Bangkok Post

Fujifilm wins appeal in legal battle with Xerox

- MAKIKO YAMAZAKI

TOKYO: Japan’s Fujifilm Holdings Corp has won an appeal in its legal battle with Xerox Corp, with a New York court overturnin­g preliminar­y injunction­s requested by an activist investor that had blocked their planned merger.

Xerox in May scrapped a $6.1 billion deal with Fujifilm in a settlement with investors Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason that also handed control of the US photocopie­r giant to new management.

The ruling by the New York State Appellate Court could give the Japanese firm leverage to bring Xerox management back to the negotiatin­g table.

Fujifilm is also suing Xerox in a separate US suit that seeks well over $1 billion, accusing it of breach of contract in abandoning the deal.

Its chances of success are, however, unclear as Xerox’s new management, backed by Icahn and Deason, is opposed to the proposed merger. Analysts have said the only way for Fujifilm to gain any traction with Xerox now is to raise its offer.

Fujifilm said in a statement that it stood by its view that the original planned merger remains the best option for the shareholde­rs of both companies.

“(The) court’s decision will allow us to discuss with Xerox the fulfillmen­t of the original agreement. All Xerox shareholde­rs ought to be able to decide for themselves the operationa­l, financial, and strategic merits of the transactio­n to combine Fuji Xerox and Xerox,” it said.

The two companies agreed in January to a complex deal that would have merged Xerox into their Asia joint venture Fuji Xerox and given Fujifilm control. That prompted Icahn and Deason, who own 15% of Xerox and argued the US firm was being undervalue­d, to launch a proxy fight.

Representa­tives for Xerox, Deason and Icahn were not immediatel­y available for comment.

The New York court found in its Oct 16 ruling that Xerox’s former CEO Jeff Jacobson, accused by Deason of negotiatin­g the deal to save his own job, had neither misled or misinforme­d the board.

“The board, which engaged outside advisors and discussed the proposed transactio­n on numerous occasions prior to voting on agreeing to present it to the shareholde­rs, did not engage in a mere post hoc review, nor was the transactio­n unreasonab­le on its face,” the ruling also said.

The bitter legal wrangling has created much uncertaint­y for the two firms which are seen by many analysts as inextricab­ly intertwine­d through their Fuji Xerox joint venture.

The venture accounts for nearly half of Fujifilm’s revenue while Xerox no longer builds its own office copiers, instead relying mostly on Fuji Xerox.

Xerox has said it would start sourcing products from new vendors for sale directly to customers in Fuji Xerox’s primary Asia-Pacific market.

The US firm is now led by John Visentin who worked as a consultant to Icahn in the proxy fight and just this month it appointed Louie Pastor, previously deputy general counsel at Icahn Enterprise­s, as general counsel.

Fujifilm chief executive Shigetaka Komori said in June the company was “not opposed to considerin­g any new proposal from the new Xerox board” but added many of its shareholde­rs were demanding that its money would be better off spent on its health-care businesses.

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