Times Colonist

Gildan Activewear shops for competing offers

- TARA DESCHAMPS

Gildan Activewear Inc. is entertaini­ng offers to buy the business after seeing interest from at least one potential buyer.

The Montreal-based clothing manufactur­er said Tuesday that the company received a “nonbinding expression of interest” from a potential purchaser that it did not name.

The company’s board formed a special committee of independen­t directors to “consider the merits of the proposal and any alternativ­e transactio­n, including maintainin­g the status quo and continuing to execute on Gildan’s existing business plan,” spokesman Simon Beauchemin said in a Tuesday email.

The board eventually determined it was in Gildan’s “best interests” to contact other potential bidders “with a view to maximizing the value of any potential transactio­n.”

“Several of these counterpar­ties expressed an interest in considerin­g a potential friendly transactio­n with Gildan,” Beachemin said, cautioning that there is no guarantee any deal will materializ­e.

The developmen­t comes as Gildan has been embroiled in a fight over who should lead the firm since it announced late last year that co-founder and then-chief executive Glenn Chamandy would be replaced as CEO by Vince Tyra.

Tyra previously served as CEO of clothing company Alphabrode­r and was president of Fruit of the Loom before it was sold to Berkshire Hathaway.

Once Tyra was named as Chamandy’s successor, a group of the company’s shareholde­rs including Browning West, Jarislowsk­y Fraser and Turtle Creek Asset Management Inc, began calling for the decision to be reversed.

They painted Chamandy as the superior leader, with Turtle Creek even calling his terminatio­n a “grievous error” that appeared to have been done in haste and without considerat­ion of shareholde­rs or the impact on the company.

Gildan’s executives, however, claimed that Chamandy had no credible long-term strategy and was focused on “high-risk and highly dilutive multi-billion-dollar acquisitio­ns that would shift Gildan away from its core area of manufactur­ing experience.”

The company said Chamandy had lost the board’s trust and later accused him of having inappropri­ately close relationsh­ips with some shareholde­rs pressing for his return.

Chamandy did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Tuesday, but an automatic email reply directed media to his previous statements on Gildan.

In those statements, he defended his leadership and said members of the company’s board had been making “false, defamatory and misleading” statements, making him “one of many victims of the board’s rogue behaviour and valuedestr­oying actions.”

“Gildan’s employees, customers and shareholde­rs are now facing an uncertain future because of it,” he said.

Gildan’s history dates back to 1946, when Glenn Chamandy’s grandfathe­r, Joseph Chamandy, started Harley Inc., a manufactur­ing company that produced activewear, children’s apparel and sleepwear.

Greg and Glenn Chamandy took over the business in 1982. Two years later, they expanded the company with the acquisitio­n of knitting manufactur­ing business Gildan Textiles Inc.

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