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		After P&G revamp, activist investor Peltz moves on to Unilever
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		 [May 31, 2022]  By 
		Sachin Ravikumar and Richa Naidu 
 (Reuters) -Billionaire activist Nelson 
		Peltz will join the board of Unilever, the consumer goods giant said on 
		Tuesday, heaping pressure on the maker of Dove soap and Hellmann's 
		mayonnaise as it reviews its strategy.
 
 Shares in the London-listed group jumped 7% as it said Peltz, whose 
		hedge fund Trian has built up a 1.5% stake in Unilever, will join as a 
		non-executive director from July and serve as a member of the board's 
		compensation committee.
 
 It is Peltz's latest intervention in a major consumer goods company and 
		he is likely to push Unilever for a bigger revamp of strategy after an 
		unsuccessful 50-billion-pound ($63-billion) bid to buy GSK's consumer 
		healthcare arm in January, Unilever's third attempt.
 
 "We look forward to working collaboratively with management and the 
		board to help drive Unilever's strategy, operations, sustainability, and 
		shareholder value," Peltz said in a statement.
 
 Unilever investors have been disappointed by the company's lacklustre 
		share performance, the botched attempts to buy GSK's consumer products 
		business and for focusing on sustainability more than financial 
		performance.
 
 
		
		 
		Peltz, who runs New York-based Trian, is known for his interest in 
		consumer-oriented firms and proposing operational changes at the hedge 
		fund's portfolio companies. He has previously been on the boards of 
		Procter & Gamble Co and Mondelez.
 
 Analysts and Unilever investors welcomed Peltz's appointment, saying the 
		billionaire could revamp company culture and financial performance, 
		particularly in his role on the compensation committee.
 
 "I think it's fantastic news," Jack Martin, fund manager at Unilever 
		shareholder Oberon Investments, said. Fellow Unilever investor Waverton 
		Investment Management also welcomed the news.
 
 "Nelson Peltz is a man with extensive experience of taking activist 
		stakes in some of the largest consumer companies in the world and has 
		been enormously successful doing so," Martin added.
 
 RETURN OF THE P&G PLAYBOOK
 
 Unilever has already taken some steps to cut costs by consolidating its 
		headquarters in London and getting rid of some slower growing businesses 
		like its Lipton tea brand.
 
 
		
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			 Nelson Peltz founding partner of Trian Fund Management LP. speak at 
			the WSJD Live conference in Laguna Beach, California October 25, 
			2016. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo 
            
			
			 
The company, which employs about 148,000 people worldwide, has also said it 
plans to cut about 1,500 management jobs in a restructuring to create five 
product-focused divisions - a revamp that echoes P&G's reshaping three years 
ago.
 "We have held extensive and constructive discussions with him and the Trian team 
and believe that Nelson's experience in the global consumer goods industry will 
be of value to Unilever," Unilever chairman Nils Andersen said.
 
 Trian is now Unilever's fourth largest shareholder, according to Refinitiv data.
 
 Investors will be hoping Peltz will bring the playbook that worked at 
Cincinnati-based P&G to Unilever, helping to streamline the company and revive 
its share price.
 
In 2017, the activist investor called for a slew of changes at P&G, after which 
Peltz joined its board in March 2018 following a months-long proxy fight.
 P&G's stock price has risen nearly 90% since then. He left the board last year.
 
 Shares in Unilever have slumped well below their 2020 pandemic lows this year 
and are still down 30% from an all-time high reached in 2019.
 
 "Most of his (Peltz's) actions will count as 'back to basics': investing in 
innovation, fixing incentive schemes, accelerating the pace of acquisitions and 
disposals, etc," Bernstein analyst Bruno Monteyne said.
 
 
Monteyne said the most "Trian-unique element of the P&G plan was his proposal to 
split P&G into independent operating units" and doing so at Unilever would "make 
a lot more sense".
 ($1 = 0.7931 pounds)
 
 (1 euro = $1.0734)
 
 (Reporting by Sachin Ravikumar in Bengaluru and Richa Naidu in London; 
Additional reporting by Anna Pruchnicka in Gdansk; Editing by Uttaresh.V, Sherry 
Jacob-Phillips and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
 
				 
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