Waterloo Region Record

GM management notches victory as shareholde­rs reject activist’s proposals

- Brent Snavely and Eric D. Lawrence

DETROIT — General Motors shareholde­rs on Tuesday overwhelmi­ngly rejected a proposal from activist investor David Einhorn to create two classes of stock and also shot down an alternativ­e slate of board nominees he had supported, giving CEO Mary Barra and the company’s management team a big vote of confidence.

More than 91 per cent of the votes cast by shareholde­rs were against the proposal despite an aggressive two-month campaign by the well-respected Wall Street investor. Excluding votes from Greenlight Capital, the firm co-founded by Einhorn, 96 per cent of the votes went against the plan.

Einhorn tried to convince shareholde­rs the company needs to do more to boost its stock price and nominated three board members as alternativ­es to GM’s 11 nominees. Einhorn also wanted to split GM’s stock into two classes — one designed for big dividend returns and another designed to reward shareholde­rs if the automaker’s profits and stock price grow.

“We decided to bring a creative idea to GM’s shareholde­rs and nominate directors to help fix GM’s inefficien­t capital structure and unlock significan­t value for all shareholde­rs,” Einhorn said in a statement. “We are disappoint­ed that shareholde­rs have elected to maintain the status quo. We congratula­te GM’s management on their win today.”

Despite the support from shareholde­rs, GM and other auto companies are under pressure to demonstrat­e they can boost profitabil­ity while also manoeuvrin­g deftly as electric, autonomous vehicles and ride-hailing apps shake up the industry. Ford pushed out former CEO Mark Fields last month in part because of the company’s languishin­g stock price and the lack of a clear autonomous vehicle strategy.

Before Tuesday’s meeting in Detroit began, GM CEO Barra acknowledg­ed that the company’s stock price is undervalue­d but said Greenlight’s proposal was “not in our shareholde­rs’ best interest.”

She said the management team has been making tough-but-necessary decisions to adapt to changing business conditions and has been working hard to reward investors.

“We do believe that GM stock is undervalue­d and we are taking decisive actions to address this,” Barra told reporters shortly before the annual meeting began. “We’re deploying resources in higher-return opportunit­ies. We’re delivering great new cars, trucks and crossovers all around the world. We’re continuall­y working to make our business more efficient and to remove costs. We’re working to lead the transforma­tion of personal mobility.”

Despite GM’s stagnant stock price, Barra’s management of the company has been increasing­ly praised by analysts who say she’s making bold strategic decisions that are reshaping the company’s global operations.

“The company has demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s to make very tough decisions,” Bruce Clark, senior vice-president of Moody’s Investor Service told the Detroit Free Press.

GM in March announced an agreement to sell its European division to PSA Groupe for $2.2 billion and said in May it would no longer sell vehicles in India or South Africa. GM’s European division had been losing money for years and GM was a small player in India and decided it would need to invest heavily to gain significan­t market share.

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