Los Angeles Times

Disney slams activist investor in political-style ad

Entertainm­ent giant steps up campaign against Nelson Peltz, who wants board seat.

- By Meg James

Walt Disney Co. is stepping up its campaign against activist investor Nelson Peltz, warning shareholde­rs in a new video that it would be “disruptive and destructiv­e” to add Peltz and former Disney executive Jay Rasulo to the company’s board.

The nearly three-minute campaign message, posted to the Vote Disney website Monday, suggests the Burbank entertainm­ent giant is taking seriously the threat posed by Trian Partners Chief Executive Peltz, who launched his firm’s proxy fight last fall. The current skirmish is Peltz’s second attempt to gain more inf luence over the legendary company and its executives.

Trian has asked for two board seats to make room for Peltz and Rasulo, a former Disney chief financial officer. The election will be decided at the April 3 annual shareholde­rs meeting.

Separately, a second investor, Blackwells Capital Group, also is aiming to shake up Disney’s board, which has largely been seen as in sync with Chief Executive Bob Iger and his initiative­s.

Although Trian’s campaign has appeared to lose momentum in recent weeks, the effort continues to receive support, particular­ly from major shareholde­r and longtime Marvel Entertainm­ent Chairman Ike Perlmutter, who has pledged his shares to the Trian nominees.

Disney’s new video has the trappings of a politicals­tyle advertisem­ent. It includes ominous music chords, slick graphics and unf lattering pictures of Peltz and Rasulo. The video is packed with critical commentary about the pair’s abilities and agendas.

An announcer intones that if Trian succeeds in its proxy battle, “Disney could suffer the same fate as other great companies that Peltz has previously infiltrate­d, such as G.E. and DuPont. Nelson Peltz has a long history of attacking companies to the ultimate detriment of shareholde­r value.”

In response, a Trian spokespers­on blasted Disney in a statement, saying the video contained “false and misleading statements” to divert attention away from “Disney’s poor performanc­e” in recent years.

“To suggest that Nelson Peltz is an ‘infiltrato­r’ (he has been elected overwhelmi­ngly by shareholde­rs in 48 elections) is offensive and highly dismissive of shareholde­r democracy,” the Trian statement said.

The video, which Disney plans to distribute to institutio­nal shareholde­rs, describes Rasulo as a bitter former employee “who was passed over for a promotion nearly a decade ago.”

Rasulo once ran Disney’s vaunted theme parks business and moved into the CFO role during an earlier stab at succession planning by the company. But Rasulo left the company in 2015 after he lost a bid to become Iger’s No. 2. Instead, Tom Staggs was named chief operating officer.

“He hasn’t been employed since leaving Disney, and the last time he joined the board of a media company, the stock tanked,” the video announcer said as the screen showed a falling stock price by radio company IHeart Media.

Perlmutter is dismissed as “another disgruntle­d former employee,” who has “his own lengthy record of destructiv­e behavior inside Disney,” the video said, noting Perlmutter’s “well-documented grudge” against Iger.

The proxy battles were seeded in Disney’s struggles last year. The company has not fully recovered from COVID-19 pandemic disruption­s and a mountain of debt that Disney took on to acquire much of Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox, including the Fox movie and television studios.

In a dueling video on Trian’s Restore the Magic website, Peltz directs his message to fellow shareholde­rs, saying: “It’s time for the board to understand that their big board fees and management with a huge compensati­on owe something to us.”

Trian has criticized Disney for its CEO succession struggles and what it deems as outsize compensati­on for managers. Its platform also demands that Disney focus on “achieving significan­t and sustained profitabil­ity” in streaming with “Netflixlik­e margins of 15-20%” by fiscal 2027.

Disney and other traditiona­l rivals — including Paramount Global and Warner Bros. Discovery — have been fighting an uphill battle to maintain their standing in the wake of Netflix’s takeover of the television industry and the arrival of global behemoths Apple and Amazon in the video streaming arena. The traditiona­l companies have spent billions of dollars to carve out a streaming presence.

Last year’s dual strikes by SAG-AFTRA and the Writers Guild of America dealt another blow to Disney and other traditiona­l entertainm­ent companies.

But Disney has gained ground among investors. Its stock is up 24% this year after rising 1.8% on Monday.

Disney’s video message also dismissed Peltz’s motives. “His quest also seems more about vanity than a belief in Disney,” the video announcer said. “Why else would he sell 500,000 Disney shares over the past six months in the middle of his proxy fight?”

 ?? Jordan Strauss Invision/AP ?? WALT DISNEY, led by CEO Bob Iger, above, is the target of a proxy battle launched by Nelson Peltz.
Jordan Strauss Invision/AP WALT DISNEY, led by CEO Bob Iger, above, is the target of a proxy battle launched by Nelson Peltz.

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