Foundation In early 1848, the
receivers of De Bruyn en Zonen concluded that a liquidation of the company by selling its assets, would lead to very high losses for its creditors. The most probable reason would be that its specialized buildings and machinery and its sugar in stock, could not be sold for the price at which they were on the
balance sheet. Furthermore, the NTS had secured its credit by a mortgage on De Bruyn's two big refineries, so the prospects for the other creditors were worse than the balance sheet alone suggested. On 7 December 1849 the contract to found the company was signed in Amsterdam. The new company issued 2,800 shares of ƒ1,000 each. The list of shareholders was headed by the Netherlands Trading Society for 462 shares. The brothers Christiaan Hendrik de Bruijn, Martinnus de Bruijn Corneliszoon, and Adrian de Bruijn, who had been partners in Firma C. de Bruyn en Zonen mainly paid for their shares by bringing in: 1) The steam sugar refinery "De Vijf Gebroeders" on the
Looiersgracht and Lijnbaansgracht, consisting of four capital buildings.; 2) The new steam sugar refinery on Osdorp Bastion. Both had been mortgaged to the Netherlands Trading Society for ƒ300,000. The De Bruyn brothers also brought in: 3) A traditional refinery on the Looiersgracht; 4) The warehouse called Cement Molen; 5) the house and warehouse called Oude Magazijn; 6) the warehouse Mercuur; 7) the warehouse Groote Wolbaal; 8) The buildings: De Twee Banen; Het Schild van Frankrijk and Het Huis te Egmond all on the Schans near Passeerderstraat. The management of the company was formed by the three De Bruyn brothers as
directors and Izak Bussemaker Hendrikszoon as president director. Every act of the compagny that required a signature would have to be signed by the president director and one of the other directors. The
supervisory board had five members. Also in 1857 Fa. De Bruyn asked a government permit to found a sugar factory to produce raw sugar from sugar beets. This would become the
Commanditaire Sociëteit voor Landbouw en Industrie onder firma De Bruyn, which founded the first successful beet sugar factory of the Netherlands in
Zevenbergen. This first period of business by NSR ended with the May 1858 shareholders meeting accepting the significant losses by deprecating the nominal value of shares from ƒ1,000 to ƒ350. This brought the
share capital down to ƒ980,000. The original proposal had been to diminish this to ƒ700,000, and so the shareholders put it ƒ280,000 higher. A judge would later rule that the higher number caused the balance asset buildings and machinery to be fictitious for at least ƒ158,000.
In business (1858–1874) 1858 was also the year that the situation turned around. The Amsterdam refineries processed 62,176 tons of raw sugar against 36,425 tons in the previous year. Prices were higher and the NSR employed 320 people. In 1859 and 1860 the amount of raw sugar processed in Amsterdam rose to 64,298 and 76,729 tons. The company was not that successful, because it only processed 13,000 tons in 1860. The relatively low production in 1860 may have been due to the company moving refinery activities from the Looiersgracht to the new refinery on Osdorp bastion in mid 1860. This new refinery had 7 boilers. On 30 July 1860 the steam refinery "De Vijf Gebroeders" was brought to auction in separate lots. In late 1861 some merchants then started the Hollandsche Suikerraffinaderij. They used these buildings for their refinery and office. In 1861, the NSR processed 16,000 tons of raw sugar. In 1860 and 1861 NSR sold its old steam refinery De Vijf Gebroeders on Looiersgracht and (probably) also its less important traditional refinery on Looiersgracht, for a total sum of ƒ158,000. After this sale, the refinery on Osdorp bastion was modernized for ƒ262,000. In 1862, NSR processed 17,000 tons of raw sugar and had 11 steam engines and 8 boilers with a total of 85 hp. In 1863 a new competitor appeared, the Hollandsche Suikerraffinaderij. In 1864 the Dutch production of white sugar rose from 65,250 tons to 88,000 tons, of which 71,500 tons were exported. In 1865 NSR produced as much as in 1864. Over 1866 a dividend of ƒ34 per ƒ350 share was paid. In 1867 production was high, but profits stayed behind. 1868 was also a very busy year in Amsterdam, but the NSR processed 1,000 tons less than in 1867. In 1869 the Amsterdam refineries were also busy, with competitor Hollandsche Suikerraffinaderij processing about 20,000 tons. In 1870 the Dutch sugar industry profited from the absence of the French competition. The NSR produced 'slightly more than the previous year'.
The end (1870–1877) In the early 1870s, major changes in market conditions caused a crisis in the Dutch sugar refining industry. The opening of the
Suez Canal had brought the important Mediterranean customers much closer to the East Indies. On Java, the forced sale of sugar to the
Netherlands Trading Society was abolished in 1872. The protectionist export tariff which supported shipping to a Dutch harbor, was abolished on 1 January 1874. The British import tax on raw sugar was abolished on 1 April 1874. It all led to a major reroute of Java sugar from the Netherlands to harbors in the United Kingdom. While 59% of the Java sugar was shipped to the Netherlands in 1873, this was only 29% in 1874. In absolute terms the Dutch imports also decreased by 30%. In 1874, the competitor Amsterdamsche Stoom Suikerraffinaderij was liquidated after her main refinery had burnt down, and the shareholders did not see enough prospects to rebuild it. February 1874: ƒ181; In February 1875: ƒ88-90; in July 1875: ƒ47; In August 1876: ƒ16-18. On 18 April 1877, the Amsterdam court granted an automatic stay to the NSR. A commission of inquiry was formed to investigate: the 1876 balance sheet, business since 1 January 1877, and the probable causes of the losses. On 23 May 1877 the report of the inquiry was presented in a shareholders meeting, which then refused to approve the balance sheet over 1876 and decided to declare bankruptcy. The report noted many irregularities and bad practices. E.g. assets had not been specified in detail, and had not been deprecated properly. The inquiry turned ugly when it investigated the asset inventory (). The chief operator alone reported about this asset. It supposedly led the directors to report a probable profit of ƒ76,000 on 12 March 1877, only to report a huge loss on 11 April when inventory was found to be surprisingly low. The commission asked the chief operator if he could uphold his reports in good faith. He answered that:
the balance had been inflated somewhat, just like the previous balances. When he repeated this in the presence of the directors, there was no protest, nor notable surprise. The commission therefore made its own computations of the inventory on 1 January 1877. It noted that the balance over 1876 inflated the amount of white sugar in stock and its value by ƒ169,800. It also noted that over 111,770 kg of raw sugar had not been accounted for. The inquiry of the commission summarized its work on the balance of 1876 by stating that assets were ƒ302,550 less than reported, leading to a total loss of ƒ758,000 on 31 December 1876. The commission then went a bit further and also looked at the (already approved) balance sheet of 1875. It noted that this should have specified a total loss of ƒ445,963 on 31 December 1875 instead of just ƒ93,000. In other words: the report of the directors that ƒ450,000 had been lost in the first months of 1877 was not correct, it had been lost over the previous years. == Liability of the management ==