A policy of returning 100 per cent of profits to the business empowered Power Farming Group to achieve overseas expansion and annual revenue of $400 million, director Brett Maber says.
Maber, guest speaker at the annual meeting of the Institute of Directors Waikato and third-generation shareholder of the family-owned tractor sales sector heavyweight, later said Power Farming had made bold decisions and taken calculated risks in expanding within New Zealand, into Australia and last year the United States, but its confidence had been backed by a strong balance sheet.
The Morrinsville, Waikato-based independent tractor and machinery sales company started in 1948 as Maber Motors, a one-man operation from which his grandfather, Laurie Maber, sold and serviced tractors and implements to the local farming community.
In 1977, Laurie's son Geoff, who joined the business on leaving school, formed a separate wholesale company called Power Farming after securing the rights to distribute a revolutionary 4-wheel drive Japanese-made tractor in New Zealand.
Against all expectations, it sold like hot cakes.