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Tuesday, 20 December 2011 - Analysis: Olympus ex-CEO looks to be losing boardroom bid |
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Triton says it's perfect for explorers who want to work and the wealthy who want to play.  Video  Surveillance system tags, tracks and follows The BlackBerry maker's tumultuous year Saudi prince buys Twitter stake for $300 million Follow Reuters Facebook Twitter RSS YouTube Read In mourning, hermit kingdom North Korea seals itself | 3:03am EST Apple scores limited victory in smartphone patent war 12:11am EST "Dexter" writers considered incest storyline for years 19 Dec 2011 Clinton says U.S. to help women broker peace 19 Dec 2011 Blizzard strands motorists in Southwest, Plains 19 Dec 2011 Discussed 265 Ron Paul gains ground, further stirring Republicans 142 Ron Paul strongly defends anti-war policies 113 North Korea state TV says Kim Jong il has died Watched AT&T drops T-Mobile bid Mon, Dec 19 2011 Wild elephants on rampage in India Mon, Dec 19 2011 Pyongyang mourns the passing of Kim Jong Il Mon, Dec 19 2011 Analysis: Olympus ex-CEO looks to be losing boardroom bid Tweet Share this Email Print Related News Olympus aims to tap Sony, others for $1.3 billion in new capital 2:08am EST Olympus says nothing decided on capital raising Mon, Dec 19 2011 UPDATE 2-Southeastern warns Olympus board may dilute capital to retain control Mon, Dec 19 2011 Special Report: The masterminds of the Olympus coverup Fri, Dec 16 2011 Nikkei posts modest gains but set for losing week Fri, Dec 16 2011 Analysis & Opinion RBS’s board lessons Hedge funds against Obama Related Topics Tech » Deals » Global Deals Review: 2011 Q3 » Global Deals Review: 2011 Q2 » Global Deals Review » Hot Stocks » Asian Markets » Inflows Outflows » Japan » By Emi Emoto and Nathan Layne TOKYO | Tue Dec 20, 2011 2:08am EST TOKYO (Reuters) - Michael Woodford, the ousted boss of Japan's Olympus Corp, has won the battle to force his former employer to admit to more than a decade of accounting fraud. His bid to return as chief executive officer, however, appears doomed. Woodford has said major lenders to the maker of cameras and medical equipment will decide its fate - and those banks are already lined up behind Olympus managers, seemingly intent on slamming the boardroom door shut on him for good. Olympus' lenders, led by Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG), are likely to deliver the final blow to the Briton's comeback campaign by backing a plan to bring in a new domestic investor to pump more capital into the firm, say bankers familiar with their thinking. They say the new investor, possibly a Japanese rival such as Fujifilm, would bolster Olympus with a dose of fresh equity, but in the process also weaken the influence of foreign shareholders who are the main backers of a Woodford comeback. The Nikkei business daily reported on Tuesday that Olympus may issue about $1.28 billion (100 billion yen) in new preferred shares, with Sony and Fujifilm seen as the likely buyers. Panasonic Corp may also buy some of the stock, the report said. Olympus said it had made no decisions about capital raising, while Sony and Fujifilm declined to comment. COZY TIES As evidence that the deck is stacked against Woodford, the bankers point to his criticism of cosy ties between Olympus and its main Japanese investors, and to signs SMFG in particular is backing the current board, the same team that sacked him. "Woodford does not have much chance of winning support from Japanese shareholders," said a Japanese banker, who declined to be identified because of the issue's sensitivity. Japan's major banks such as SMFG and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group are often cornerstone investors in Japanese blue chips, with major holdings of both equity and debt, and they traditionally call the shots at board level, making or breaking chief executives. Olympus is no different, as Woodford may discover. In a sign lenders are in the driving seat, Olympus has appointed an industrialist with connections to SMFG as the head of an outside panel to advise the firm on a management shake-up. The panel chief, Shiro Hiruta, was formerly head of chemicals firm Asahi Kasei, which has close ties with SMFG. "In the old days, banks would send someone to be CFO and CEO. You can see having someone from a company close to SMFG means Olympus' solution is going to be bank-led," said the Japanese banker. SMFG is the biggest lender to Olympus with 227.5 billion yen ($2.92 billion) in outstanding loans and bonds, according to company data and sources. The bank also holds a 3.4 percent equity stake in Olympus, whose balance sheet has been left badly weakened by a $1.7 billion fraud to hide investment losses. Olympus' other main lender MUFG, which also is a shareholder, has said it will continue to support the company. Woodford himself is showing frustration that his campaign has failed to draw any public support from Japanese banks, and has made barbed comments about their cosy ties with Olympus. Speaking to reporters on a visit last week to Japan, he sounded abandoned: "Not one Japanese shareholder stood up and said publicly, 'Mr Woodford is right, thank you Mr Woodford', anything, a total, utter silence." FOREIGNERS' FEARS Far from surrendering the boardroom to Woodford and his own team of nominees, the current board has even stepped back somewhat from its earlier commitment to resign en masse - a retreat that clearly enraged the whistleblower. Lenders may even be willing to retain some of those board members, a source from a Japanese bank told Reuters. "I don't know if it will produce good results for the entire board to resign," the source said, declining to be identified because he wasn't authorized to talk to the media. U.S. fund manager Southeastern Asset Management, a supporter of Woodford and a big foreign shareholder with about 5 percent of Olympus, fears it will have little influence on the end-game. "We are concerned that they want the capital-raise not to shore up the balance sheet but to bring in a partner who would be supportive of their continued control of the board," Josh Shores, a principal at Southeastern, told Reuters. The fund on Monday urged a halt to any fund-raising plan until a new board was in place. Olympus' net assets are dangerously thin after it corrected its accounts last week, unwinding the effects of a 13-year fraud to reveal its true financial state. Shareholders' equity was just 42.9 billion yen ($550 million) at end-September, or just 4.5 percent of total assets - less than a quarter of what is seen as a "healthy" cut-off. A healthy 20 percent proportion of equity would imply that it needs to raise about 150 billion yen in fresh equity. How much it can raise may be limited by Tokyo Stock Exchange listing rules that require a company to seek either shareholder approval or an independent entity to bless an offering equal to more than 25 percent of outstanding shares. At the current stock price that would restrict it to 72 billion yen. Woodford, who was a rare foreign CEO in Japan, has outlined his own ideas for Olympus to raise capital, through either private equity or a rights issue -- but both are unlikely to win support from Japanese investors, Tokyo investment bankers say. Rights issues are an unwieldy and rare form of raising capital in Japan, and domestic shareholders may flinch from selling part of Olympus to private equity firms which are often viewed in Japan as foreign asset strippers. "It could be sold to someone in the future and the potential buyer could be a foreign firm. That would not be acceptable from the Japanese point of view," said a private equity expert, who asked not to be identified. NEMESIS If reinstated as CEO, Woodford says he would recapitalize Olympus within months. But he may find that his nemesis, Olympus President Shuichi Takayama, will move more quickly still, and line up a new domestic investor before an extraordinary shareholder meeting Takayama plans to hold in March or April. There's no shortage of rumored new partners for Olympus. Apart from tech stalwarts Sony, Panasonic, Canon and Fujifilm, medical device maker Terumo Corp, which owns 2.5 percent of Olympus, has been cited by bankers as a possible partner, as has conglomerate Hitachi Ltd. Fujifilm said last week it was buying U.S.-based medical equipment maker SonoSite Inc for about $753 million to bolster its life sciences business. A tie-up with another Japanese company would be more palatable to local investors, but would do little to meet foreign investor demands for improved corporate governance. With enough support from foreign shareholders, Woodford could force an earlier vote, but has not so far sought to convene an extraordinary meeting, according to Olympus, suggesting to some analysts he lacks the numbers. "Rather than calling it early and losing, it's probably better for (Woodford's supporters) to wait until the planned gathering so they can get their board candidates ready," said Kengo Nishiyama, senior strategist at Nomura Holdings. Robert McCormick, chief policy officer at proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis & Co, noted there have been very few proxy contests in Japan, reflecting a docile domestic shareholder base that rarely challenges management. And Woodford's chances? "It will really come down to how much of the shareholder base is based in Japan and how much is outside Japan," said McCormick. "Japanese shareholders based in Japan tend to be fairly conservative, but if you get a lot of U.S., UK, even continental (European) shareholders, you're more likely to get a positive result." ($1 = 77.9650 Japanese yen) (Additional reporting by Junko Fujita and Taiga Uranaka; Editing by Mark Bendeich and Ian Geoghegan) Tech Deals Global Deals Review: 2011 Q3 Global Deals Review: 2011 Q2 Global Deals Review Hot Stocks Asian Markets Inflows Outflows Japan Related Quotes and News Company Price Related News Tweet this Link this Share this Digg this Email Reprints   We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/ Comments (0) Be the first to comment on reuters.com. Add yours using the box above.   Edition: U.S. Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom Back to top Reuters.com Business Markets World Politics Technology Opinion Money Pictures Videos Site Index Legal Bankruptcy Law California Legal New York Legal Securities Law Support & Contact Support Corrections Advertise With Us Connect with Reuters Twitter   Facebook   LinkedIn   RSS   Podcast   Newsletters   Mobile About Privacy Policy Terms of Use Our Flagship financial information platform incorporating Reuters Insider An ultra-low latency infrastructure for electronic trading and data distribution A connected approach to governance, risk and compliance Our next generation legal research platform Our global tax workstation Thomsonreuters.com About Thomson Reuters Investor Relations Careers Contact Us   Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. 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