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Icahn says Family Dollar wasting over $300 million in breakup fees
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[August 20, 2014]
By Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn told Reuters
late Monday that efforts by Family Dollar’s board to
fend off competing bids in favor of a deal with Dollar
Tree have resulted in more than $300 million being
needlessly spent on breakup fees. |
Icahn has pushed Family Dollar to sell itself to Dollar General and
has been openly critical of Family Dollar Chief Executive Howard
Levine, who would have retained his position after an acquisition by
Dollar Tree.
On Monday, Dollar General offered to buy Family Dollar Stores for
$8.9 billion, trumping an agreed-to merger with its rival Dollar
Tree and aiming to strengthen its dominance of a growing segment of
retailers serving penny-pinching customers.
Dollar General has also offered to pay the $305 million breakup fee
that would be owed to Dollar Tree if its deal with Family Dollar
were to fall apart.
"This is a quintessential example and a reflection of what is wrong
with Corporate America," Icahn said. "The Family Dollar board is
wasting more than $300 million (in breakup fees to Dollar Tree) in
an attempt to chill a competing bid from Dollar General, which would
keep Howard Levine out of the company once and for all even though
the Dollar General bid would enhance the value of Family Dollar
stock."
Icahn, who in June took a 9.4 percent stake in Family Dollar, had
encouraged Family Dollar to sell itself to Dollar General. On
Monday, Icahn said he was "surprised" by Family Dollar's deal with
Dollar Tree and questioned whether Levine's future role at Dollar
Tree could have influenced the company to go ahead with the deal.
Dollar Tree said last month that Levine would remain as Family
Dollar CEO after the acquisition.
Icahn has cut his stake in Family Dollar to 3.6 percent from 9.4
percent as of July 30.
In a regulatory filing in August, it was revealed that on June 6,
Icahn telephoned Levine to discuss Icahn's stake in Family Dollar
and to express an interest in additional communications with Family
Dollar's management regarding the company's current operations and
future plans, including potential strategic opportunities and
business combination transactions.
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According to the filing, Levine asked Icahn whether he would be
willing to sign a non-disclosure agreement and Icahn declined.
"It appears that Levine and Family Dollar wanted to neutralize me by
getting me to sign a confidentiality agreement," Icahn said. "If
Levine and Family Dollar had gotten me to sign it, that would have
kept me from doing a proxy fight and in my opinion this would have
given Levine 2-3 more years to mismanage the company and keep a
competing bid from materializing. I refused to sign the
confidentiality agreement."
Icahn said: "In my humble opinion, Family Dollar would still be in
the hands of Levine and the board if it had not been for my
activism."
Company officials at Family Dollar declined to comment on Icahn's
remarks.
(Reporting By Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)
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