Kuwait Times

Shareholde­rs take Akzo Nobel to court to oust Chairman Burgmans

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Akzo Nobel shareholde­rs angered by the Dulux owner’s rejection of a 26.3 billion euro ($29.5 billion) takeover offer from US rival PPG Industries took their fight to an Amsterdam court yesterday.

Activist hedge fund Elliott Advisors, supported by several long-term institutio­nal investors, asked the Amsterdam Enterprise Chamber to order an investigat­ion into possible mismanagem­ent by Akzo’s board and force an extraordin­ary meeting of shareholde­rs to vote on dismissing Chairman Antony Burgmans. Elliott Advisers and the other institutio­nal investors together represent 18 percent of the Dutch paint maker’s shares.

“A large group of shareholde­rs has lost confidence in Mr. Burgmans and has asked to call him to account at an extraordin­ary shareholde­rs meeting,” said Jan Willem de Groot, representi­ng Elliott. “That’s a vote of no confidence by itself.”

Akzo was to respond later. At the start of the hearing, presiding Judge Gijs Makkink granted a request by PPG to address the court as an “interested party,” allowing it to speak after shareholde­rs and before Akzo.

PPG lawyer Arnold Croiset van Uchelen told the court the US company remains willing to enter talks with Akzo, regardless of the compositio­n of its management and supervisor­y boards. As dozens of lawyers and journalist­s packed the courtroom for the hearing in the high-stakes corporate battle, PPG’s Chief Executive Michael McGarry shook hands with Burgmans.

A ruling is expected within a week, soon enough for PPG to decide whether it wants to submit a formal bid to Dutch regulators without the support of Akzo’s board by a June 1 deadline or walk away for at least six months. Despite impassione­d pleas by several shareholde­rs, experts in Dutch corporate law say it will be tough for the shareholde­rs to convince judges that Akzo’s corporate governance has been so poor as to warrant an investigat­ion.

Akzo, meanwhile, faces a potentiall­y awkward public questionin­g of its reasons for rejecting PPG’s offer on May 8. Shares in Akzo opened nearly flat at 75.48 euros on Monday, well below PPG’s 96.75 euros per share offer made on April 20, suggesting investors have significan­t doubts as to whether a PPG bid will ultimately succeed.

 ??  ?? AMSTERDAM: Akzo Nobel Chairman Antony Burgmans (third left) looks on while in court yesterday in Amsterdam. —AFP
AMSTERDAM: Akzo Nobel Chairman Antony Burgmans (third left) looks on while in court yesterday in Amsterdam. —AFP

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