Login  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to TWICE Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Office Depot In Board Dispute With Investors

By Colleen Bohen -- TWICE, 3/24/2008

DELRAY BEACH, FLA. — A shareholder group will attempt to breach Office Depot's board at the office supply chain's upcoming stockholder meeting.

Office Depot is advising stockholders to reject the attempt by the Florida-based real estate development company Levitt Corp. and its wholly owned subsidiary Woodbridge Equity Fund (together the Woodbridge Group) to nominate two new directors to the Office Depot board at this year's annual stockholders meeting, scheduled for April 23.

The Woodbridge Group said last week it is planning on nominating Mark Begelman, former president and COO of Office Depot, and Martin E. Hanaka, former president and COO of Staples, as candidates to serve on the board in place of Steve Odland, the company's current chairman and CEO, and David I. Fuente, the company's former chairman and CEO.

“As Office Depot shareholders, we believe Office Depot needs new representation on its board to revitalize the company and store experience and return Office Depot to a high-performance organization again. Under the current board and management team, Office Depot has lost its vision, its competitive position in the office supply retailing space and its drive for leadership,” said Alan B. Levan, chairman/CEO of Levitt Corporation and Woodbridge Capital Corporation, in a release.

In a statement, Office Depot said it “believes that removing two of the most experienced retailing executives from the Office Depot Board would be highly disruptive, and could destabilize the company and damage prospects for a successful turnaround. The board has a strong long-range plan that is in the process of being implemented under difficult macroeconomic conditions.”

Office Depot said it is urging its stockholders to sign and return only the white Office Depot proxy card solicited by Office Depot's board. It is asking that stockholders disregard any proxy card they may receive from the Woodbridge Group.

In its own release, the Woodbridge Group urged shareholders not to vote for the incumbent directors on Office Depot's proxy card, but instead asked them to await receipt of the Woodbridge proxy statement and gold proxy card before voting.

This news follows the release of disappointing financial results, which included news that Office Depot's total company net earnings for the fourth quarter , ended Dec. 29, were $19 million compared with earrings of $127 million in the same period in 2006.

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

There are no other articles related to this article.

By This Author

Sponsored Links





 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs


Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

» VIEW ALL BLOGS

Photos

  • TWICE On The Scene: PRO Group
    The stars came out over the Hyatt Regency resort here and top vendors hobnobbed with a plethora of PRO Group members on Tuesday evening, here, to kick of the group’s annual spring meeting.
  • Spring RetailVision 2008
    Highlights from Spring RetailVision which took place last week in Orlando, Fla.
  • TWICE On The Scene: CEA Washington Forum
    CE execs, Congressmen and policy advisers and makers CEA's annual Washington Forum to discuss free trade, HDTV and DTV labeling and the annual Digital Patriots awards dinner.
Advertisements





NEWSLETTERS
Click on a title below to learn more.

TWICE Daily E-mail Update
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites