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		Shareholders take aim at Murdochs with 
		Fox voting rights push 
		
		 
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		 [November 15, 2017] 
		By Ross Kerber 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - A shareholder proposal 
		calling for Twenty-First Century Fox Inc to do away with its dual-class 
		share structure may inflict a symbolic black eye on the media company's 
		founder Rupert Murdoch and his family at its annual meeting on 
		Wednesday. 
		 
		Strong fund manager support for the measure, which is advisory and would 
		not force the company to change anything, would nevertheless signal 
		investor dissatisfaction with the Murdoch family's grip on the company 
		as filings show Fox has lost a longstanding shareholder ally in Saudi 
		Arabia's Kingdom Holding. 
		 
		At the same time, its Fox News division is recovering from a series of 
		costly sexual harassment settlements, an issue that has slowed Britain's 
		regulatory review of the company's bid to take over broadcaster Sky Plc. 
		 
		To add to the turmoil, Fox has recently talked to Walt Disney Co about 
		selling much of itself, according to a CNBC report. 
		
		
		  
		
		The proposed new voting structure is aimed at beefing up investor 
		oversight over Murdoch and his sons Lachlan and James, who are all Fox 
		board members. The proposal has the support of influential proxy 
		advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services but is opposed by Fox. 
		 
		The shareholder meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. (1800 GMT) on Wednesday 
		in Los Angeles. 
		 
		The majority of Fox shares traded publicly are class A shares, which 
		have no voting rights. The Murdoch family owns about 39 percent of the 
		class B voting shares, according to the company's proxy. 
		 
		Major mutual fund firms have been pushing the importance of equal voting 
		rights as a way to improve the way companies are run, a shift that may 
		give the reform proposal at Fox a boost, according to corporate 
		governance experts. 
		 
		"I would expect the large institutions would support it," said Charles 
		Elson, a professor at the University of Delaware who follows corporate 
		governance, of the shareholder resolution. 
		 
		A Fox spokesman referred to the board's opposition statement in its 
		proxy which says the current voting structure helps focus on long-term 
		business strategy and helps attract and retain employees. It also says 
		the board is sufficiently independent. 
		 
		Mario Gabelli, a top 25 holder of Fox voting shares, feigned snoring at 
		the Reuters Global Investment Summit on Wednesday in New York when asked 
		if he expected the reform to pass. 
		 
		"The guy (Rupert Murdoch) has 40 percent of the vote and the ISSs of the 
		world are going to do absolutely nothing," said Gabelli. 
		 
		
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			Actress Anjelica Huston, media mogul Rupert Murdoch and model Jerry 
			Hall. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok 
            
			  
			TOO MUCH POWER 
			 
			A similar proposal calling for a single share class came close to 
			getting a majority in 2015 at Fox’s sister company News Corp. 
			 
			Fund executives worry technology initial public offerings like that 
			of Snap Inc, which offered outside investors no voting rights, 
			concentrate too much power in the hands of insiders. 
			 
			Among big fund shareholders of Fox, representatives of BlackRock 
			Inc, State Street Corp and T. Rowe Price Group Inc declined to 
			comment on how they planned to vote at Fox. Each backed a similar 
			measure at News Corp in 2016, according to researcher Proxy Insight. 
			Each has expressed concerns about voting rights in general. 
			 
			The Murdoch family will not be able to count on a traditional ally 
			in the vote, Saudi Arabia's Kingdom Holding Co, listed as having 6.6 
			percent of the Class B shares in a 2015 proxy, but not listed as a 
			major shareholder in the current proxy. 
			 
			The company said in a 2016 press release that its previous chief 
			executive, billionaire Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal, had a "strategic 
			alliance" with Rupert Murdoch. But the prince is among dozens of top 
			Saudis detained recently by the country's Crown Prince Mohammed bin 
			Salman. Kingdom Holding did not respond to e-mailed questions this 
			week. 
			 
			Elson and others cautioned that even if the advisory measure 
			received a majority of shares voted it might not lead to a 
			restructuring, a sign of Murdoch's control. 
			
			
			  
			
			Laura Campos, a director at the Nathan Cummings Foundation, which 
			sponsored the motion for revamped voting rights, said even though 
			the measure is advisory, it would pressure Fox leaders if it won a 
			majority. 
			 
			"Scandals tend to make investors more supportive of proposals asking 
			for improved corporate governance," Campos said. 
			 
			(Reporting by Ross Kerber; Editing by Anna Driver and Bill Rigby) 
			
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