Very smart guy unless he starts talking his head off...
Loeb Prevails in Latest Crusade to Reform Corporate Japan (1)
2016-04-08 01:22:59.306 GMT
By Craig Trudell, Monami Yui and Shigeru Sato
(Bloomberg) -- The idea of an octogenarian CEO in
questionable health ousting a potential successor to make way
for his own son would be met by hackles, maybe even outright
laughter, by many corporate governance experts and shareholder
activists in the U.S. and Europe.
Yet that’s what Dan Loeb accused Seven & i Holdings Co.
Chief Executive Officer Toshifumi Suzuki of having in mind for
Japan’s biggest retailer, which operates the Seven-Eleven,
Denny’s and Ito-Yokado retail brands. Suzuki, 83, might have
succeeded were it not for a shaming campaign by Loeb, the
billionaire activist investor and founder of hedge fund Third
Point LLC.
On Thursday, the Seven & i board rejected a plan to remove
Seven-Eleven Japan President Ryuichi Isaka, the executive Loeb
praised as “instrumental to the success” of the profitable
convenience stores unit in a sharply critical letter to the
company’s board sent March 27.
In addition, he raised concerns for Suzuki’s “chronic
health problems” and claimed the CEO planned to name an interim
president of the core convenience store unit -- to be followed
later by the promotion of his son, Yasuhiro Suzuki. “If these
rumors are true,” Loeb wrote, “they raise serious questions
about Mr. Toshifumi Suzuki’s competence and judgment and whether
he should be making any decisions about the company.”
50-Year Career
The board’s rejection -- reached after directors came one
vote short of removing Isaka -- was a stunning victory for Loeb
and prompted Toshifumi Suzuki’s resignation hours later. During
a bizarre afternoon press conference, the CEO who’d spent more
than 50 years at Seven & i and its affiliates appeared with
allies to tell his side of the story.
“Some executives around me asked me why I’m retiring,”
Suzuki said. “After all, it is my lack of virtue and I’m deeply
ashamed of myself.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2...rate-japan
Before you speak, listen. Before you write, think. Before you spend, earn. Before you invest, investigate. Before you criticize, wait. Before you pray, forgive. Before you quit, try. Before you retire, save. Before you die, give. –William A. Ward
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