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Day Runner Struggling to Get Back on the Pace in Day-Planner Market

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Day Runner Inc., the daily organizer company that had such a bright future 18 months ago, has been staggered by mounting debt, growing electronic competition and big retailers that changed the rules of the game.

Today, the 20-year-old manufacturer of paper organizers, planners and software is slashing its work force to staunch the red ink and helplessly watching the value of its shares plummet.

Beset by past problems, Day Runner also must take steps to avoid becoming a dinosaur in an era when computers, the Internet and all things Web are seizing center stage in everyday life. The Palm Pilot and other electronic organizers are Day Runner’s competitors in the future, which is closing in fast.

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Meantime, the company has to figure out a way to meet the demands of major retailers like Office Depot Inc., Staples Inc., Wal-Mart and Kmart, all of which have reduced inventories to maximize their own profits. By ordering only what they need when they need it, they have put pressure on all suppliers.

Most other vendors, though, have adjusted to the changing demands. Day Runner hasn’t yet.

Earlier this week, the Irvine firm reported lower sales and a quarterly loss of $2.7 million, its third money-losing quarter in the last year, and its stock price, more than $25 a share in mid-1998, had sunk to Friday’s close of $1.69.

The immediate future, if not its long-term health, looks grim.

“It’s a really hard road back for them,” said Alexander Paris Sr., an analyst with Barrington Research in Chicago. “I would advise them to sell, if they can.”

Just 18 months ago, after recording record earnings for its 1998 fiscal year, Day Runner had attracted Wall Street’s attention. Its stock soared more than 33% in less than two months.

Forbes magazine tapped it as one of the best 200 small companies in the nation for the second consecutive year. And Day Runner spent $84.5 million to acquire British rival Filofax Group, a purchase that many believed would propel it to even loftier heights. The price was 50% more than Filofax’s stock value.

But the company had little time to savor the spotlight.

The borrowings to buy Filofax turned the relatively debt-free company into one burdened by $150 of debt for every $100 in equity. Interest payments more than doubled to $3.8 million for the latest quarter from $1.4 million in the previous year’s second quarter.

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“Just before everything turned down, they made their biggest acquisition in history and went from a zero debt position to an overly leveraged balance sheet,” Paris said. The timing “couldn’t have been worse.”

At the same time, Day Runner’s key customers changed their buying habits. Day Runner was hit particularly hard by the inventory tightening because 64% of its business comes from five large retailers. Its biggest customer, Wal-Mart, accounts for 25% of its sales.

Future demand also suffered as some retailers slowed their own expansions or opened new outlets in lower-volume markets.

In addition, Day Runner’s customers began returning slow-moving items they once would have sold themselves at a discount, said Michael Crawford, an analyst with B. Riley & Co. in Los Angeles.

“Their customers changed the rules of the game on them,” he said.

Corporate executives acknowledge that they weren’t prepared for the shift in inventory management and haven’t been dealing with it well. A year ago, it fired 350 workers, or 20% of its work force, and dismissed 30 more since December.

“We have been surprised by how intense this inventory tightening has been and what a long-lasting and negative impact it has been having on us,” James E. Freeman Jr., Day Runner’s chief executive, said in press release announcing the company’s latest quarterly results.

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Neither Freeman nor other executives would comment further.

By contrast, Day Runner competitor At-A-Glance anticipated its customers’ new strategy. The Sidney, N.Y., company tracks sales every week at more than 2,000 Office Depot and OfficeMax Inc. stores, among others, to let them know when they need to reorder At-A-Glance products, said John Hayek, senior vice president of marketing. Mead Co. bought At-A-Glance last year for $540 million.

Day Runner has to deal with not only its past but its future. Last year, retailers ordered 2.3 million electronic personal organizers valued at $764 million, according to International Data Corp., a market research firm. Orders are expected to grow to 6.4 million units worth $2 billion by 2003.

“I don’t think paper organizers will ever disappear, but they certainly face some stiff competition, which is getting stiffer,” International Data analyst Jill House said.

Day Runner sells electronic organizers and personal planning software, but hasn’t been able to capitalize on Internet possibilities.

A partnership with Infoseek has failed to lead to any co-developed Web-based organizer--and may never. Walt Disney Co. acquired Infoseek and rechristened it Go.com in a plan to make it a Web portal aimed at entertainment and leisure.

Day Runner faced other problems in the past six months.

In July, it hired an investment banking firm to help it boost its stock price, which has continued to drop. In September, the company restated earnings for three quarters because of accounting errors, shaving more than $2 million in profit off the bottom line. Shareholders promptly filed two lawsuits accusing the company of misrepresenting its financial condition. Last month, the company’s chief financial officer, Dennis Marquardt, quit.

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Undaunted, Day Runner executives are pushing through with a restructuring aimed at cutting costs.

“Our goal is to complete the bulk of our restructuring this fiscal year and to enter fiscal 2001 as a leaner and profitable organization. We believe this goal is achievable,” Freeman said in the company’s latest press release.

But first, he acknowledged, the company expects to record a “substantial loss” in the current three-month period.

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Tumbling Performance

Beset by heavy debts, competition and a change in how customers order its products, Day Runner Inc, a maker of daily organizers, has seen its stock price and earnings fall sharply since their apex in mid-1998.

Financial Results

For fiscal years ending June 30, in millions

1997

Sales: $127.4

Net Income: $12.5

1998

Sales: $167.8

Net Income: $15.9

1999

Sales: $196.2

Net Income: -4.0

2000*

Sales: $109.4

Net Income: -2.1

*first six months of fiscal 2000

Stock Price

March 1997: $12.69

June 1998: $25.19

December 1999: $1.69

Source: Dayrunner Inc. and Bloomberg News

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