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Friday, September 7, 2018

Third Point nominates slate to challenge Campbell board

Activist investor Daniel Loeb's hedge fund Third Point announced its intention on Friday to replace Campbell Soup's entire board, the start of what is likely to be intense proxy battle between Loeb and the iconic soup company.

Such a campaign would shine an unprecedented spotlight on the three descendants of Campbell's founder who sit on the soup company's board. Two of those descendants, Bennett Dorrance and Mary Alice Dorrance Malone, together hold a 33 percent stake in Campbell. The fiercely private siblings, whose father served as Campbell chairman, have resisted past pressure to sell the company.

"We can only conclude that the board remains beholden to the sentimental agenda of its vocal and empowered minority – the two longstanding family representatives to the Board who have stubbornly opposed options to create maximum value for all shareholders for decades," wrote Loeb in his letter.

The third family member on the board is Archie Van Buren, nephew to Bennett and Mary Alice. Van Buren is a trustee in the Campbell Voting Trust, through which other descendants together hold a combined 7.9 percent stake in the company.

Campbell requires two-thirds shareholder vote approval for a deal.

The executives Loeb is nominating include: Larry Karlson, former chairman and chief executive of Berwind Financial; Sarah Hofstetter, chairwoman of 360i; Bozoma Saint John, chief marketing officer of Endeavor Co.; Kurt Schmidt, former director and chief executive of Blue Buffalo; Raymond Silcock, chief financial officer of International Nutrition & Wellness Holdings; David Silverman, chief executive of CrossLead; Michael Silverstein, an executive at Carlyle Group; William Toler, former CEO of the Hostess Brands

Loeb is nominating Third Point executives, Munib Islam and Matthew Cohen.

He is also nominating George Strawbridge, a descendant of the Campbell Soup founder. Strawbridge earlier this year disclosed his stake in the soup company and announced he is teaming up with Loeb in his battle.

Strawbridge served on the Campbell board from 1988 to 2009. A businessman in his own right with ventures that include a stake in the National Hockey League's Buffalo Sabres, Strawbridge was active and quizzical while on the board, according to a person who sat in on the meetings.

Campbell announced last week it is selling its international and fresh food businesses, as the 149-year-old condensed-soup maker struggles to regain its financial footing and refocus on its signature packaged foods. The announcement came after a three-month critical review, propelled by disappointing earnings and the surprise departure of Campbell's CEO.

Last week's announcement, though, was underwhelming to Third Point.

"Interim CEO Keith McLoughlin [last week] detailed the Board's years of failings with an extensive catalogue of the strategic and financial blunders that brought the business to the brink," wrote Loeb.

"Absent from his commentary, however, was any accountability for the damage. No changes to the Company's Board or senior leadership were announced, making his contrite tone ring hollow."

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