Adam Jeffery | CNBC
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/06/27/billionaire-carl-icahn-steps-up-his-fight-with-occidental-over-anadarko-deal-wants-4-board-seats.html
- Carl Icahn ratcheted up his fight with Occidental Petroleum over its pending purchase of rival Anadarko Petroleum by calling for a special shareholder meeting where he hopes to win board seats.
- Icahn said he planned to oust and replace four Occidental directors and change the company’s charter through a stockholder consent solicitation to prevent it from ever engineering a similar takeover again.
- Occidental said it will review the latest materials filed by Icahn, and looks forward to addressing them in ongoing conversations with shareholders.
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn on Wednesday ratcheted up his fight with Occidental Petroleum over its pending purchase of rival Anadarko Petroleum by calling for a special shareholder meeting where he hopes to win board seats.
In
a regulatory filing, Icahn said he planned to oust and replace four
Occidental directors and change the company’s charter through a
stockholder consent solicitation to prevent it from ever engineering a
similar takeover again.
Responding to the filing, Occidental said it will review the latest
materials filed by Icahn, and looks forward to addressing them in
ongoing conversations with shareholders.
Icahn, one of industry’s
most powerful activist investors, cast himself as one of the deal’s most
fervent critics by charging that Occidental’s $38 billion bid for
Anadarko was too expensive and could endanger Occidental’s future if oil
prices sink.
The deal has been approved by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and is expected to close in the second half of the year.
Icahn’s
move on Wednesday put fresh pressure on Occidental’s management and
Chief Executive Vicki Hollub at a critical time and has sparked
speculation that Occidental may try to settle with him.
“It is
important to add new directors to Occidental’s Board of Directors to
oversee future extraordinary transactions like the Anadarko transaction
and to ensure that they are not consummated without stockholder approval
when appropriate,” Icahn said in a statement to shareholders on Wednesday.
Icahn owned a $1.6 billion stake in Occidental as of May 30.
While
the move was notable, it hardly came as a surprise as Icahn had been
hinting for weeks that he might push for a special meeting where other
shareholders would be able to express their frustration with management.
In
May he sued Occidental in Delaware court, and earlier this week he went
out of his way to criticize the Occidental-Anadarko deal while
discussing the merger of major casino operators Caesars Entertainment and Eldorado Resorts.
“The recent Occidental Petroleum fiasco is a great example of how CEOs
and boards will go to great lengths, including ‘betting the company’ to
serve their own agendas,” Icahn said in a statement about the
Caesars-Eldorado merger. “If their bet is successful, they and possibly
their shareholders win, but if it is unsuccessful, only the shareholders
lose.”
While Icahn has said publicly that the Occidental-Anadarko
deal likely would not be derailed, his filing illustrates how he wants
to make sure that nothing similar happens again.
He said
Occidental lacks effective corporate governance and that its directors
made mistakes in how and at what cost they pursued the acquisition of
Anadarko, according to the filing.
Icahn is calling on the board to set a record date to determine which shareholders could petition to hold a special meeting.
The oil and gas producer’s bid for Anadarko topped one by Chevron and includes a $10 billion financing deal with Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.
The
merger of the two U.S. shale producers would increase Occidental’s debt
to around $40 billion. Icahn, in his lawsuit filed in Delaware Court of
Chancery in May, sought access to the oil producer’s financial records
and details of negotiations.
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