Icahn, Deason urge Xerox shareholders to oppose Fujifilm deal

Reuters 

(Reuters) - Corp's plan to sell itself to Japan's Holdings has come under further pressure with and urging fellow shareholders to oppose the $6.1 billion deal.

The activist shareholders, who own a combined 15 percent of the U. S. printer and copier maker, said the agreement dramatically undervalued and criticised the deal structure, which calls for the U.

S. firm to be combined into the Fuji joint venture, as "tortured, convoluted".

"We urge you - our fellow shareholders - do not let Fuji steal this company from us," and Deason said in an open letter. (http://bit.ly/2skuvYM)

They added there was still great opportunity for to create "enormous value for shareholders, and it does not involve selling control to Fuji without a premium".

Seeking a firmer footing amid waning demand for office printing, the two firms agreed to a deal under which their existing joint venture Fuji will buy back Fujifilm's stake in it for about 75 percent for around $6.1 billion.

will then use those proceeds to purchase 50.1 percent of new shares.

Masayuki Otani, at Securities Japan, said that and have limited options in terms of addressing Icahn's and Deason's opposition to the deal.

"Combining the businesses for efficiency is probably the only way for to survive," Otani said. "And can't afford to pay that much, as more restructuring may be needed when the deal is complete."

said in a statement that it had considered several other options in detail and concluded that the combination with Fuji is the "best path to create value" for the company.

Fujifilm, valued at some $20.6 billion, said in a separate statement that the planned deal "represents compelling strategic and financial value for shareholders."

"The combined company will create a strong foundation under a globally unified management strategy and provide new value by leveraging Fujifilm's technological resources," the Japanese company said.

Shares of climbed 1.1 percent on Monday. Fujifilm's stock dropped 3.2 percent on Tuesday.

(Reporting by and in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by in Tokyo; Editing by and Edwina Gibbs)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, February 13 2018. 15:19 IST