Billionaire investor Ackman loses bitter ADP proxy
battle
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[November 08, 2017]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
ROSELAND, N.J. (Reuters) - William Ackman
got what Automatic Data Processing Inc's <ADP.O> chief executive called
an "ass-whipping" on Tuesday as the activist hedge fund manager lost an
acrimonious fight to win seats on the payroll company's board.
It was the latest in a string of public defeats for Ackman, who raised
$500 million from investors to take a stake in ADP. Some of Ackman's
backers have told Reuters they are considering pulling their money from
his funds.
Fewer than 25 percent of votes were cast in favor of Ackman's slate of
three directors looking to shake up the company in the proxy contest,
which became a three-month-long showdown between the billionaire
investor and ADP CEO Carlos Rodriguez.
Ackman arrived at the company's annual shareholder meeting at its
Roseland, New Jersey, headquarters looking relaxed. He helped himself to
a pastry, then took a seat in the fourth row with his associates, a few
feet away from an anxious-looking Rodriguez, seated alone.
The mood changed after the vote tally was announced.
Reading from prepared remarks, Ackman faulted the proxy voting system
but accepted defeat. "We came in peace," he began, later shaking
Rodriguez's hand.
Rodriguez got in the last word. "This was an ass-whipping," he told
Ackman and the assembled shareholders.
BITTER BARBS
Over the last few months, Ackman and ADP had traded increasingly bitter
barbs through securities filings, television appearances, conference
calls, webcasts and private meetings with investors.
Ackman said management complacency had turned ADP into an inefficient
corporate slugabed pushing outmoded products that even a top sales force
could not sell. ADP countered that Ackman brought no new ideas to the
table, risked disrupting the company's steady path to growth and behaved
like a "spoiled brat."
ADP's stock was up 0.8 percent at $112.17 in early trading after the
vote results were announced.
Ackman launched the ADP proxy contest as an underdog, taking aim at a
company engaged in the unglamorous business of providing human resources
technology and largely backed by Wall Street. ADP's share price has more
than doubled under Rodriguez's tenure, and the company has posted
relatively solid earnings growth.
Ackman had asked ADP shareholders to approve his proposal to seat three
new directors, including himself, and oust three others, including
Chairman John Jones. He has also suggested Rodriguez is the wrong person
for the job, and called for the departure of ADP's technology chief,
Stuart Sackman.
INVESTOR UNREST
Several of Ackman's Pershing Square investors who spoke to Reuters in
the run-up to the ADP vote said the outcome would affect their
confidence in his investment ability.
Ackman, 51, made a name for himself during the 2007-2009 financial
crisis with a public and aggressive bet against bond insurer MBIA Inc <MBI.N>.
He has made similarly contentious investments in or against companies
ranging from retailers Target Corp <TGT.N> and JC Penney Co Inc <JCP.N>
to Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd <CP.TO>.
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William 'Bill' Ackman, CEO and Portfolio Manager of Pershing Square
Capital Management, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in
New York City, U.S., May 8, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Although the average annual returns for Pershing Square's core fund are
15 percent since its inception in 2004, Ackman racked up double-digit
losses in 2015 and 2016 after a 37 percent gain in 2014.
Bets on Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc <VRX.TO>, Herbalife
Ltd <HLF.N> and more recently Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc <CMG.N> have
all weighed on returns. So far this year, the fund is barely in the
black, compared with a 15 percent rise in the S&P 500 Index and a
roughly 6 percent gain for the average hedge fund.
On Tuesday, Kevin Walkush, a portfolio manager at Jensen Investment
Management, said the firm had cast about 1 million votes in favor of ADP
management, and has since sold some shares based on their rising value.
Walkush said Ackman deserved credit for pushing ADP to disclose more
details on its margins and other areas. But the portfolio manager said
the company’s strategy was sound as it revamps its sales force and
migrates to the cloud.
“He seemed late to the party,” Walkush said of Ackman. “His expectations
to us seemed unrealistic.”
MORE AGITATING
Among major investors, spokespeople for Vanguard Group and State Street
Corp <STT.N> declined to comment on how they voted their ADP shares. A
person familiar with the vote said funds run by BlackRock Inc <BLK.N>
supported at least one of Ackman’s nominees.
Ackman's Pershing Square owns almost 2 percent of ADP's common shares,
making it the seventh-largest voting shareholder, according to Thomson
Reuters data. When counting unexercised options, the value of the stake
is roughly $2.3 billion.
After the meeting, Ackman said he was disappointed but felt he had
accomplished a lot. He has said he will continue agitating for change.
"The company, in order to win, made a number of very significant
commitments to shareholders about growth," he said. "If they achieve
those objectives and they exceed them, then I think shareholders will be
happy, the stock will go up. If they don’t, we’ll be back next year."
Rodriguez played down Ackman's influence and said he was insulted by how
Ackman had characterized ADP and its employees. Despite having little
knowledge of the company, he was able to get media attention with his
remarks, the CEO told Reuters.
"This is all about who had the best narrative, who has the best hair,"
Rodriguez said.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Roseland, New Jersey; Additional
reporting by Ross Kerber and Svea Herbst in Boston; Writing by Lauren
Tara LaCapra; Editing by Bill Rigby and Colleen Jenkins)
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