Kohl's board 'behaving somewhat disingenuously,' activist investor says

In This Article:

Macellum Capital Management CEO Jonathan Duskin sits down with Yahoo Finance Live to talk about the activist investor seeking control of Kohl's executive board following a poison-pill tactic, nominating 10 directors to the board, and restructuring the retailer.

Video Transcript

KARINA MITCHELL: All right, we are going to shift gears and now bring in our next guest. Activist investor Macellum seeks to take over Kohl's board with the nomination of 10 directors. Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi is joined by Macellum CEO, Jonathan Duskin, for more. Brian, take it away.

BRIAN SOZZI: All right, thanks so much, Karina. Jonathan, always good to get some time with you. So you had a very interesting Thursday. Come out here in the morning, nominate 10 new directors to Kohl's ginormous 14-member board. Now they came back a little bit after that, saying, what you have proposed is, quote, "unjustified and counterproductive." How do you respond to that?

JONATHAN DUSKIN: Not an unusual response from the company, right? I don't think very many boards would say that replacing the board members was justified, right? Of course they're going to be defensive here. Obviously we think it's way overdue. We ran a campaign last year. We were, I think, very reasonable. We added two directors. We gave it some time to play out. And unfortunately, we had probably one of the worst years for any retailer last year for Kohl's from the top line perspective, from the stock performance perspective.

And when we see the maneuvers they've made, putting in a poison pill, rejecting bona fide offers, we hear the level of interest that's out there, we really see a board that we think behaving somewhat disingenuously. They seem very self-serving, very entrenched. They seem intent on protecting their jobs over creating shareholder value and exploring ways to create shareholder value. So we really do think control is warranted here. Again, we tried to work very constructively with them over the last year. We waited patiently. And unfortunately, it is not going very well. And I think the time for material change is upon us.

BRIAN SOZZI: Isn't it supposed to be a board's job, Jonathan, to maximize shareholder value? And as someone with a lot of retail experience such as yourself and a lot of activist experience, what is it about this board that they could be looking away from wanting to take some pretty decent offers out there?

JONATHAN DUSKIN: It's really hard to know. I don't sit in the boardroom. I think it probably stems from the idea that they might be overly optimistic about the company's plans. Remember, this is a company whose stock price has been in the same place for two decades. This is a company that put out a very rosy plan, a strategic agenda, the Greatness agenda, they called it, in 2014, missed those objectives by a wide margin. They rolled out a plan in October of 2020 to generate material shareholder value. Obviously, that didn't come to fruition.