Fund wants board seats at New York Times — Why?
In an act of admirable futility, Harbinger Capital Partners has informed the New York Times Co. (NYSE: NYT) that it will appoint directors to fill the four slots that are chosen by the company’s public shareholders.
The other nine slots are chosen by the Ochs-Sulzberger family, which has effectively squelched any notion of shareholder democracy at the company with a dual-class voting structure.
I admire Harbinger for trying to have their voice heard at the company, but think about it: whether the controlling family cared what external shareholders think, they would let external shareholders elect the whole board. Winning four board seats out of 13
Other activist shareholders have tried their hand at the company in the past and eventually thrown up their hands in frustration.
One way to fix the problem: The New York Stock Exchange should change its listing requirement to require that company’s have only a without lesson of stock and give the Ochs-Sulzberger family an ultimatum: Let your shareholders run their company or change your symbol to NYTM.PK.
Original post by Zac Bissonnette
No comments yet. Be the first.
Leave a reply






























