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General of Darkness
21st April 2011, 07:25 PM
The Chinese are slant eyed jews, plain and simple.

Fellowes, American Stationery Giant, Brought to Its Knees in China
By Matthew Robertson
Epoch Times Staff Created: Apr 5, 2011 Last Updated: Apr 16, 2011
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Related articles: China > Business & Economy

There are few paper shredders in the world that can rip an A4 piece of paper into 2,000 pieces, and come with functions like SilentShred, SafeSense, and “100% Jam Proof”—and most that do have the name “Fellowes” printed on top. But consumers may soon be able to buy, say, the deluxe Powershred C-480Cx, without the Fellowes brand, because the company’s entire business in China has been stolen by its joint venture partner.

Over 1,600 workers at the joint venture facility in China turned up one day in August last year to find that the factory gates were locked, trucks had blockaded the entrances, and a group of rough-and-ready enforcers were telling them to move on.

And some days later, in the dead of night, a truck entered the facility and stole some of the million-dollar manufacturing tools used to make the shredders, some of which weigh several tons. The joint venture partner “proceeded to destroy our business,” according to James Fellowes, the CEO, at a Congressional Hearing on March 31.

Now on the Fellowes Inc. company website several of the personal shredders and all of the commercial shredders are accompanied by a “Limited Supply” icon, and a note by James Fellowes, CEO of the firm, humbly apologizing that the company “is unable to produce some of its shredders which are made in our primary manufacturing operation in China.”

Fellowes’ paper shredders are a US$168 million business, and when the company was taken over in China it lost US$100 million, according to Fellowes.

James Fellowes is the third generation owner, a descendant of Harry Fellowes who started the company in 1917 with $50 making Banker’s Boxes. Before the recent takeover in China the company employed 2,700 workers in 16 countries, including 625 in the U.S.

It introduced its patented line of paper shredders in 1982, and in an attempt to cut costs it was an early entrant to the China manufacturing scene.

Fellowes, the man and the company, won’t talk about the case except for a public Congressional testimony. But The Epoch Times spoke with a number of people familiar with the matter, under condition of anonymity because of political sensitivities involved.
Joint Venture

In 1998 a former Fellowes employee struck a deal with a company called Jinsen, in Changzhou, China, to manufacture paper shredders. Later a second business, called Jinxun, was formed. In the beginning they made a cheaper line of shredders.

Both companies are owned by the Zhou family, specifically the two brothers Zhou Liqun and Zhou Licheng. The Zhou’s are well connected politically.

Business went well, and in 2006, meaning to expand the enterprise in China, Fellowes established a joint venture with Jiangsu Shinri Machinery Co., Ltd., or just “Shinri,” in Changzhou. Shinri isowned by the Zhou family, part of the New United Group conglomerate, also owned by the Zhou family.

Shinri is one of the largest machine tool manufacturers in China, and the conglomerate also includes companies like Jiangsu Xinyu-Wind Power Equipment Co., Ltd., one of the largest domestic producers of wind power equipment.

Joint ventures are one of the ways that foreign firms can do business in China, often understood as the price of market entry. The Chinese side typically provides the land, labor, and local contacts, while the foreigners provide the tools and know-how.

The two manufacturers, Jinsen and Jinxun, would continue churning out shredders with the Fellowes’ name, using Fellowes’ proprietary machinery, while Fellowes controlled both those companies because it appointed the management, according to the terms of the joint venture agreements.

With business stable, Fellowes poured money into research and development in the United States and China, upgrading the engineering finesse that makes the products “The World’s Toughest Shredders.”

Things went smoothly for three years. High-quality shredders flowed out of Changzhou and money flowed into Illinois. The joint venture also stipulated the generous remuneration of over 100 percent on investment, every year, paid on time to Shinri, according to people familiar with the details of the contract.

At the height of the enterprise Jinsen was making tens of millions of dollars and was allowed to use new product designs and technologies for free. Over 1,600 people were employed.

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/china/american-stationary-giant-brought-to-its-knees-in-china-54204.html

BarneyFag
21st April 2011, 07:30 PM
Sounds good to me.

mick silver
21st April 2011, 08:11 PM
move your company to china then cry . i hope the mother f go to jail there

Uncle Salty
21st April 2011, 08:16 PM
Tough titties Mr. Fellowes. You play with fire, you get burned.

optionT
21st April 2011, 08:19 PM
They got greedy and moved their operations to China and gave a big FU to the American people!

Screw em!

Spectrism
21st April 2011, 08:23 PM
I have to agree. MANY greedy SOBs took their plants, technology, contacts, -all trade secrets over to China and literally GAVE them away in a country where spying and stealing trade secrets was commonplace. I have no sympathy for Fellowes either. I bet he left behind many ex-employees who are raising a beer in toast to the thieves you showed Fellowes what karma is all about.

There is probably an endless list of such companies... and some with real dangerous technology. China was GIVEN everything that we worked hard for. The blessing bestowed by God upon America were pissed into the sewage ditches of the world.

Cobalt
21st April 2011, 08:27 PM
Gets ripped off in China and then whines to CONgress about it :oo-->

Glass
21st April 2011, 08:29 PM
should have followed the IBM and GE overseas investment model. Never get the whole thing manufactured and assembled in the same place. Get parts manufactured in one country and have assembly done in another. This way you can control the technology and related IP. Have seen this done before and they (chinese) have been doing this a long time.

Uncle Salty
21st April 2011, 09:02 PM
should have followed the IBM and GE overseas investment model. Never get the whole thing manufactured and assembled in the same place. Get parts manufactured in one country and have assembly done in another. This way you can control the technology and related IP. Have seen this done before and they (chinese) have been doing this a long time.


Yep, Motorola got boned big time the the Chicoms.

silver solution
21st April 2011, 11:36 PM
There is probably an endless list of such companies... and some with real dangerous technology. China was GIVEN everything that we worked hard for. The blessing bestowed by God upon America were pissed into the sewage ditches of the world.
By the fake joo banker, gangsters.

ShortJohnSilver
22nd April 2011, 07:04 AM
Fake crying - what probably happened was that his company was insured via Eximbank or whatnot and the place was "stolen" all the while Fellowes gets paid back by the American government (read: taxpayer). Could even have had some money under the table as a component ...

Read this summary from 1999: http://www.fpif.org/reports/export-import_bank

Ever read the book Dune by Frank Herbert? When thinking about international deals, remember the Harkonnen and their "plots within plots" and "wheels within wheels" strategy.

What good is an office supply company that sells to the USA when the USA economy is tanking?

gunDriller
22nd April 2011, 07:08 AM
Tough titties Mr. Fellowes. You play with fire, you get burned.


well, with all that shredded paper, he will have plenty of tinder 8)

keehah
22nd April 2011, 10:16 AM
Easy money; for a few years. Now a future that even if they still have the skill to rebuild in America they will never compete on price.

http://floweroftheheart.wordpress.com/2011/04/08/fellowes-american-stationery-giant-brought-to-its-knees-in-china/
Things went smoothly for three years. High-quality shredders flowed out of Changzhou and money flowed into Illinois. The joint venture also stipulated the generous remuneration of over 100 percent on investment, every year, paid on time to Shinri, according to people familiar with the details of the contract...

Fellowes has mostly written off the China business, and is starting another manufacturing facility in Illinois.