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POST TIME: 5 May, 2018 00:00 00 AM
Vivendi and activist fund set for Telecom Italia showdown
AFP

Vivendi and activist fund set for Telecom Italia showdown

A weeks-long power struggle over the control of Telecom Italia between Vivendi and a US activist fund comes to a head Friday when shareholders vote on a new board, reports AFP from Milan.

Vivendi, which is the largest shareholder in Telecom Italia (TIM) with a stake of around 24 percent, has been at loggerheads with activist fund Elliott—which holds just over nine percent—since Elliott demanded the removal of six board members in mid-March.

Vivendi has de facto control of TIM thanks to its stranglehold on board and executive positions, and Elliott has repeatedly blasted the company’s performance since “Vivendi nominees” joined the board in December 2015. That request prompted the resignations of eight TIM board members which triggered Friday’s showdown meeting to elect a new board.

Italian media are reporting that 65 percent of TIM shareholders will take part in the vote, which will be held in a meeting scheduled to start at 0900 GMT. The higher the turnout, the better Elliott’s chances of forcing change.

Elliott, which believes that an “independent” board is needed to improve TIM’s governance and performance, has put up 10 candidates well-known in the Italian business world, including Luigi Gubitosi, current extraordinary administrator of failing airline Alitalia, and Fulvio Conti, former CEO of Enel.

The Vivendi slate includes its CEO Arnaud de Puyfontaine, who is the group’s candidate for chairman and one of board candidates who Elliott wanted dismissed.

Elliott has castigated governance issues and “conflicts of interest” such as TIM’s January 2017 awarding of an advertising contract to Havas, which is owned by Vivendi, worth a rumoured 100 million euros ($123 million).

The charges filed last week against Vincent Bollore, CEO of the Bollore group that owns Vivendi, in connection with the awarding of two lucrative port concessions in West Africa, was for Elliott the “latest example” of the problems posed by Vivendi.