Oshkosh Board Unanimously Rejects Icahn’s $3 Billion Bid
Oshkosh Corp. (OSK)’s board of directors rejected an unsolicited offer from billionaire activist director Carl Icahn to buy the truck maker for about $3 billion.
Icahn, Oshkosh’s largest investor with a 9.5 percent stake, has criticized the firm’s executives for poor performance. He said his proposal, made earlier this month, would amount to roughly $32.50 a share.
The offer is “inadequate, undervalues the company and is not in the best interests of all Oshkosh shareholders,” the board said in a statement today.
Oshkosh shares gained as much as 3.5 percent and were up less than 1 percent to $30 as of 10:17 a.m. in New York trading.
An employee who answered the phone at Icahn’s New York headquarters said he couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.
The Oshkosh, Wisconsin-based company makes commercial trucks and supplies blast-resistant trucks to the U.S. Army and Marine Corps. The military work resulted in a surge in wartime sales that have slowed with the end of the Iraq War and the U.S.’s planned withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Oshkosh said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing today it would cut 450 jobs in January due to lower demand from the Defense Department.
JLG Spinoff
Icahn has said he wants to spin off JLG Industries Inc., which makes construction lift equipment, because it is more valuable as a separate entity. The unit was purchased by Oshkosh about six years ago.
The Oshkosh board called the proposed spinoff an “ill- advised strategy,” and accused Icahn of trying “to enrich himself at the expense of all other Oshkosh shareholders” in its statement today.
“Your board encourages shareholders to send a clear message to Mr. Icahn that you will not allow him to pursue his self-serving agenda and will not permit him to take control of Oshkosh for a price significantly below the company’s value,” Richard M. Donnelly, chairman of the board of directors, said in the statement.
Shareholder Rights Plan
The board adopted a plan that would let shareholders buy one preferred share for each share of common stock held at the close of business on Nov. 5, according to the statement. The rights would be exercisable if someone acquired a 10 percent stake in the company.
“The rights plan is intended to enable all shareholders to realize the long-term value of their investment in the company and to protect them from unfair or coercive takeover tactics,” according to the statement.
Oshkosh also announced today that its defense sales declined 19 percent to $953.7 million in the fourth quarter ended Sept. 30, compared with a year ago.
For the year, the declines in military sales were offset by gains in commercial segments, as revenue rose 7.9 percent to $8.18 billion from $7.58 billion in fiscal 2011.
Full-year adjusted profit fell 26 percent to $208.5 million, from $280.8 million, in 2011. The profit decline was “primarily attributable to an adverse product mix and lower sales in the defense segment, offset in part by significantly improved access equipment and commercial segment results,” the company said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Kathleen Miller in Washington at Kmiller01@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Stoughton at sstoughton@bloomberg.net
Oshkosh Directors Reject Carl Icahn’s Offer
Scott Eells/Bloomberg
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn, center, walks outside of the Nasdaq MarketSite with Robert Greifeld, chief executive officer and president of Nasdaq OMX Group Inc., in New York.
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn, center, walks outside of the Nasdaq MarketSite with Robert Greifeld, chief executive officer and president of Nasdaq OMX Group Inc., in New York. Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg
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