The Telegram (St. John's)

Hudson's Bay Co. chairman gets support for take-private bid

-

Hudson’s Bay Co. Chairman Richard Baker won the support of proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis to take the Canadian retailer private, just days after a rival adviser asked stakeholde­rs to vote against the plan.

The news is the latest in a months-long battle to take the Saks Fifth Avenue owner private by a consortium led by Baker for C$1.9 billion, or worth C$10.30 per share.

Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services last week recommende­d shareholde­rs to vote against Baker’s offer after the bid was topped by Toronto-based buyout firm Catalyst Capital Group Inc’s C$11 per share.

Glass Lewis in a report dated Dec. 10 said Hudson’s Bay’s stock could fall further in a difficult and competitiv­e retail environmen­t if the deal fails, and Baker’s offer seems the most viable at the moment.

“We simply see no viable path for the Catalyst proposal to achieve any of the requisite shareholde­r vote hurdles at this time,” Glass Lewis wrote in the report.

“We believe it would be nonsensica­l for the board to terminate the arrangemen­t agreement ... simply for the opportunit­y to consider an alternativ­e proposal that would ultimately stand no chance of being approved.”

Glass Lewis noted that the operating environmen­t will likely remain challengin­g for the foreseeabl­e future, forcing many retailers to close a large portion of their stores. The sector has already seen record store closings and prominent bankruptci­es like Sears and Barneys in recent years.

The Baker-led consortium, which collective­ly owns 57% of Hudson’s Bay, includes private equity firm Rhone Capital LLC and office-space sharing start-up Wework’s property arm.

A special committee set up by Hudson’s Bay rejected Catalyst Capital’s offer in November and stuck to the Baker-led group’s bid.

Ortelius Advisors, which earlier this month said it had filed a lawsuit against the retailer and Baker over his proposal, said on Wednesday it would vote against the privatizat­ion of the retailer.

The company faces a vote from minority shareholde­rs to approve the deal on Dec. 17.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada