Compania General De Tabacos De Filipinas
He was a financial genius who parlayed his work adventures in Cuba and Latin America into a steamship companies and trading businesses. He was the most influential Spanish businessman of his generation and counted the Prime Minister and the King as his personal friends.
Tabacalera was a private enterprise he founded with the sole intention of taking over the Philippine Tobacco Monopoly from the Spanish colonial government. Its incorporators were the Sociedad General de Credito Inmobiliario Español, Banque de Paris and Bank of the Netherlands. It was founded to take over the tobacco factories that the Spanish government possessed in the islands, as well as to develop agriculture, trade, and industry.
Tabacalera was one of the oldest leaf tobacco dealers in the world and the first Spanish trading company to be quoted on the stock exchange of both Madrid and Barcelona.
Tabacalera dedicated itself to exporting tobacco from the Philippines to the Spanish Tobacco Monopoly. During its heyday, Tabacalera exercised almost monopolistic control over the whole Philippine tobacco leaf industry. It took over 5 tobacco plants from the colonial government but soon opened a start of the art factory in 1895 called La Flor de la Isabela.
It opened distribution and logistics operations to sort, trade, and prepare tobacco and acquired properties in San Antonio, Santa Isabel and San Luis in Cagayan Valley. It also established a shipping company Compañia Transatlantica and Tabacalera Insurance Co..
It expanded into many non-tobacco activities and grew rapidly until the Philippine Revolution of 1898. With the American colonial government as a new master in the Philippines, Tabacalera lost its special status in the island and had to adjust to the competitive pressures of the world market.
Nevertheless, it expanded into abacca, copra, sugar, interisland shipping and liquor. It established Hacienda Luisita and founded La Flor de la Isabela, one of the biggest cigar factories in the world. After World War I, it plowed its investments into sugar milling and rice trading. It enjoyed a boom in revenues and profits even as its tobacco exports declined, which its sugar and copra businesses more than made up for. It became the Philippines' biggest sugar and coconut exporter. At its peak, it became the biggest Philippine employer. Hacienda Luisita alone employed more than 6,000 Filipino and 200 Spanish nationals.
From 1900 to 1940 Tabacalera's fortunes went boom and bust with the Philippine economy and was subjected to the many sugar quotas imposed by the US Congress. At the end of World War II the company's installations were destroyed, but slowly the businesses were rebuilt. From the 1950s to the 1970s, Tabacalera experimented with expanding into other international regions such as Latin America, France, and Indonesia.
Its main lines of business were the export of tobacco to Algeria, Belgium, Morocco, Switzerland, Germany and Spain, the cultivation of sugar cane (centered in San Carlos, Negros and the Central Azucarera in Basi, Negros, import-export between southeast Asia and Europe, and the representation of European products in the Philippines, such as Renault, General Electrica Española and Sociedad Española de Construccion Naval, among other.
Unlike other American trading companies, Tabacalera specialized in dealing with dark air-cured tobacco, an increasingly difficult product to market in the competition of light Virginia leaf offered by American companies. Its near monopoly position in the Philippines and its hegemony over the economy (at one time, Tabacalera duties supplied more than 30% of Philippine government revenues) deteriorated rapidly past the 1970s.
Tabacalera's operations in Barcelona were eventually bought out by Altadis and the Spanish company ceased operations as an independent company. Tabacalera's operations in the Philippines are much reduced and are headquartered in Romualdez Street, Manila.
Being the leading Philippine company of its day,
Tabacalera sponsored many cultural activities. It established many
schools for its workers. It collected ethnological items for the famous
1887 Exposition General de las Islas Filipinas in Madrid, Spain. In 1883
it created the most magnificent Filipiniana library in its headquarters
in Ramblas Barcelona, with no other than the leading bibliographer of
the day Wenceslao E. Retana.