Transcript Excerpt from May 11, 2009 CNBC Squawk Box appearance by William A. Ackman
On May 11, 2009, William Ackman, the founder and managing member of the general partner of Pershing
Square Capital Management, L.P., appeared on television on CNBC Squawk Box. The following is a
transcript excerpt from the appearance:
Conversation between CNBC and William A. Ackman
CNBC: And Pershing Squares, Bill Ackman is in the midst of a battle for board seats now, at
retail giant Target. Check out the Wall Street Journal today. Hell be introducing his slate of
five nominees, including himself, to Target shareholders later this morning, but first he joins us,
exclusively, for the remainder of the show as a special guest host. We invited Target to appear on
air with us, as well, but the company declined our invitation. Bill, its good to see you.
WILLIAM A. ACKMAN, PERSHING SQUARE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, L.P.: Thank you for having me.
CNBC: Looking at some of the things about Target that are obvious, I think that for a while we
thought Target was overtaking Wal-Mart with cachet and everything else, but in the last 18 months,
or so, Wal-Mart has seemed to separate itself positively from the performance of Targets stock and
of the company itself. Right?
ACKMAN: Sure.
CNBC: Why, where is, whats Target doing wrong at this point?
ACKMAN: Two principal reasons. One is the state of Targets credit card business. Wal-Mart is
really just a pure retailer, whereas Target is really some part bank and its a big part retailer,
but in a world where credit is deteriorating, where unemployment is rising, you dont want to have
exposure to your customers. That had a meaningful impact on the companys earnings, and of course,
on the stock price. I think the other problem theyve had is that the Expect More. Pay Less.
kind of image of the business. Expect More. worked really well when times were good. And then,
we began a recession in December, really in the fourth quarter of 2007, and thats when Target
really began to underperform. And it could be that consumer said you know, I dont I thought
of Target as really discretionary and Wal-Mart as non-discretionary, and they went to buy their
groceries at Wal-Mart, and they ended up buying other things there. Traffic went down. That hurt
sales. That has hurt the business.
CNBC: I mean, thats the one thing is, if you look at what happened between Target and Wal-Mart, a
lot of it is probably very likely just blamed on whats happened with the downturn in the economy.
ACKMAN: Well, you know, I think you want a retailer that can do well. You know, our view on
Target going into this investment is, they would be one of the few retailers that would do well
even in a difficult economic time. I mean, you think of them as a place where you can buy things
at generally very high quality at a low price, and thats a good position to be in, because I think
it may have overemphasized the kind of upper scale discounter image, and then lost that customer
when times got tough.
CNBC: Not I mean, the stock price performance wasnt that different than Wal-Marts a little
bit, not quite a bit. And Wal-Marts I mean, in the last year, the one that shows about 3
percent.
ACKMAN: Well, if you go from, at the time, the fourth quarter of 2007, to the day before we
launched the proxy contest, which I think is the right measure, because I think that weve had an
impact since the proxy context began, that youll see the stock is down 50 percent, and Wal-Mart is
up around 11 percent.
CNBC: And if you were to look at the same store sales and the performance, it used to be they were
much closer in what Target was able to deliver, and that has diverged, too; has it not? What has
Target been putting up?
ACKMAN: You know, minus a couple percent comps, a minus 10 percent comp in November of last year.
So, theyve definitely underperformed on same store sales, and actually the credit card business
has been a huge source of losses.
CNBC: Management acts like youre unreasonable, youre asking for, youre not clear what youre
asking, necessarily. They say theyre doing some, what are their ideas, theyre going to bring
some groceries in?
ACKMAN: First of all, were very supportive of management. You know, whats interesting here is
the company, at least the board has positioned the proxy contest as Pershing versus management.
This has nothing to do with management. We like management. Were big supporters of management.
CNBC: The whole slate of directors?
ACKMAN: Its not that we dont like the directors. I think the directors are high quality people.
But if you look at Target, this is, obviously, a major retailer, a major credit card company, a
major owner of real estate. But theres not one retail executive on the board. Theres not one
credit card executive on the board.
CNBC: Dick Kovacevich is on the board, from Wells Fargo.
ACKMAN: Hes chairman of a bank. Wells Fargo doesnt, however, have a particularly well-regarded
credit card business, and I think of him as a good bank manager. But theres a big difference
between someone who runs a bank and someone who runs a credit card business. Youve got very
specific issues associated with it. The other thing thats missing on the Target board is
ownership. The stock.
CNBC: What do they own?
ACKMAN: The independent directors, I think, own something like 0.2 percent of the stock. If you
include options, theyve been granted its like 0.8 percent of the stock. If you look at stock
sales, heres kind of a stunning number. Over the last five years the board and management have
sold $430 million worth of stock a huge number. Management has bought no stock at all, other
than the day after we launched the proxy contest, it breaks down to about 170,000 shares. So,
its there isnt really an ownership culture. And so, I think, you know, what we see missing on
the board is specific expertise and stock ownership.
CNBC: If you like management
ACKMAN: Yes.
CNBC: how can you criticize the board, when the board places management?
ACKMAN: Well, I think the board has done a good job in hiring management, but the board has other
responsibilities beyond just hiring management.
CNBC: Owning stock?
ACKMAN: I think that creating an ownership culture, I think, is important. I think, also, making
the right strategic decisions. You know, we approached the company, we bought the stock in April
of 2007, we approached the company in August of 2007, and we said look, number one, a credit
tsunami is coming. Obviously, as you guys know, Ive been pretty negative on credit, and on bond
insurers, and so on. And I said, look, its going to become more difficult for this company to
access capital. You know, bond issuers are big providers of credit enhancement for securitization,
and this is a business where you can partner with a JPMorgan, or a Citi, or an HSBC, or even a GE;
theyll take the vast majority of the risk, theyll assume all of funding. You can take control of
the relationship with the customer. So, you have all of the benefits of being in the credit card
business.
CNBC: The way many retailers do.
ACKMAN: All but Nordstrom. So, theres a reason why Wal-Mart, and Kohls, and others, Sears, have
exited the credit card business, because theres really an inherent conflict between a retailer and
the credit card business. You know, the retailer wants to generate same store sales. But the CEO,
obviously, wants to put, wants to create as much credit for his customers as possible, but
obviously the problem with that is you extend too much credit.
CNBC: Although I thought you were in favor of the deal that they did do with
ACKMAN: We were certainly supportive of a deal that shifted some funding risk. But what we had
approached them to do was shift both the credit and the funding risk. And Target felt strongly
about keeping underwriting control of the portfolio, and obviously a bank is not going to take the
risk, unless you transfer a substantial portion of the underwriting to a financial institution.
CNBC: So, youre going to have this big investor meeting today, in New York?
ACKMAN: Yes.
CNBC: And the point of that is to do what? Is it to generate publicity?
ACKMAN: No. The point of that is, we have, were proposing five independent directors for the
board. Target has five seats coming up for election. So, number one, eight of the 12 current
directors are going to stay. Were going to put up five. We want the shareholders to meet the
five to assess their independence, assess their personal qualities, assess their background and
experience. Later in the show, I understand Jim Donald is coming on?
CNBC: Yes.
ACKMAN: Jim started his career at Wal-Mart when they had four superstores, helped build that into
a dominant if you looked at, I dont know, [15] years ago, if you looked at the general
merchandise discounter business, Wal-Mart did not have nearly as big a lead as a Target in terms of
a supermarket business, but they brought Jim Donald in, a number of years ago, and he really built
that business very significantly, and wed love to have him on Targets board. It would be
helpful.
CNBC: Do you know specifically which directors, who were already in place, you want to go?
ACKMAN: Well, we dont have a choice. I mean, the way the rules work is its a staggered board,
five seats up.
CNBC: I thought it was four seats up.
ACKMAN: Well, its interesting you mention that, because there are actually five seats up. In
order to change the size of the board you have to have a shareholder vote, and originally Target
put up only four directors, because they only wanted their four to be replaced. Bob Ulrich, the
prior chairman, resigned, which also created another seat. Weve got five spots, and weve put up
five people. Four of them have no relationship with Pershing Square. Three of the four I really
met for the first time in the last couple months. And the other is not someone weve done
business with. So, shareholders have to decide which slate of independent directors, or which of
our slate, and which of the companys slate would best serve the shareholders.
CNBC: So, you could wind up with a couple of people, maybe Mr. Donald, maybe yourself would wind
up with seats on the board?
ACKMAN: Sure. It could be several from our slate and a couple from the company slate. It could
be all from ours, all from theirs. You know, whats unfortunate about corporate elections is that
people arent you know, its rare you get a choice. The typical retail investor receives a proxy
in the mail and throws it out, because what election why do you want to vote for only one
candidate per seat? Its kind of an absurdity of corporate elections, generally. And, you know,
we have sort of an ulterior motive in running this proxy contest. We think if we make the effort
here, its going to have an impact on other boards.
CNBC: The velvet push-back that people say look, obviously you have a huge stake. This is your
biggest position?
ACKMAN: Yes.
CNBC: And what is it, about 7.8 percent, between the options and the shares that you hold
ACKMAN: Its over a billion dollars of common stock. Weve got a few, you know, $280,000,000
worth of options. So, its a big position.
CNBC: Right. I think more than 4 percent of that is in options that, I believe, come due in
ACKMAN: January of 2011.
CNBC: Okay. So, youre talking about 20 months, or something, down the road.
ACKMAN: Yes.
CNBC: The push-back from Target and from people involved with them is that youre interested
because you have these options that are going to expire, and that youre not a long-term investor.
ACKMAN: Okay. Just a quick review on the kind of options we have. We purchased these options
originally beginning, I think, in April of 2007; so, obviously and we extended them for a couple
years, in February of this year these are not just traditional listed options. Theyre
over-the-counter options which we can extend to the future, if we want. Our plan, ultimately, is
to own the underlying shares with respect to the options that we own. So, the best evidence that
were a long-term investor is that, number one, weve owned the stock for more than two years and
number two, Im joining the board; right? When a manager joins the board, we lose the flexibility
to trade the stock. So, if we were short-term and I wanted to get out in a few months, this would
be a bad idea, to join a board of directors.
CNBC: Its being called the post whats the strike price?
ACKMAN: You know, if you look at the options held by management, many of them expire before our
options; right? A much bigger percentage of the compensation package held by management is in the
form of options. If weve got 80 percent of the value of our position out of the money, I could
see their point.
But because its like you needed to go there, now youre obviously not going to exercise them if
there was a 70 strike price when the stocks in the 40s. But if 35 strikes and its in the 40s;
so, you could exercise it.
CNBC: Its being called the largest and most expensive proxy battle, or one of, in U.S. corporate
history. How much is it costing you, overall?
ACKMAN: You know, I think it could be $10 to $15 million. Its a lot of money, but in light of
the size of the position, I think its worth it, and I think if we can get the right directors on
the board, I think its going to help the company in a meaningful way. And, if you think about it,
weve got, I dont know, 60-plus million shares. So, if the board adds a dollar of value, thats
$60 million. That increase in value more than pays for the proxy contest. And again, we think
that were working out a lot more than a dollar a share.
CNBC: And well talk a lot more about this and Fannie, Freddie, the credit markets everything.
Youll be with us till 9 oclock. You signed up for it you have a two hour sentence.
CNBC: Hes actually his seat belt. He cant get up.
CNBC: Youre not allowed to move.
ACKMAN: All right.
The Squawk two-minute drill with Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management
CNBC: In summary, Mr. Ackman?
ACKMAN: I guess Id say the following: I think that people dont take corporate elections very
seriously, because its a foregone its a rigged game, right? You get a slate of directors. You
can either vote in favor or withhold. The guy gets one vote, hes elected to the board. Were
trying to change that, and were trying to do it the right way. In the case of Target, I didnt
put together a group of my friends who were on the board. I found four independent directors who
have no affiliation with Target. Were very excited about the opportunity to get a chance to meet
Jim Donald today. The other directors are as outstanding as Jim.
CNBC: But you point out that if you win, theres a number of good things that will happen, as a
result. If you lose, though, there are a number of negative things. You could this could make
things worse in some way.
ACKMAN: I think thats right. I mean, I think, you know, were a credible investor. Weve done
well for shareholders in lots of other situations. We own a very meaningful position in the
company stock. Weve been very respectful of management. Weve had a very excellent relationship
to date. We went about it the right way, and we asked for one seat for Pershing and one seat for
an independent director. We went through an interview process. We were rejected we werent told
why we were rejected, excuse me. And then we put up a slate of directors. We found independent
directors. We focused on what was missing on the board, what expertise was missing. We made sure
that they had no affiliation with Target. We made sure they werent in a competitive position with
Target and we are spending the appropriate amount of money to make sure that people hear the
message. Youve given me an opportunity on CNBC. If we lose; right? If we get zero on this board,
I think its an invitation for boards to become really insular. You know, if we cant credibly
get, you know, two to three, four, you know, five directors on this board . Again, were not
changing control of the board. Eight of the current directors are going to stay. So, the strategy
of the company is not changing. So, I just think, whats the downside to shareholders? I dont
see it.
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CNBC:
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Bill, weve got to go here, but we appreciate your joining us. |
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ACKMAN:
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I appreciate the time. |
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CNBC:
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Happy birthday. |
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ACKMAN:
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Thank you very much. |
Conversation among CNBC, William A. Ackman and Nelson Peltz, the Chairman and CEO of Trian Partners
CNBC: Our next guest this morning is another titan activist investor who has more than a little
experience in these proxy fights and on landing spots on companies boards. Joining us this
morning for a rare Squawk exclusive is Nelson Peltz, the Chairman and CEO of Trian Partners, also
non-executive chairman of the board of Wendys/Arbys Group. Of course, our guest host, Bill
Ackman, of Pershing Square Capital joins us, as well.
Nelson, its great to see you, and its great to have you at the same table as Bill, because, as
we watch him go through this deal with Target, I wonder, in this environment, if there is a secret
to making these things work, these fights work.
NELSON PELTZ, TRIAN PARTNERS CHAIRMAN/CEO: Well, first of all, its sort of like a fraternity
initiation Bill. Weve been doing this for years and years, 25 years, and only had one proxy
fight. And I think the key to a proxy fight is to really present a logical plan. A plan that
the mutual funds can understand. A plan that, especially in this environment, addresses the income
statement. You know, there are a lot of balance sheet opportunities that activists we think
of ourselves as a constructivist, by the way, not an activist. And private equity has always
been attacking the balance sheet. I think what people really want to see is how are you going to
get me more earnings per share? How is that going to happen? How do we capture what we call that
free money on the income statement thats laying there and not being addressed properly? And if
you can do that, and we did that at Heinz, and we did that in such a way that we took the high
road there was no name calling, no adjectives we just presented our plan, and the company
presented their plan, and after the fight was over, everybody is great friends. And I just dont
say that lightly, I really mean that. Everybodys working in the same direction.
ACKMAN: Actually, thats one of the things that, you know, people say to us when I ask them the
question, whats the downside to electing our slate. Our slate is a group of independent directors
all of them, except for myself, unaffiliated with Pershing Square they said well, after a proxy
contest, isnt it going to be a mess on the board? And, you know, I think its very useful for you
to explain. Again, you described I think you took a very high-minded approach to the proxy
contest. My sense is Heinz didnt really take that approach. I mean, there were a fair amount of
personal attacks. I thought it was pretty ugly, but yet you say it was fine.
PELTZ: Well, it all depends on what your perspective has been. If they sold it, it was pretty
light. You know, I really think so. If it got ugly, we wouldnt have been able to have the
atmosphere in the board room that we have today. And it was, I felt it was light both ways, and to
credit Bill Johnston and the board, the day the fight ended, I was welcomed, my other nominee was
welcomed in such a way that we never felt anything but being part of that board forever. We got
all the information we wanted. And it was a testament to the old Heinz board and Bill [Johnston]
that it worked out so well, and it continues to work well.
ACKMAN: Why do you think companies fight so hard? Why did they fight so hard to kick you off,
and why do you think this is a why arent election just, may the best man win?
PELTZ: I think its a combination, perhaps, I think, of a knee-jerk reaction, sometimes. As I
said, weve been doing this for 25 years. Weve been buying strategic stakes in companies for 25
years and only had one proxy fight. And we have people on board today Tiffany, Kraft, Cadbury,
Dr. Pepper, Snapple, obviously Wendys and Heinz. So, I think its sort of a knee-jerk reaction.
I think once the fight is over, it all settles down. Honest men can disagree. I think perhaps
Heinz didnt agree with our plan initially. And I think they saw some wisdom in it, and I think
what theyre doing today is executing two good compromises of both their plans.
CNBC: How much of your plan have they taken over and run with, and how much have you come to some
compromises?
PELTZ: Well, if you look at, and I have to be at the Heinz board meeting tomorrow; so, I dont
want to take credit for whats happened to earnings per share at that company. But if you look at
whats happened since we bought our stock, shortly after we bought our stock, the company announced
shares at $1.89, and theyve gone up very nicely to the guidance of roughly $2.89. And thats been
in three years. Thats the same company. Thats no new debt. No tremendous share buybacks. A
couple of small bolt-on acquisitions here and there, and divestitures here and there, but thats
the same company. Now, to give credit to them, they were in a process of doing that. We felt the
process was perhaps taking longer than it should have. But we are clearly on the same page. I
think the company is doing very well. And Im very proud to be part of whats going on there. And
I mean that. Im just not saying that lightly.
CNBC: But to Bills question about why companies fight so hard. A lot of critics point to the
structure of how votes happen, how incumbents generally win. We just watched Ken Lewis go through
this with this chairman vote, and I wonder if you think that signals in any way a tipping point, or
a shift.
PELTZ: Well, its its really unhappy the way it works today. Because you present a short
slate, the companys got a full slate. In order for you, as a shareholder, not to pick either
slate, but a combination of the two, you have to be virtually present, in our case in Pittsburgh,
you had to be in Pittsburgh on the day of the meeting to present your combination slate. I think
that disadvantages shareholders. I think universal proxy card is really important. I think a good
mix of directors on the board from ownership mentality to skin in the game, to industry knowledge,
and to non-industry knowledge, is a great mix of all of that, and I think thats vital to give the
shareholders the opportunity to make their determination, like a Chinese menu, they want one from
column B and one from column A, and so be it.
ACKMAN: You know, interestingly, one of our directors is Ron Gilson. Ron Gilson is very highly
regarded, hes a corporate governance expert, hes a professor at Stanford and at Columbia, and it
was his idea to have a universal proxy in this proxy contest, because people may not want to vote
for a New York hedge fund manager, they may only want to vote for the independent directors on our
slate, and perhaps pick one from the other slate. And right now, to Nelsons point, thats a
difficult thing to do.
CNBC: People want to be able to vote a la carte, as well, and thats not happening.
ACKMAN: Well, this is a case where you shouldnt be forced to vote for, you know, everyone that
weve selected and, frankly, you shouldnt be forced to vote for everyone the companys selected.
PELTZ: But you can get around that. You can get around that, but the hoops that youve got to go
through in order to be able to accomplish that are very difficult. You just cant mail in a, you
know, a universal proxy card. You really have to be there in person on the day.
ACKMAN: Unless the company consents. So, I guess the one thing I would ask CNBC viewers, if
youre a Target shareholder and you want to have the ability to pick up and check from one on our
slate and one on the other slate. The company has to consent
CNBC: Thats going to be costing a lot more money, right?
ACKMAN: No. No. Weve offered to put their nominees on our proxy card. Now, we cant do it
without the consent of the company, without the consent of the nominees, but if we did that, we
could effectively accomplish universal proxy card and give people the flexibility. I dont think
theres really a good reason not to give shareholders a choice.
....
ACKMAN: Nelson, if I can ask a question. You mentioned sitting down with the CEO and talking
about strategy. You also mentioned how it was important to have both a mix of business backgrounds
on the board, but also people with relevant experience. Obviously, youve had a lot of experience
in consumer product companies, and I think you brought that to bear at Heinz. Also, you brought on
Michael Weinstein.
PELTZ: Right.
ACKMAN: Maybe you can explain why you think its important to have people with relevant you
know, basically youve been in the business, why is it important to have both a mix of people like
that, as well as just general business expertise.
PELTZ: Well, thats a good question, Bill, because a lot of these boards today have very
well-meaning directors people who have a great background, and a well-earned background, but they
dont know that much about the board theyve been asked to serve on. And I think you need a mix of
that, but its really great to have somebody on the board who knows the industry, has a background
in the industry, the challenge to give ideas, to help, to do all of the above. Because when you
have a guy on the board from the automotive sector, and he is involved in a retailer, I dont think
theres a huge amount of experience that he can bring to bear to that company.
....
Conversation among CNBC, William A. Ackman and Jim Donald, former CEO of Starbucks Corporation and
one of the Nominees for Shareholder Choice
CNBC: Our next guest is being targeted to serve on Targets board that is, if Bill Ackman has
his way. At his town hall later today Bills going to be making the case for Jim Donald. Jim is
the former Starbucks CEO. Hes one of the nominees for the board thats being put up by
Mr. Ackman. We invited Target to join us this morning, but the company declined. Jim Donald joins
us right now on a CNBC exclusive, and Jim, thanks for coming in today.
JAMES DONALD, FORMER STARBUCKS CEO: Thank you.
CNBC: Good to see you here. Why are you interested in being on Targets board?
DONALD: Well, its what I do now. Ive been out of Starbucks for about 16 months, and I serve on
a few boards, but Im very selective in the boards that I serve on, and I think its important that
when one decides to serve on a board as Nelson said, Im an activist, but not in the same way Im
active in very much running the company, particularly when its something that fits my sweet spot,
and Target fits my sweet spot.
CNBC: Fits your sweet spot because of your experience at Starbucks and other experience?
DONALD: Well, its retail, number one, and Ive had about 39 years in retail. Its food retail,
number two. Its big box. But, more importantly, its also about the 365,000 employees that can
make a difference each and every day. I kind of grew up working in that manner.
CNBC: What do you think Target is doing wrong right now, and what would you do differently?
DONALD: You know, its hard to say. I dont have any inside information. Im a nominee. Im not
privy to what their strategy is. You have to admit, theyre one of the top, in my opinion, five
best merchants in the world; so, its hard for me to really kind of pinpoint what I think their
opportunities are.
CNBC: Although Im guessing youve spent some time in the stores, check things out. Are there
things that just kind of jump out at you, or pushing into grocery, pushing into other areas that
youd like to see?
DONALD: No. I think if you look at retail numbers today, you see where the retail sectors have
gotten through these recessionary times, It is in consumables, and it is in grocery. And I think
Target, as Greg Steinhafel has said, is looking to advance their growth in the supermarket
business.
CNBC: If you are nominated to this board, though, youll have to give up your position on the Rite
Aide board?
DONALD: Yes. Ive had conversation with Mary Sammons, the Chairman and CEO of Rite Aid, and said
that would, it would probably be happening.
CNBC: And what does Rite Aid say about all of that?
DONALD: Well, Mary was sad to see that, and I said, if were elected, and if I can quote her,
she said why wouldnt they want you on the board? And she just said, I understand.
CNBC: Bill, why did you see, what did you see in Jim? What is it that you saw here? You two know
each other for
ACKMAN: No, I didnt. I wasnt a shareholder of Starbucks, and I didnt cross paths with him
previously. But grocery is a big initiative for Target. Jim is modest guy, but he started his
career at Wal-Mart. They had four superstores when he got there, and built it into its a
dominant factor in their success during the recession. Then, he went on to Safeway, as president.
He was CEO of Pathmark, and then on to Starbucks. Its really the ideal experience set for someone
if youre going to put one retailer on this board, and there really isnt one retailer today
and again, to Nelsons point, having someone with expert, relevant expertise can be very helpful,
particularly in an area which is an important growth initiative for Target. So, the grocery
background, and just you know, grocery background, and then just, you know, business character,
the references we got on him as a person. I was very impressed with the fact that, you know, we
set up a meeting with him. He came to my office a week later, flew in from Seattle. Had been to
see something like ten Targets and ten Wal-Marts in the week before. So, he has passion about the
business, and he had all kinds of ideas. I think he just is respecting I think, were expecting
Jim to be successful in getting on the board, and I think he doesnt want to share his insights
until hes on that board. But hes got some interesting ideas for the company.
....
CNBC: Jim, theres a comment in Fortune magazine, this latest issue. There have been some people
who have looked at this proxy fight, including Bill Dreher, hes a Deutsche Bank securities senior
analyst, he calls this fight a waste of time and money, but he says, where I sort of pricked my
ears up was potentially being able to get Donald on this board. Again, Bill mentions that youve
looked at these stores, youve had some ideas. You really think that you can come in and make a
difference at Target?
DONALD: Becky, a board member today doesnt necessarily work on the tactical stuff, they work on
the strategic stuff. A board member is a coach. Hes not going to get in the game. It isnt
about the play, but its also giving counsel and advice, and if Target is true to their words about
growing their supermarket business, I think I can ignite it.
CNBC: From the Wal-Mart experience of it, and thats the way at Target. I mean, maybe you
shouldnt even go that way at Target. Do you have to go that way? Its such a low margin
business. Why?
ACKMAN: Okay. It may or may not be the right way to go, but I think its something that the
companys focused on as an initiative. Theyre definitely expanding the number of sides, if you
will refrigerators in each of the various stores. There is you know, if you think about
Targets history, the DNA of the company, this was, you know, Dayton Hudson. This was a department
store retailer.
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Conversation among CNBC, William A. Ackman and Joseph Grundfest, Stanford Law School Professor and
Co-Director of the Rock Center on Corporate Governance
CNBC: Weve been talking quite a bit this morning about how much control shareholders have over
the composition of corporate boards, and joining us this morning from Palo Alto, Stanford Law
School Professor Joseph Grundfest and Co-Director of the Rock Center on Corporate Governance. Hes
former Commissioner of the SEC from 85 to 90. Of course, our guest host, Bill Ackman of Pershing
Square joins us here on set. Its great to see you, Professor. And were here, obviously, talking
to Bill about this fight he has going on with Target. I wonder if you have thoughts on that
specific fight and whether or not you think hes going to win.
JOSEPH GRUNDFEST, STANFORD UNIVERSITY LAW & BUSINESS PROFESSOR: Well, I have no idea whether Bill
is going to win or not. Im sure hes got a strong opinion on the matter. But in terms of the
fight, I think we have to recognize that this is probably an appetizer that signals many more
different types of fights of this likely to come in the relatively near future.
CNBC: Why is that? You talk about the boards becoming more politicized, and that theyre going to
have to start performing more like politicians; right?
GRUNDFEST: Thats exactly right. There are several factors that are at work in the marketplace
right now that indicate that these types of political battles are going to become much more common.
For example, weve got Say on Pay, thats already required for all TARP institutions. Id be very
surprised if Congress doesnt pass Say on Pay legislation in the relatively near future. We have
majority voting thats already been adopted by two-thirds of the S&P 500. That way if the majority
of the shareholders simply withhold authority to elect a director, they can kick that director off
the board. The New York Stock Exchange is already changing its Rule 452 thats going to change the
way that brokers vote their shares, make it easier to oust incumbent directors. And the SEC is
also likely to adopt proxy access; in which case, it will be even easier to run proxy contests of
the sort that Bill is running today.
CNBC: Do you take credit for some of that, Bill?
ACKMAN: Look, its hard. We have a big enough investment that we can justify a proxy contest in
the case of Target. We think bringing on independent directors with relevant expertise is going to
help a lot. But we also think its going to help other companies we have investments in. You
know, S&P 500 boards felt very much insulated from proxy contests. And, you know, were not
criticizing the current board for the quality of the people on the board. We think the quality of
the people on the board is excellent. What were saying is, you know, directors have been there a
little too long. Youve got directors who have been on the board for 15 years, you know, flying in
from Australia. Theres a guy named Solomon Trujillo whos a telecommunications executive.
GRUNDFEST: 15 years, right?
ACKMAN: Well, hes been on the board a long time. Hes conveyed what hes had to say to the
board. I think Jim Donald, you met him today, he brings very directly relevant expertise to the
company. Theres a director named George Tamke. Hes on four boards you know, three boards
other than Target. The other three boards are portfolio companies of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice,
where he is a managing partner. Hes chairman of two of these other boards. How much
time, realistically, can he devote to Target? He owns, like, 10,000 shares of Target, and hes been
on the board, I think, for ten years. So, what were trying to do is upgrade the Target board.
Its going to cause other boards to do some self-reflection and say, you know what, you know, what
happens to boards over time is they become like little clubs everyones friendly, its a nice
environment. Who wants to be the person to say, look, youve been on the board for 15 years, its
time for you to step down, for us to bring on someone new. And it really takes a shareholder to
kind of prod things along, unless some of the changes that Professor Grundfest talks about actually
happen.
CNBC: Professor, let me ask you this, though. You say that this is going to bring a change, that
its going to be much more politicized. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? You know, we just
heard, from what Bill thinks, why these boards need to be more reactive, why they need to be
upgraded. But at the same time, it distracts the companies that are going through these proxy
battles. Is this a good thing or bad thing?
GRUNDFEST: Well, my concern is that this change goes too far, and what it really does is it opens
up the corporate board room so that it becomes a forum for a wide variety of issues that really
have nothing to do with the efficiency of running the business or getting returns to shareholders.
I think corporate America is really going to be paying a price for many decades in which it didnt
pay close enough attention to shareholders, and we all are familiar with the experience where when
the political process steps in, it often overshoots. And my real concern here is that were headed
for a major overshoot.
CNBC: Well, in the past boards have been taken to task for the quality of management, the
performance of management, or the performance of the stock. I wonder if you think Bills points
about the tenure, the number of boards youre on, the number of shares you own; are those fair
points with which to criticize a board member, or not?
ACKMAN: Well, whether you think theyre fair or not, those are points that are actually being made
CNBC: It doesnt matter. It is happening. Thats your point; right?
GRUNDFEST: Well, the point is, when you get to the world of politics, the word fair is really a
very interesting word. I mean, you know, whats fair? You know, anything that gets you more votes
is fair. Anything that takes votes away from your opponent is fair. So, any argument that has
salience and that resonates in terms of getting shareholders to vote in your direction is going to
be perceived as fair game. And many of the points that Bill is making are strong points from the
shareholder activist agenda. Many activist shareholders do believe that there should be limits on
the number of boards on which an individual director can sit, that board rotation is actually a
good idea, and that getting fresh blood into the board room actually can be constructive for many
different shareholders.
ACKMAN: I think when you were referring to this having gone too far, I think youre talking about
proxy access. Your concern is someone with 0.1 percent of the stock decides to run a proxy contest
about, you know, environmental issues or about, you know, pro choice rights, or things like that.
It doesnt sound like your concern is relevancy of expertise, or
a shareholder who owns an 8 percent stake in the business deciding to put up some directors with relevant
expertise, particularly if theyre independent directors, and theyre backed by a shareholder who
owns a lot of stock.
GRUNDFEST: Well, thats exactly right, Bill. My concern, really, is that if the regulatory
process does adopt proxy access, we could wind up in a situation where corporations are going to
just become much, much more difficult to govern, especially in a world where we already have
majority access, and I, personally, have no objection if the SEC, or if Congress, required majority
access at all publicly traded corporations.
ACKMAN: See, the problem we have now is that its plurality voting, which means that if you get
one vote, okay, youre elected. And I think what Professor Grundfest is talking about is if we
make majority voting a requirement, it really is going to discipline boards into making sure that
the best candidate is running for election. And, you know, in the case of Target, since there is
no opposition without us, had we not put up a slate of independent directors, its a certainty that
all the directors that they proposed would be nominated, and shareholders shouldnt have to spend
$10 million to just create a contest. Im a little more supportive of proxy access than Professor
Grundfest. I do think that if theres competition, in the same way, I think we have a better
president because theres competition. If the current president could re-elect himself just term
after term for 15 years and re-elect himself for another, you know, another four-year term, if you
will, I dont think wed have a great country.
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