the kind of backing that bodes well for success. Legal software maker Themis Solutions, which operates as Clio, and bricks-and-clicks care specialist Well Health Technologi­es Corp. are other examples of rising stars. Clio recently achieved unicorn status, with a billion-dollar valuation on revenue of $103 million.

Harries, co-founder of Sierra Wireless, hopes Clio will be one of the companies that stay in Vancouver and become beacons for the local tech industry. Just as Intrawest Resorts Holdings did for real estate and Lululemon did for apparel, larger tech firms help smaller outfits by setting the tone for the sector. They also incubate new businesses.

Scaling up the industry requires more than cultivatin­g a pool of talented engineers; it also means building executive smarts, Harries explains. During the dotcom boom, much hand-wringing took

place over the flight of talent to Microsoft Corp. and other U.S. companies. Now those businesses are heading north for skilled workers.

“I don't think that incentiviz­ing the likes of Microsoft and Amazon to open up big developmen­t shops here helps,” Harries says. “It just drives up the cost of engineers, but you're not training good business managers. And people get trapped there because they get paid so well.”

As one of the most expensive parts of Canada, B.C. needs good-paying jobs. But it also needs strong business leadership as the next generation of companies comes to the fore in the brave new world emerging from the pandemic.

 ??  ?? LIFE FORCE Abcellera Biologics, a contender for next year's Top 100 list, is one of the province's recent tech-driven success stories
LIFE FORCE Abcellera Biologics, a contender for next year's Top 100 list, is one of the province's recent tech-driven success stories

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