Disney dissident may nominate Disney board slate

cherrynegra

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Disney dissident may nominate Disney board slate
May 03, 2004 2:37:00 PM ET

By ________ Satran

FORT WORTH, Texas, May 3 (Reuters) - The two dissident investors of Walt Disney Co. (DIS) who campaigned to unseat Michael Eisner as chairman will nominate an alternate slate of directors next year if the current board does not "face up to the issues", former director Stanley Gold said on Monday.

Although Disney has been forecasting strong earnings growth over the next few years, Gold said Disney's results will deteriorate because the company has "buildings full of suits" but is "bankrupt of creative people."

Gold and fellow dissident investor Roy Disney, the nephew of company founder Walt Disney, spearheaded a drive to oust Eisner after they resigned from the Disney board late last year.

Gold is the chairman of Shamrock Holdings Inc., the U.S. investment arm of Roy Disney.

Their campaign against Eisner sparked the shareholder protest that flared at the company's March 3 shareholder meeting, when 45 percent of ballots were withheld from Eisner's reelection to the board. Eisner was ousted as chairman, but remains chief executive of Disney.

Gold said he considers Pixar Animation Studios Inc. (PIXR) chief Steve Jobs qualified to take over as CEO from Eisner.

"If I had a list, Steve Jobs would be on a short list of people who could fix this company," Gold said in answer to a question at a meeting of the Society of American Business Editors and Writers.

Pixar, the pioneering computer animation house founded by Jobs, has been responsible for creating some of the most successful movies distributed by Disney in recent years, including "Finding Nemo" and "Toy Story." Pixar in late January ended talks with Disney to renew their movie distribution deal.

Shamrock must unveil its board candidates in early December in order to run the slate next year, Gold said. "I'm less and less encouraged that they (the board) will face up to the issues, but if they don't we will run a slate," Gold said.

Disney, meanwhile, says it is on track to grow earnings from continuing operations more than 40 percent this year and by double digit rates through 2007, in what it says is a validation of Eisner's strategy.

The fight to unseat a corporate management is difficult because of the cost and time needed. Shamrock spent $3 million to $5 million on its recent Disney campaign. REUTERS

© 2004 Reuters
 

cloudboy

Well-Known Member
Great, out of the frying pan and into the fire.

We get to have our park, only it will be late to open, have only half the rides they said they would have (but the rest are coming)., and you you would be picked up at the airport in blacked out windowed vans and never know where the park really is. And no travel agent in your area would actually deal with Disney trips and you'd have no place to actually purchase one.

Man I have to cheer up!
 

DisneyFan 2000

Well-Known Member
I would love Steve Jobs to be Disney's next CEO! His company has been more and more profitable over the years + he goes all the way with his movies! :king:
 

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