Activist investor Icahn sells nearly a third of his
Occidental Petroleum stake
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[November 09, 2019] By
Jennifer Hiller
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Activist investor Carl
Icahn, who has been waging a bitter battle against Occidental Petroleum
Corp's board over its $38 billion acquisition of Anadarko Petroleum, cut
his holdings in the oil and gas producer by nearly a third, according to
an open letter to shareholders released on Friday.
Icahn has opposed the deal as "hugely overpriced" and a misplaced
bet-the-company gamble on oil prices rising, and urged Occidental's
board to instead put the company on the market.
Icahn sold 10 million shares and now holds 23 million shares, valued
around $900 million, he said. He had owned a $1.6 billion stake in
Occidental as of May 30.
Occidental bought rival Anadarko in August for $38 billion despite
investor opposition to the deal, which did not go to an Occidental
shareholder vote for approval.
Occidental did not respond immediately to a request for comment. Its
shares traded at $39.90, up 2.2% on Friday.
It plans to slash spending next year by 40% and cut back on production
goals in order to meet dividend and debt payments, it disclosed Monday
when it released third quarter financial results.
Icahn wants to replace board members, have the company accelerate asset
sales, and in court is seeking documents related to the deal.
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Billionaire activist-investor Carl Icahn gives an interview on FOX
Business Network's Neil Cavuto show in New York, U.S. on February
11, 2014. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Replacing the company's leadership would cause its value to "meaningfully
increase," Icahn said in an interview on Friday. Icahn declined to say how much
he lost on the sale of the 10 million Occidental shares.
The company has lost $21 billion in market cap since the deal was rumored, his
shareholder letter said. He plans a proxy fight against the board.
Icahn and Occidental are battling in a Delaware court over the release of
documents relating to the Anadarko deal.
A letter to a judge earlier this week said Icahn wants to know, "whether the
actions of the directors and management were just serious mistakes or whether
they represented knowing intentional breaches of fiduciary duty similar to those
seen with Enron, Worldcom and other failed companies."
(Reporting by Jennifer Hiller, Editing by Franklin Paul and Marguerita Choy)
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