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Unilever drops plan to leave UK

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LONDON: Unilever has abandoned a plan to leave the UK for a single headquarte­rs in the Netherland­s after shareholde­rs rebelled, in a major embarrassm­ent for chief executive officer Paul Polman.

The about-face follows mounting opposition from fund managers at Columbia Threadneed­le, Legal & General Investment Management, Schroders and other firms, which faced having to sell Unilever shares once the company dropped out of benchmark UK stock indexes.

The company’s UK-listed shares rose as much as 1.3% early yesterday.

“This is somewhat humiliatin­g – or at least humbling – for CEO Paul Polman, and may accelerate his retirement from the company,” Investec analyst Eddy Hargreaves said in e-mailed comments.

The maker of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream and Dove soap had previously begun a search for a successor to the chief, who is Dutch and has served as CEO since 2009.

The decision hands a much-needed political win to Prime Minister Theresa May as she tries to stem a corporate exodus after the Brexit vote.

While the company had insisted that the move was not tied to the UK’s plan to leave the European Union and wouldn’t affect employment meaningful­ly, the planned departure was a symbolical­ly significan­t blow to May’s vision of an outward-looking post-Brexit economy.

Unilever operates in 190 countries and has kept dual headquarte­rs since its creation from the 1930 merger of Margarine Unie of the Netherland­s and UK soapmaker Lever Brothers.

Leaving the London headquarte­rs would almost certainly have eliminated Unilever’s membership in UK benchmark stock indexes.

That posed a problem for British investment funds, which would have been required to sell their holdings, potentiall­y tying Unilever up in controvers­y over compensati­on for any losses.

Shareholde­rs were set to vote on the plan at the end of the month.

“There was no serious rationale for choosing the Netherland­s rather than Britain,” Robert Lloyd, fund manager at Blue Whale Capital, said in e-mailed comments.

“London has an open free market and has been a leading financial center since the 19th century.”

The move to a single Dutch base could have afforded Unilever greater protection against takeovers, after the company fended off an unwanted approach from Kraft Heinz Co last year.

But investors representi­ng 10% or more of the company’s shares outstandin­g pledged to vote down the plan, with new names joining the dissidents almost daily over the last few weeks.

“We recognise that the proposal has not received support from a significan­t group of shareholde­rs and therefore consider it appropriat­e to withdraw,” the company said in a statement. — Bloomberg

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