The Mercury News

Twitter agreement saves Jack Dorsey’s job.

Board will add three new members; Silver Lake invests $1 billion

- By Scott Deveau Bloomberg News

Twitter will appoint three new directors to its board and create a committee to review its leadership and governance, as part of an agreement with activist investor Elliott Management Corp. and private equity firm Silver Lake. The pact leaves Chief Executive Officer Jack Dorsey in place.

Silver Lake will also make a $1 billion investment in the social media company, which Twitter plans to use to fund part of its first ever share buyback, set at $2 billion.

Elliott’s head of U.S. activism, Jesse Cohn, will join Twitter’s board immediatel­y alongside Egon Durban, coChief Executive Officer of Silver Lake, the firms said in a joint statement. A third independen­t director will be appointed at a later date.

The board will also form a committee, including Cohn and Durban, that will evaluate a succession plan with Dorsey and make recommenda­tions on the company’s corporate governance, including the potential eliminatio­n of its staggered board.

The committee plans to share the results of its review by year-end.

Twitter rose closed down 2.99% to $32.46 Monday in New York trading.

The settlement comes a little over a week after Bloomberg News first reported that Elliott took a sizable stake in Twitter to push for changes, including potentiall­y replacing Dorsey. The New Yorkbased firm nominated four directors to Twitter’s board, people familiar with the matter said at the time.

Elliott took issue with Dorsey dividing his time between running Twitter and his role as CEO of Square Inc., the payments company, the people said. Dorsey had also said he planned to spend up to six months of the year working in Africa, a plan he has since said he will reevaluate.

“As a board, we regularly review and evaluate how Twitter is run, and while our CEO structure is unique, so is Jack and so is this company,” said Patrick Pichette, lead independen­t director of San Francisco-based Twitter,

in Monday’s statement.

Tough metrics

As part of the deal, Twitter set a goal of hitting some tough performanc­e metrics, including growing its monetized daily active users in 2020 and beyond by 20% or more, accelerati­ng revenue growth on a year-over-year basis and gaining share in the digital advertisin­g market.

If the company doesn’t perform well, Dorsey could still be replaced or investors could push for a sale of Twitter, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked to not be identified because the matter is private

Durban, who became coCEO of Silver Lake in December, first reached out to Dorsey directly after the initial Bloomberg News report on Elliott’s stake, the people said. Silver Lake has a long history with Elliott and Twitter, which it had looked at acquiring in the past.

Durban acted as a peacemaker of sorts, the people said, and agreed to invest $1 billion in the company, sit on its board and to have Silver Lake’s operations team help improve Twitter’s performanc­e. Durban is a supporter of Dorsey and believes the CEO cannot be swapped out immediatel­y, they said.

Representa­tives for Silver Lake, Elliott and Twitter declined to comment.

Other settlement­s

The settlement is similar to ones Elliott has reached at other companies, including Citrix Systems Inc. and EBay Inc., where eventually CEOs at both companies were replaced.

Cohn was appointed to Citrix’s board in 2015 in conjunctio­n with then-CEO Mark Templeton’s departure. Cohn was appointed to EBay’s board in January as part of a settlement with Elliott and fellow activist Starboard Value. Devin Wenig stepped down as EBay CEO in September after failing to grow the company’s marketplac­e platform and clashing with the board about not wanting to sell its classified­s business, people familiar with the matter said.

Good job

A lot of Twitter employees think Dorsey is doing a good job and his departure as CEO would be disruptive, according to Kevin Rippey, an analyst with Evercore ISI.

“The issues with Twitter aren’t related to management, they’re largely grounded in challenges around technical infrastruc­ture,” Rippey said in an interview Monday.

Silver Lake’s investment will be made through Twitter’s 0.375% convertibl­e bonds due 2025.

As part of Monday’s settlement, Elliott, which owns about a 4% stake in Twitter, and Silver Lake, have signed a standstill agreement.

“Twitter serves the public conversati­on, and our purpose has never been more important.

Silver Lake’s investment in Twitter is a strong vote of confidence in our work and our path forward,” Dorsey said in the statement.

“We welcome the support of Egon and Jesse, and look forward to their positive contributi­ons as we continue to build a service that delivers for customers, and drives value for stakeholde­rs,” he added.

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