It’s back to the drawing board for Unilever
But Anglo-Dutch giant will not have an easy route to being a single corporate entity
Paul Polman’s parting gift to his successor as CEO of Unilever has been smashed by his UK shareholders. The Anglo-Dutch consumer goods group scrapped its plan to simplify into a single company in the Netherlands.
There is immediate damage in terms of management credibility, and a potential long-term opportunity cost. The proposal would have seen the current UK arm of Unilever being bought out by a new Dutch entity. The move would have hurt funds whose mandates limit them to investing only in UK or FTSE100 stocks. They would have to sell, or drift from their terms of reference, to hold shares in the new all-Dutch Unilever. It was in their interest to vote down the plan.
Unilever’s other UK shareholders aren’t so encumbered. But they faced tax uncertainties, and trading the new Londonlisted Dutch share may have come with additional friction. Some individual investors may have been offended by the impression that Unilever was trying to quit Britain after Brexit.
The naysayers had influence: The plan needed to be approved by a simple majority of Unilever plc shareholders by number, with at least 75 per cent of the UK shares being voted in favour.
Polman clearly misread the situation. He should have at least offered the UK shareholders a premium, or a special dividend. Instead, Unilever’s ethics were crudely utilitarian. Its attitude was that while a minority was being disadvantaged, their sacrifice was worth it for the good of the majority.
If a premium was due in theory, it wasn’t necessary in practice. That was wrong and tactically flawed.
Options
Options always have value, and Unilever’s plan would have given it more M&A options that would benefit shareholders.
The company will still find it tricky to do really big corporate moves. It may be at a competitive disadvantage in bid situations. Some M&A experts reckon its joint-venture structure exposes shareholders of potential US targets to taxes they wouldn’t otherwise pay.
Could Unilever come back with a reworked plan? To propose collapsing its structure into an all-UK company would just create a political row in the Netherlands that would match the shareholder row on the British side. Eurozone funds would be similarly disadvantaged.
This is hardly the swan song Polman wanted. He has stayed away from all the communications around the plan — but it is his legacy that is tarnished.
He could just leave the question of Unilever’s structure to his successor. But the company has made such a song and dance about the benefits of simplification that it owes it to shareholders to come back with a new proposal that even the recalcitrant minority can accept.