New York Post

A date with ‘blood sport’

- By CARLETON ENGLISH cenglish@nypost.com

One of the bloodiest proxy contests of the season has a new end date.

Arconic, the aluminum parts manufactur­er that has been under attack by hedge fund Elliott Management, will be holding its shareholde­r meeting on May 25, nine days later than originally planned. Arconic also announced two new nominees to its board.

It is the latest chapter in what has become an unusually nasty fight between an activist fund and its target.

“Elliott has pursued a ‘ winat-any-cost’ approach and has turned activism into a blood sport,” Arconic said Thursday in an updated investor presentati­on.

Last month, longtime Arconic Chief Executive Klaus Kleinfeld was forced to resign after the board discovered that he sent an unauthoriz­ed letter to Elliott founder Paul Singer, which was interprete­d as an attempt to extort Singer.

Arconic’s updated presentati­on on Thursday scrubbed Kleinfeld’s name from endorsemen­ts provided by Boeing, Airbus, GE Aviation and United Technologi­es and replaced it with ellipses.

Despite the circumstan­ces of Kleinfeld’s exit, Arconic is still fighting to prevent the hedge fund from gaining more board seats. Settlement discussion­s between the two broke down, Arconic said.

“Hedge funds should not have free reign [sic] to level false or unsubstant­iated accusation­s with the aim of embarrassi­ng, ruining or damaging people,” Arconic’s board wrote in its letter to shareholde­rs.

Elliott wonthree board seats soon after announcing its stake in Arconic, then Alcoa, in late 2015. It is looking for four more seats on Arconic’s 13person board.

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