Glenayre Technologies'
(NDAQ:GEMS) management may be in for some serious trouble after
activist investor Robert Chapman disclosed a 10% stake in the company
and voiced his support for fellow-activist Daniel Loeb, who demanded
that the company put itself up for sale last week (
read article).
Chapman
Capital has been involved with the company for some time now. First,
the hedge fund voted to withhold all of its votes in protest against
all directors for the company's May 22, 2007 election. Secondly, they
are currently suing the company's CEO over an illegal EDC equity option
exchange. And now, in a vocal letter to the company, the hedge fund is
bringing its fight public while voicing support for fellow-activist
Daniel Loeb.
Chapman noted that last week's filing by Third
Point was Glenayre's first official warning that its continued
siphoning off of value from the company had forced yet another large
owner to defend its investment via activist, corporate warfare. It is
here that Chapman also said it shares the four stated concerns listed
in Item 4, having concluded that what is "clearly best for
shareholders" is to "put the company up for sale". He also added, "if
by now you have not realized the days of your being paid an annual
compensation exceeding $1.8 million for the service of driving
Glenayre's owners' collective investment into the ground, it's high
time for a reality check."
Chapman also suggested that the company's board of directors read Alan Murray's
Revolt In The Boardroom: The New Rules of Power in Corporate America
saying, "you may want to take a break from admiring your 2007 Grammy
after-party photos to read the entire book, start-to-finish, and then
re-read it. Given that Mr. Thomas Costabile, EDC's high paid COO, is
carry nearly the entire operational load at EDC, I doubt you lack the
free time to read this book cover to cover".
The two activist
investors own a combined 17% stake in the company at this time and may
increase it before Glenayre's annual meeting. Many investors are hoping
that two large, activist investors will be enough to draw a response
from management and ideally a move to put the company on the auction
block to unlock value. Combined, these factors make GEMS a stock
worth watching!
For more background information on Chapman's legal arguments and demands, checkout their
Schedule 13D/A filing with the SEC today.
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