Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Land and Buildings part of group against HBC deal: source

- JAKE EDMISTON

TORONTO Land and Buildings Investment Management LLC is part of a group of minority shareholde­rs intent on blocking a deal to take Hudson’s Bay Co. private, a source confirmed on Friday.

The U.s.-based fund, run by longtime activist shareholde­r Jonathan Litt, has been publicly critical of Richard Baker, HBC’S executive chairman, who is leading the group of majority shareholde­rs pushing to take the ailing retailer off the market.

On Thursday, the private equity firm Catalyst Capital Group Inc., which has also been critical of Baker’s proposal, announced it had enough support to spike the $1.1-billion deal in a vote next month.

But it wasn’t immediatel­y clear who else was part of the dissident group. In its statement, Catalyst signalled it was aligned with a group of dissident shareholde­rs who represente­d 10.75 per cent of HBC’S common shares — along with Catalyst’s 17.49-per-cent stake, that’s a majority of the minority shareholde­rs needed to decide the vote.

“Catalyst and other shareholde­rs representi­ng approximat­ely 28.24 per cent of the common shares of HBC intend to vote against the agreement, representi­ng a majority of the minority shareholde­rs,” the statement said.

It’s not clear how much Land and Buildings owns, though they’re certainly below the 10-per-cent threshold that would obligate them to reveal their position. That means there are other dissidents involved in Catalyst’s bloc.

Since Baker’s group first proposed the deal in June, Litt has derided it as “woefully inadequate” and “dead on arrival,” calling for Baker’s removal.

But Litt hasn’t spoken publicly since HBC’S board of directors announced earlier this month that it had taken the recommenda­tion of its special committee and unanimousl­y approved a sweetened offer from Baker’s group.

The new offer boosts the share price to $10.30, up from the initial proposal of $9.45 that was floated in June. A source close to Land and Buildings said the firm continues to see the deal as unfair to shareholde­rs.

Catalyst managed to significan­tly increase its stake in HBC in August, when it issued an unsolicite­d offer to purchase HBC shares at $10.11 per share.

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