Carl Icahn: Time to break up eBay
FORTUNE -- Carl Icahn has his sights set on a Silicon Valley giant, and it isn't Apple (AAPL).
eBay Inc. (EBAY) this afternoon announced that Icahn has nominated two of his employees to its board of directors, and submitted a non-binding proposal to spin PayPal out into a separate business.
Icahn earlier this month acquired a 0.82% stake in eBay, as part of what appears to be his heightened interest in the tech sector (Apple, Dell, etc.). eBay suggested that it has previously considered, and rejected, a PayPal spinout. It also expressed support for its current directors. The company is expected to further address the matter during its previously-scheduled Q4 earnings call today at 5pm ET.
Below is eBay's statement regarding Icahn's proposal:
eBay Inc. announced today that it has received a notice from Carl Icahn indicating that he has nominated two of his employees to its Board of Directors and submitted a non-binding proposal for a spinoff of its PayPal business into a separate company. The notice stated that companies controlled by Mr. Icahn had, earlier this month, acquired shares and derivative securities that give him an economic interest of approximately 0.82% in the company.
eBay welcomes the opportunity to listen to the perspective of all of its shareholders, including Mr. Icahn. His Board nominations will be passed on to the Board's Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee, which will consider them in the ordinary course of business. We would note that eBay has a world-class board of directors with directors who have significant experience in technology and financial services.
Regarding Mr. Icahn's separation proposal, eBay's Board of Directors routinely assesses the company's strategic direction and has explored in depth a spinoff or separation of PayPal. eBay's Board of Directors has concluded that the company and its shareholders are best served by the current strategic direction of the company and does not believe that breaking up the company is the best way to maximize shareholder value. As part of eBay Inc., PayPal is able to leverage the company's technology capabilities, commerce platforms and relationships with retailers, brands and large merchants worldwide. Payment is part of commerce, and as part of eBay, PayPal drives commerce innovation in payments at global scale, creating value for consumers, merchants and shareholders.
FT Article:
Carl Icahn presses eBay to spin off PayPal payments arm - FT.com
Carl Icahn Pressing eBay For PayPal Spinoff, Board Seats - Forbes
Payment platform PayPal has been one of the biggest money-makers for eBay, but if activist investor Carl Icahn gets his way, the e-commerce platform would have to envision a future without one of its best sources of revenue: In eBay’s fourth quarter earnings report, released Wednesday afternoon, the company announced that Icahn is pushing for a spinoff that would turn the PayPal business into its own company.
In the earnings release, eBay reported that Icahn has nominated two of his employees to its board of directors and submitted a non-binding proposal for a spinoff of the PayPal business into a separate company. Icahn revealed that he has an 0.82% stake in eBay, so he is far from its largest shareholder (though he may have the biggest megaphone). And indeed, PayPal had a great fourth quarter: its revenue increased 19% to $1.8 billion for the quarter, gaining 5.2 million accounts and ending 2013 with 143 million accounts, a 16% increase over 2012.
However, eBay said that while it “welcomes” the opportunity to listen to the opinions of all its shareholders, the eBay board of directors has “explored in depth a spinoff or separation of PayPal” and has concluded that the company would be best served if PayPal remains in the fold. “Payment is part of commerce, and as part of eBay, PayPal drives commerce innovation in payments at global scale, creating value for consumers, merchants and shareholders,” eBay said.
is this guy shrewd or just a dick ....