Proxy adviser ISS recommends LG shareholders reject spinoff plan

OSTN Staff

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss

BOSTON (Reuters) – Proxy adviser Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. said LG Corp. shareholders should vote against the South Korean company’s plan to spin off five affiliates, arguing there is no “compelling” reason for the proposed transaction.

LG announced in November that it would spin off a new holding company and transfer its holdings in LG Hausys, LG MMA, Silicon Works, LG International, and Pantos into the new entity, marking the latest reorganization at one of the country’s family-led conglomerates as they pass to a new generation.

U.S. hedge fund Whitebox Advisors, which owns roughly 1% of LG, opposes the plan and has mounted a public campaign to stop it, saying the spinoff would hurt minority shareholders while aiming at resolving a family succession issue.

LG had argued that the spinoff would let it focus on existing core businesses such as electronics, chemicals, and telecommunications services.

Less than two weeks before shareholders are expected to vote on the matter at a meeting on March 26, ISS rejected the company’s arguments.

“It appears that the proposed transaction lacks a compelling business justification and does not address the most pressing issues related to capital management and the enormous discount to NAV at which shares of the parent company trade,” the ISS said in a report seen by Reuters.

Analysts expect the new holding firm, to be headed by Koo Bon-joon, a son of LG’s founder, will eventually be separated from LG Corp. LG Corp itself is led by Koo Bon-joon’s nephew Koo Kwang-mo, who took over as LG Group chairman in 2018 after his father died.

The ISS report also addressed the family dynamics.

“The statement about the post-spinoff exchange of shares between family members has fueled suspicions that the proposed transaction is merely aimed at addressing issues with succession planning inside the founding family,” the report said.

(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Read the original article on Business Insider

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