
The story of Lehman Pipe and Supply broadly mirrors those of many distributors operating across the nation: a family business that gradually grew into something else entirely.
But the particulars of the companyβs journey have been unique from the start β and a new jolt of financing appears poised to take it even further.
βMiamiβs Oldest Family Businessβ
Lehman Pipe and Supply Inc.
Julian Lehman and his wife, Betty β according to the formerβs 2011 obituary β began running Lehman Pipe and Supply the day after Julian left the military following his service in World War II. Funding for the startup, the story continued, came from $2,500 that Betty had saved up, along with βa few dollarsβ that Julian won while βshooting dice on the troopship home.β
Nearly three decades in, the Lehmansβ son, Dennis, joined the business, and in 1980, the company expanded into the wholesale distribution of pipe, valves and fittings. The business focused on local trades and municipalities until the turn of the century, when officials made the decision to expand abroad β serving markets in South America, Central America and the Caribbean.
The past decade, however, saw the most ambitious expansion efforts to date. The company moved into its current home β a 100,000-square-foot distribution hub on Miamiβs far northwest side β in 2017, then bolstered its physical footprint both in South Florida and in its international markets. First came locations in MedellΓn, Colombia, and Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, in early 2020, followed by a Pompano Beach, Florida, hub later in the year and, finally, the opening of its Fort Myers, Florida, location last spring.
The result, company officials said, was a business that evolved into one of the areaβs βdominantβ PVF distributors.
A New Generation of Leadership
Recent changes in the companyβs operations were accompanied by an evolving leadership picture, as well: at the beginning of 2023, Josh Aberman was named Lehmanβs president, succeeding Dennis Lehman after more than three decades at the helm of his parentsβ company.
Lehman Pipe and Supply Inc.
In early September, Lehman announced an agreement with Rotunda Capital Partners, a suburban Chicago private equity firm focused on lower-middle market companies across the industrial, distribution and logistics sectors.
Rather than sell the business outright, however, Rotunda said that it had made an investment in Lehman in partnership with its existing management. The firm said that it had long targeted the PVF distribution sector for investment, and that Lehman possessed many of the characteristics that it had looked for: a strong management team, a reputation for customer service, and a diverse product and customer mix.
Achieving its Full Potential
The addition of a new partner, meanwhile, could allow Lehman to broaden its ambitions even further: pursuing bolt-on acquisitions, and expanding outside its native Florida.
Lehman Pipe and Supply branch, Santo Domingo.Lehman Pipe and Supply Inc.
βTogether with management, we have the opportunity to build a super-regional leader through selective acquisitions and new greenfield locations across the South and Southeast United States,β added Rotunda Managing Partner Dan Lipson. βWe are all aligned on how to invest in the team and operations so that the company can enter new markets and win new business.β
Although Lehmanβs leadership remains in place, the agreement with Rotunda saw John Posey join the company as its executive chairman. Posey, a Rotunda operating executive, previously led operations in the Northeast U.S. for building materials distributor US LBM, and formerly helmed the PVF division at plumbing and industrial supply giant Ferguson.
For Dennis Lehman, who remains a strategic advisor and a member of the companyβs board, the deal meant enabling the company started by his parents to βachieve its full potential.β
βWe never strive to be bigger,β Lehman recently told the American Supply Associationβs Supply House Times. βWe understand that bigger doesnβt make you better, but being better could make you bigger.β