
Dillard’s Inc.
(NYSE: DDS) management received some advice from two hedge funds
looking to boost the company’s share price earlier this week. James
Mitarotonda’s Barington Capital and Michael Popson’s Clinton Group
disclosed a letter to the board of directors suggesting that the
company better manage its inventory, close under performing stores, and
sell properties or sell and lease back some stores. The move follows a
52 percent drop in the company’s share price since it began making
changes last summer. Shareholders are hoping that the company will heed
the advice and work to turn itself around with the help of two great
activists.
“Given the Company’s poor share price performance over the past six
months, we are convinced that Dillard’s is an undervalued asset with
tremendous opportunity for improvement,” the pair said in their letter.
“Unfortunately, it appears to us that you have not only ignored our
letters but have also done little to improve the Company on your own
initiative, as Dillard’s financial results have gone from bad to worse
since our initial communication in June 2007.”
The activist hedge funds made a series of specific proposals to the
company. First, they suggested initiatives aimed at improving cost
containment, inventory management and the company’s merchandising
strategy. Secondly, they encouraged measures to enhance the value of
the company’s real estate properties, including the conversion of
certain properties into higher and better uses, the closure of
underperforming stores and the sale/leaseback of owned properties.
Thirdly, they suggested a boad evaluation of the company’s management
team and executive compensation. And finally, they encouraged the
company to improve its record in corporate governance by removing the
dual class share structure, terminating the poison pill, and separating
the chairman and chief executive positions.
“Dillard’s can and must deliver considerably better financial and
share price performance,” said the hedge funds. “As significant
stockholders of the Company, we are committed to taking all actions
necessary to enhance shareholder value.”
In the end, it will be interesting to see if the company listens
this time around given their failures when ignoring the hedge funds
last time. The pair of hedge funds are known for their activist
involvements, so they may take future actions in order to attempt to
overtake the board. Unfortunately, there is a poison pill in place that
would make this extremely difficult; however, it would be an expensive
and annoying process for the company who may just decide to listen if
such a threat surfaced. Combined, these factors make DDS a stock worth
watching!
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