Woman-led activist hedge fund scores victory at
AstroNova
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[April 05, 2018]
By Liana B. Baker
(Reuters) - Ides Capital, one of only two
U.S. activist hedge funds run by a woman, was partly behind the
appointment of a female independent director this week at U.S.
industrial technology company AstroNova Inc, people familiar with the
matter said on Wednesday.
AstroNova did not disclose the role of Ides when it announced on Tuesday
that it would add Stallergenes Greer Plc board director Yvonne Schlaeppi
to its own board, while two of its oldest directors by age, Graeme
MacLetchie and Everett Pizzuti, will retire from the board.
Four of the company's six directors will now be independent.
Ides Capital privately nominated a "diverse" slate of directors to
AstroNova's board last month, but it will likely not pursue a proxy
fight following the changes to the board this week, the sources said,
asking not to be named because the discussions were private.
The hedge fund also sent a letter to the company's board last month
urging AstroNova to improve its corporate governance by adding
independent and diverse board members and strengthening its board
succession plans.
Ides will remain a shareholder and continue to push for changes at the
company, the sources said. The size of its stake in AstroNova could not
be learned.
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A representative for Ides declined to comment. AstroNova could not be reached
for comment.
AstroNova shares closed 1 percent higher on Wednesday at $16.10, giving the
Rhode Island-based company a market capitalization of $108.9 million.
Ides Capital, co-founded in 2015 by Dianne McKeever, a former Barington Capital
partner, is one of only three activist hedge funds globally that is headed by a
woman, according to research firm Activist Insight.
Washington-based Cartica Capital, which focuses on emerging markets investing,
is the only woman-led activist firm, Activist Insight said.
Ides Capital on its LinkedIn page describes itself as seeking to "constructively
engage with management teams and corporate boards to improve corporate
governance practices."
Ides' most well known investment was in 2016 when it waged a proxy fight with
airplane wireless provider Boingo Wireless Inc. It settled after Boingo added
three independent directors to its board.
(Reporting by Liana B. Baker in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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