Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Judge backs Lee Enterprise­s’ effort to repel Alden

- BY JOSH FUNK AP Business Writer

OMAHA, Neb. — Lee Enterprise­s’ effort to repel a hostile takeover got a boost last week when a judge ruled the newspaper publisher could ignore two board nomination­s from the hedge fund Alden Global Capital.

But Alden, owner of the Chicago Tribune, said it will press the fight by urging shareholde­rs to vote against Lee Chairman Mary Junck and one other long-standing board member at the company’s March 10 annual meeting.

Lee Enterprise­s, based in Davenport, Iowa, said Tuesday that a Delaware judge supported its decision to reject Alden’s nominees because the hedge fund didn’t meet Lee’s technical requiremen­ts to nominate board members. Late last year, Lee rejected Alden’s $141 million offer, saying that it “grossly undervalue­s” the publisher of the St. Louis PostDispat­ch, Tulsa World, Richmond Times-Dispatch and dozens of other newspapers.

Lee urged shareholde­rs to dismiss Alden’s arguments that Junck and board member Herbert Moloney are putting their own interests ahead of what’s best for shareholde­rs.

“Now that the Delaware Court of Chancery has confirmed what we knew all along — that the Lee Board made a proper decision in rejecting Alden’s attempted nomination­s — Alden has invented entirely new, hollow governance complaints in its continuing and transparen­t attempt to destabiliz­e the board and the company’s leadership,” a Lee spokesman said.

Alden’s critics have also raised concerns about the likelihood that the New York hedge fund would impose extreme cost cuts and extensive layoffs at Lee’s newspapers if it were able to buy the company. That is the model Alden has used to boost profits at the more than 200 newspapers it has already acquired, including the Chicago Tribune, Boston Herald, Orange County Register and Denver Post.

But Alden, which owns 6.3% of Lee’s stock, said it is looking out for other shareholde­rs because it believes Lee has underperfo­rmed since it bought all of Berkshire Hathaway’s newspapers in 2020 and has been struggling with the transition to publishing news online.

“We remain steadfast in our commitment to provide Lee with competent leadership that will improve returns for shareholde­rs and the quality of journalism for readers,” Alden said in a statement.

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