Xerox executives stay put as Icahn settlement expires
The leaders of Xerox, who looked to be on their way out just two days ago, may not be going anywhere just yet.
The embattled office equipment company said late Thursday that a settlement it reached earlier this week with unhappy shareholders would not go into effect because a key deadline had been missed. That settlement had called for the replacement of Jeff Jacobson, the company’s chief executive, and a majority of its board of directors.
Instead, Xerox said, Jacobson and the current board will remain in place — though it acknowledged that the abrupt shift would probably raise many questions.
“Xerox and its board of directors recognize the uncertainty caused by the developments of the past several days among the company’s investors and other stakeholders,” it said in a news release.
The departures-that-never-were cap a turbulent five months for Xerox. The company, which is credited with transforming the 20th century office, has long battled disappointing results and a sluggish stock price amid the rise of computerization, email and the cloud. In January it reached a deal to cede control of its operations to Fujifilm of Japan, which has long been its partner in an international joint venture.
But the deal drew criticism from major shareholders, including Carl Icahn, the hedge fund manager and shareholder activist, and Darwin Deason, who became a major Xerox investor after selling his company to it. They said the pact undervalued Xerox. In a lawsuit aimed at stopping the deal, Deason accused Jacobson of striking the accord to keep a job at the combined company.
Last week, a court in New York state sided with Icahn and Deason and temporarily blocked the