New York Post

BIG $$ BEHIND DISNEY

Boost for Iger board

- By ARIEL ZILBER Additional reporting by Alexandra Steigrad and Post Wires

Disney CEO Bob Iger appears to have the upper hand in his effort to stave off a proxy battle from activist investor Nelson Peltz’s Trian Partners.

With the votes of more than half of all shares counted before Wednesday’s stockholde­rs meeting, Disney has pulled ahead of Trian thanks to the backing of asset management giants Vanguard, BlackRock and T. Rowe, according to a Reuters report.

Peltz, who has questioned Iger’s leadership and business strategy, aims to snatch two seats on the company’s board of directors — one for himself and one for former Disney chief financial officer Jay Rasulo.

Vanguard, Disney’s largest shareholde­r with an 8.2% stake, and T. Rowe, which owns about a 0.64%, backed the company and voted to reelect Maria Elena Lagomasino and Michael Froman – the two Disney directors being challenged by Trian, Reuters reported.

Earlier Tuesday, Norges Bank Investment Management, which owns a 1.2% stake in Disney, said it had voted to re-elect 11 of the entertainm­ent company’s 12 directors. NBIM, which manages the Norwegian Government Pension Fund, did not vote for any candidates proposed by Trian.

Disney scored another victory on Monday as it appeared to secure the support of another powerful investor, Disney’s second-largest shareholde­r BlackRock, according to Reuters.

BlackRock, Vanguard, Disney and Trian declined to comment.

While the backing of the big institutio­nal investors could give Disney an early edge in the proxy battle, people involved in reviewing the shareholde­rs’ votes cautioned that results could yet change.

Even those who already voted have a chance to change their decision before Wednesday’s 1 p.m. meeting.

Top executives at Disney, activist investors Trian and Blackwells Capital, and armies of call-center workers hit the phones to woo voters in last-minute pleas to elect their board candidates.

The board-room battle comes at a pivotal time for Disney, as the company tries to reinvigora­te its creative franchises, make its streaming business profitable, and find partners to help build ESPN’s digital future.

Iger (inset) has called the activist campaigns a “distractio­n.”

Disney’s stock price has climbed 34% in 2024, but it remains down nearly 40% from its record-high close in March 2021. The stock closed up 1%, at $122.82 a share, Tuesday

Peltz and the activists have cited the lack of a clear succession plan at Disney for when the 73-year-old Iger eventually steps down as scheduled in 2026.

Hollywood insiders told The Post that the search for Iger’s successor has become a mess as industry-wide skepticism has surfaced over whether Disney has a candidate ready to take the mantle in two years.

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