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Icahn, who has a long history of challenging the decisions of corporate boards and management, sounded unbowed Friday. "We are not satisfied," he said in a statement. "We believe that an increase of a mere 13 cents is an insult to shareholders. And promising shareholders an additional 8-cent dividend that we were already entitled to, and pretending that it is some sort of gift, is a further slap in the face." In exchange for ensuring shareholders will receive the extra money, Michael Dell and Silver Lake received a key concession. Dell's board agreed that the deal can go through as long as it gains support from a majority of votes cast, excluding Michael Dell's nearly 16 percent stake in the company. The original bid required a majority of all outstanding stock excluding Michael Dell's stake, a provision that meant that abstentions counted as a part of the opposition. Last week, Michael Dell estimated that about 27 percent of the shares eligible to vote hadn't submitted ballots leading up to the previously scheduled meetings on the deal. Those would have been counted as "no" had the vote been formally recorded. Dell's board also changed the voting eligibility. All shareholders holding company stock as of Aug. 13 can cast ballots. Before, the cutoff date was June 3. The change creates a new pool of voters, including many investors who bought the stock in the past few months and stand to profit from the sweetened offer. Long-time shareholders, though, won't be as fortunate because they bought their stock during better times for Dell. The shares have plunged by more than 40 percent since Michael Dell returned for a second stint as CEO in 2007, largely because the company has had trouble adapting to a technological shift that has caused PC sales to fall as more people use smartphones and tablets to connect to the Internet and handle other common computing tasks. Vince Dungan is among the Dell shareholders who don't like the idea of selling out to Michael Dell and Silver Lake. A shareholder since 1998, Dungan said after Friday's brief meeting that it makes more sense to reject the buyout offer and benefit from a potential turnaround as the company expands into more profitable areas of technology while lessening its dependence on PCs. Even under the latest offer, Dungan figures he would lose about $160,000 on his original investment in the company. "What about the stockholders that have been invested in the company all these years? We're losing money. Lots of money," said Dungan, 66. "I've been holding it for 15 years. What's a few more years?" Michael Dell is also betting that the company can bounce back, but he doesn't want to try to do it while the stock is being traded publicly. He foresees the company going through a painful transition likely to lower its earnings for several years, something that will be easier to endure if Dell Inc. doesn't have to cater to Wall Street's fixation on short-term results. If the proposed buyout goes through, the company will become privately held for the first time in 25 years. The latest deal came about a week after Michael Dell described the $13.75 per share offer as his "best and final" proposal. Patrick Moorhead, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, said Michael Dell's willingness to take things a step further shows how badly he wants a chance to revive the company. "It's his name on the sign, a part of his legacy," Moorhead said. "So, he is going to put everything he has on the table to take control."
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