Business World

Fujifilm deal ‘dramatical­ly undervalue­s’ Xerox Corp., say Icahn and Deason

-

NEW YORK — Xerox Corp. shareholde­rs Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason strongly criticized the printer and copier maker’s plan to sell itself to Japan’s Fujifilm Holdings saying the transactio­n “dramatical­ly undervalue­s” Xerox.

Shares of Xerox were up nearly 2% at $30.06 in early trading on Monday.

“We urge you — our fellow shareholde­rs — do not let Fuji steal this company from us,” Icahn and Deason said in an open letter. The top shareholde­rs termed the deal structure as “tortured (and) convoluted.”

In an e- mailed statement, Xerox told Reuters it considered several other options in detail and concluded that the combinatio­n with Fuji Xerox is the “best path to create value” for the company.

The two investors said there is still great opportunit­y for Xerox to create “enormous value for shareholde­rs, and it does not involve selling control to Fuji without a premium.”

On Jan. 31, Fujifilm said it was set to take over Xerox in a $6.1-billion deal and combine it into their existing joint venture, Fuji Xerox.

“To put it simply, the current board of directors has overseen the systematic destructio­n of Xerox, and, unless we do something, this latest Fuji scheme will be the company’s final death knell,” Icahn and Deason said in the letter.

Deason in a regulatory filing said on Monday he has raised his stake in Xerox to 15.2% from 6%.

Icahn has a 9.7% stake in Xerox as of Jan. 22, according to Thomson Reuters data.

The two investors in their letter highlighte­d their concerns about becoming passive minority owners of a Fuji subsidiary if the deal with Xerox proceeds.

Fujifilm was not immediatel­y available for comment. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines