Investor Peltz, corporate doctor, pushes Disney to take bitter pill
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[January 13, 2023] By
Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Dawn Chmielewski
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire activist investor Nelson Peltz often
presents himself as a partner with constructive advice for corporations
and in 2019 Walt Disney Co Chief Executive Bob Iger was eager to hear
his ideas.
But in 2023, Iger, who came out of retirement in November to again lead
the media giant after a 66% decline in quarterly profit, does not want
Peltz as a Disney director. Still, the fund manager has a compelling
case to push for change, with Disney's stock price down 36% over the
last 52 weeks.
Weeks of discussion last year ended with Disney denying Peltz's request
for a board seat leaving the parties embroiled in what bankers and
lawyers say may become one the most expensive and explosive proxy
contests in recent history.
Longtime Disney CEO Iger returned late last year to help stanch losses
from the fledgeling streaming service Disney+. Three years ago, Iger had
invited Peltz to speak to Disney's board about his philosophy, Peltz's
firm Trian Fund Management said and a source close to Disney confirmed.
At that time Trian did not own Disney stock.
Then Trian amassed a 0.5% stake in Disney last year and Peltz wanted a
bigger voice and vote after criticizing capital spending, past
acquisitions and a bungled succession plan.
When he requested a board seat, Disney balked and instead offered an
"information sharing agreement." This would let Peltz speak with the
management team and the board but not have a vote as a director.
Iger and other directors agree Disney needs to cut costs, and many cuts
have already been announced. They say they want to continue the dialogue
with Peltz but expressed concern that had not made concrete suggestions
to address the problems he identified, people familiar with the
company's thinking said.
Media analyst Michael Nathanson agreed with Peltz and wrote in a note
that "many of Disney's wounds are self-inflicted," but expressed
confidence in Iger's ability to "make the difficult decisions" required
to improve Disney's long-term profitability.
Peltz and his colleagues mostly negotiate for changes out of the
limelight and have been invited by 15 companies, including Unilever Plc
and Invesco Ltd, to join the board. Peltz himself has served on 11
boards. At three -- Procter & Gamble, H.J. Heinz and DuPont de Nemours
-- Trian waged boardroom battles that went to a vote where all investors
got a say on whether Trian should have a seat.
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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
While those three companies worked hard to keep Trian out, their
CEOs later lauded the firm's collaborative efforts and insights.
Mostly Peltz's medicine worked as Trian said companies where he was
on the board outperformed the broader S&P 500 stock index by 9%
during his tenure.
For Disney, however, Peltz may be an especially aggravating
activist, arriving shortly after Third Point's billionaire founder
Daniel Loeb showed up again last year. Disney and Loeb engaged in
conversations and the two sides quickly agreed to add media
executive Carolyn Everson to the Disney board.
FASTER FASTER
Many times activist investors push corporations for changes the
company may already be considering. But they want management to act
faster and more broadly.
Indeed Peltz may be betting the playbook he used at P&G will work at
Disney too. This includes updating aging brands, simplifying
bureaucracy and bringing along binders of information and data to
find new ways of doing things.
With Disney's stock swooning, investors are unhappy and may be ready
to back Peltz in a vote, investors and advisers who are not
permitted to speak publicly said on Thursday.
Firms including T.Rowe Price, Legal & General Investment Management,
Nuveen and Dimensional Fund Advisors are invested in Disney and are
invested in P&G as well where they saw shares climb with Peltz on
the board.
In his current battle, Peltz may be helped by new U.S. regulations
that allow investors to see all director candidates on a so-called
universal proxy card. Bankers and lawyers say this process may make
it easier for activists like Peltz to win at least one board seat at
an election. This is because investors can now pick and choose
instead of selecting either all of the activist's choices or the
company choices.
"Even though Disney has publicly rebuffed Peltz's agenda, this proxy
battle is likely to cause more ripples," said Paul Verna, principal
analyst at Insider Intelligence. "In the current climate, with
Disney's stock underperforming the market and a slew of unfavorable
economic conditions and business dynamics, Peltz may have more
leverage to force Disney's hand."
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss with additional reporting by Dawn
Chmielewski in Los Angeles and Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru; Editing by
David Gregorio)
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