Free Newsletter
Biogen works to stave off proxy fights
Biogen Idec is building up its defenses against the sort of proxy battle it was forced to wage with activist investor Carl Icahn earlier this year. The company has revised its corporate bylaws to include obstacles for activist shareholders who want to nominate new directors or propose resolutions for a vote at annual meetings.
For instance, the company gave authority to its chairman to adjourn a shareholder meeting even if a majority isn't in favor. Shareholders who want to get resolutions or directors onto a ballot have to disclose their holdings in any financial instruments with values that depend on Biogen shares. And they'll have to fess up to any prior agreements with business partners or with its nominees about Biogen's future operations.
You'll recall that Icahn pushed Biogen to sell itself to the highest bidder earlier this year, arguing that the company was undervalued. But when Biogen solicited offers, no firm bids surfaced, and Icahn accused the company of just going through the motions. Then, he nominated his own slate of directors, but failed to get them on board.
- read the story in the Wall Street Journal
Related Articles:
Icahn loses a big round with Biogen Idec
Icahn accuses Biogen of lying about sales process
Biogen squares off against Icahn in board battle
Icahn aims for Biogen control
Biogen shares deflate as it gives up on sale
Biogen Idec in play after Icahn makes his move
Paid Research Reports
- Trends in mHealth and Telemedicine
- The Global Aesthetic Dermatology Market Outlook
- Future Directions in Regenerative Medicine
- Pipeline Insight: Insulin Antidiabetics – Novel analogs show promise as alternative delivery methods prove less attractive
- Pipeline Insight: Non-insulin Antidiabetics - Rise of the weight-reducers: Once-weekly GLP-1 agonists and novel SGLT-2 inhibitor
- Forecast Insight: Antidiabetics - Diabetes market growth driven by epidemiological trends and rich pipeline


SHARE
WITH: