Business World

General Motors Co. shareholde­rs to decide on Greenlight Capital stock plan, board challenge

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DETRIOT — Greenlight Capital’s plan to split up General Motors (GM) Co.’s stock, as well as its challenge to the company’s board of directors, will come to a head on Tuesday, as the US automaker’s shareholde­rs cast their votes on the hedge fund’s proposals.

Greenlight’s proxy contest comes during a major overhaul at GM as Chief Executive Mary Barra seeks to jolt the company’s lagging stock price and sales by slashing costs and refocusing on the most profitable markets.

In the latest sign of the challenges facing major auto makers, rival Ford Motor Co. last month replaced CEO Mark Fields with Jim Hackett, a reformist executive who had run one of its divisions, following a decline in the company’s North American profits and share price.

At GM’s annual shareholde­r meeting, shareholde­rs will vote on Greenlight’s plan to divide GM shares into two classes, which the fund’s founder David Einhorn said in March could boost the automaker’s $52 billion market capitaliza­tion by as much as $38 billion.

On GM’s proxy website, the automaker affirmed to shareholde­rs its support for its board members: “We believe your directors represent the best mix of expertise, qualificat­ions and skills to advance GM’s business strategy and serve the interests of all shareholde­rs by driving longterm value creation.”

GM shares closed Friday at $ 34.45 on the New York Stock Exchange, barely up from $ 33 at its initial public offering in 2010.

“GM does not recognize its $34 stock price is a problem and has no plan to address the discount to its intrinsic value,” Greenlight said in its March 15 letter to shareholde­rs.

The stock underperfo­rmance is central to Greenlight’s other key proposal on Tuesday’s ballot: replacing three directors on GM’s board, Jane Mendillo, Michael Mullen and Carol Stephenson. Greenlight has nominated Leo Hindery, who has served as CEO for five telecommun­ications and media companies, including AT&T Broadband and Liberty Media; Vinit Sethi, Greenlight’s director of research; and William Thorndike, founder of private equity firm Housatonic Partners and the former chairman of Consol Energy.

GM’s board has been an issue for investors for three decades. Former US presidenti­al nominee Ross Perot famously derided GM’s directors as “pet rocks” in the 1980s, before GM bought out his stake in the company.

Greenlight’s fight faces an uphill battle. Proxy advisers Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services and Glass Lewis have recommende­d that GM shareholde­rs vote for the automaker’s board nominees and against the dual class proposal.

Greenlight, GM’s fifth largest shareholde­r with a 3.6% stake, has not mentioned the dual class plan in public documents since a May 11 presentati­on, a review of its filings showed.

 ??  ?? GENERAL MOTORS displays its 2014 GMC Sierra full-size pickup truck after unveiling it and the 2014 Chevrolet Silverado full-size pickup truck in Pontiac, Michigan, US on December 13, 2012.
GENERAL MOTORS displays its 2014 GMC Sierra full-size pickup truck after unveiling it and the 2014 Chevrolet Silverado full-size pickup truck in Pontiac, Michigan, US on December 13, 2012.

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