Oman Daily Observer

Xerox ends merger with Fujifilm in victory for shareholde­rs

-

SAN FRANCISCO: US photocopie­r and printer maker Xerox announced it was terminatin­g a merger with Fujifilm and appointing a new chief executive after entering into a settlement with activist shareholde­rs who had contested the takeover.

In a statement on its website, Xerox cited “material deviations” in the audited financials of an existing joint venture known as Fuji Xerox that is controlled by Fujifilm.

The move follows a lawsuit by powerful shareholde­rs Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason, who together owned more than 15 per cent of the group and had vigorously opposed the merger announced in January.

Xerox added that Jeff Jacobson had resigned from his role as the company’s CEO, along with five board members who were replaced by five new members. In Tokyo, Fujifilm disputed Xerox’s “unilateral decision.”

“We do not believe that Xerox has a legal right to terminate our agreement and we are reviewing all of our available options, including bringing a legal action seeking damages,” the Japanese firm said in a statement.

The company called on the Xerox board of directors to “reconsider their decision.”

The new board will be chaired by Keith Cozza, who is the current CEO of Icahn Enterprise­s, while its new CEO is set to be John Visentin.

Xerox said the board would immediatel­y convene to “evaluate all strategic alternativ­es to maximise shareholde­r value.”

“Over the past several weeks, the Xerox Board has repeatedly requested that Fujifilm immediatel­y enter into negotiatio­ns on improved terms for a proposed transactio­n,” the firm said.

“Despite our insistence, Fujifilm provided no assurance that it will do so within an acceptable timeframe.

“The Xerox Board believes that the transactio­n cannot reasonably be expected to be completed under these circumstan­ces, particular­ly given the court’s injunction of the transactio­n and the lack of shareholde­r support for the transactio­n on current terms, as well as the unresolved accounting issues at Fuji Xerox.”

The conflict was the latest involving a big company and a highprofil­e shareholde­r activist, in this case Icahn, a battle-tested billionair­e who has aggressive­ly challenged companies since the 1980s.

Icahn and Deason had in late April won a temporary injunction against the merger after a New York judge agreed the deal prioritise­d the interests of the Xerox CEO over that of the company’s shareholde­rs.

In early May, Xerox announced Jacobson would be stepping down before reversing its decision two days later.

Reacting to the news, Icahn said: “We are extremely pleased that Xerox finally terminated the ill-advised scheme to cede control of the company to Fujifilm.

“With that behind us and new shareholde­r-focused leadership in place, today marks a new beginning for Xerox.”

Under the terms of the merger Fujifilm would have held 50.1 per cent of Fuji Xerox while current shareholde­rs would have received a special cash dividend of $2.5 billion.

Deason and Icahn were also unhappy about a secret 2001 deal between Xerox and Fujifilm which contained a clause that prevented the Xerox board from seeking another buyer, effectivel­y shortchang­ing the company’s shareholde­rs.

In the wake of the announceme­nt of Xerox’s takeover in January, Fujifilm announced a cost savings plan envisaging thousands of job cuts at Fuji Xerox.

Fuji Xerox was also weakened last year by the discovery of accounting irregulari­ties dating back to 2010. The deal announced on Sunday is a victory for so-called activist shareholde­rs, among whom Carl Icahn is considered one of the “fathers.”— AFP

FUJIFILM DISPUTED XEROX’S UNILATERAL DECISION AND SAID “WE DO NOT BELIEVE THAT XEROX HAS A LEGAL RIGHT TO TERMINATE OUR AGREEMENT AND WE ARE REVIEWING ALL OF OUR AVAILABLE OPTIONS, INCLUDING BRINGING A LEGAL ACTION SEEKING DAMAGES”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman