Investment group Mariner Financial’s bid for skatewear and equipment group Globe International looks set to fail as investors have responded angrily to its offer.
Globe’s board, which owns 70.7% of the group’s shares, have urged the remaining shareholders to reject Mariner’s $19.7 million and all scrip bid and board members announced they will reject the offer themselves.
Other shareholders look set to follow suit, with former Globe director Melbourne barrister Norman O’Bryan making his feelings clear in his acceptance and share transfer form, which he sent back with “F*ck off you morons!” scrawled in large black letters across it.
Mariner chief executive David Olney-Fraser, told SmartCompany he thought the response from O’Bryan was unprofessional.
“But I’m a fairly tough nut, I wasn’t offended and I don’t get too worked up over that sort of thing,” he says.
SmartCompany contacted O’Bryan but he failed to respond prior to publication and a spokesperson for Globe told SmartCompany O’Bryan’s actions were those of one individual shareholder and the company was unable to comment.
However, the ownership battle is set to continue with an extraordinary meeting scheduled for February 6 where Mariner has indicated it wants the chairman of Globe to be pushed from the company’s board.
“We’ll be going to the shareholder meeting on 6 February and we will be asking some questions of the board our primary disappointment is the board does not seem to be listening to messages from shareholders and they are treating it as a private company,” Olney-Fraser says.
“To get to two strikes and still not add any new non-executive directors or chairman shows a fairly blatant disregard to the message from shareholders, they are just plowing on regardless.”
He says the removal of chairman Paul Isherwood is essential.
“I think that directors who act like that shouldn’t be running public companies and a chairman who allows that to happen to his board should be ashamed of himself,” he says.
David Gordon, partner at Bentley’s, told SmartCompany as the board members own most of the shares, if they don’t want a takeover to happen, then it probably won’t happen.
“This bid has uncovered the issue of small cap listed entities which are private companies in all but name and don’t have the growth and profit pressures associated with diverse shareholder demands or requirements,” Gordon says.
“The fact is that Globe by all measures was an underperforming business and if any acquirer believes that there is value in the business they will need to meet most probably the inflated price of the current shareholders.”
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