12/5/2025
Another Board Overhaul Caps Off Year of Chaos for Beleaguered Dye & Durham
Toronto Globe & Mail (12/05/25) Silcoff, Sean
For the second straight year, Dye & Durham (DYNDF) will emerge from its annual meeting with a completely overhauled board, after ex-chairman Tyler Proud struck a governance truce with the Toronto legal software company. The deal, announced Friday, is the latest twist in a seemingly endless season of chaos affecting the beleaguered company. Under the agreement, one of the directors nominated by activist shareholder Engine Capital LP last December — Anthony Kinnear — will leave the seven-person board immediately. He is being replaced by newcomer Edward Smith, executive chairman and former chief executive of global manufacturing services company SMTC Corp. Smith becomes chairman of D&D, replacing Bay Street veteran Alan Hibben, who joined the board just 15 days earlier and will remain a director. The remaining two directors left from last December’s Engine-led putsch, Hans Gieskes — who served as interim CEO early this year — and Tracey Keates, will serve the balance of their terms but will not stand for re-election. Three other directors that swept in last December — Sid Singh, who also served as interim CEO, as well as Engine founder and ex-D&D chairman Arnaud Ajdler, and Eric Shahinian — stepped down two weeks ago when Hibben and CEO George Tsivin joined the board. Shahinian had been the nominee of Proud’s holding company OneMove Capital Ltd. under a shareholder rights agreement. The final director who joined last December, Ritu Khanna, left earlier this year. There are more changes. David Danziger, appointed to the board last summer under a standstill agreement between the company and Proud’s brother — ex-D&D CEO Matt Proud — and his holding company Plantro Ltd., has resigned effective Dec. 30. That leaves an empty spot on the slate that Matt Proud is entitled to fill with his nominee under the shareholder rights agreement. Wendy Cheah, chief financial officer of OneMove Capital, is taking Shahinian’s place on the board immediately as his nominee, while Allen Taylor, former chief financial officer of various portfolio companies of Brookfield Asset Management as well as a senior vice-president with the conglomerate, joins as an observer. Come this month’s annual meeting, D&D, under its deal struck with OneMove, will put forward a slate featuring Smith, Cheah, Hibben, Taylor, and Tsivin, plus David Giannetto, a veteran software executive, and whoever Matt Proud offers up as a nominee. Tyler Proud had tried to negotiate a new slate with D&D this fall, but was blindsided when it instead made the changes that brought Hibben on-board. Proud then launched a proxy fight with a slate that included Smith, Giannetto, and Taylor. At the same time, his brother launched his third takeover bid of the year for D&D, offering to pay $5.72 a share in stock and senior unsecured notes. The stock closed Friday at $2.78, near its all-time low and 88% off its 52-week high. D&D went public at $7.50 a share in July 2020 and traded above $50 a share in 2021. The chain reaction of tumultuous events has unfolded as D&D faces a Dec. 18 deadline to file delayed financial statements. If it doesn’t, it will be in default under its senior credit agreement. D&D has said that it expects to file the statements that week. Much of the board drama dates to when Matt Proud tried to lead a management buyout of D&D in 2021, months after it went public. The board rejected his $50.50-a-share bid and instead offered him a rich pay package. That incensed shareholders, led to the exit of two directors and sparked broader discontent among investors about D&D’s debt-fueled acquisition-binge and his management style. Tyler Proud, who had served as chairman before the initial public offering, was among the disaffected shareholders. Engine, a New York hedge fund and experienced activist shareholder, tapped into that investor dissatisfaction when it launched an ultimately successful campaign last year to overhaul the board, which accompanied Matt Proud’s exit from D&D. But the Engine board failed to deliver quick changes as promised, including the hiring of a new CEO, as Tsivin only joined mid-year. It hired and fired a former chief financial officer. The company delivered disappointing results and S&P and Moody’s cut its credit ratings. D&D dealt with constant entreaties, including a brief activist campaign, from Matt Proud, and promised to launch a strategic review to explore a potential sale, after abandoning a similar process last year. This fall, CIBC Capital Markets backed out of leading the review. That process is supposed to kick off by year-end under the standstill agreement with Matt Proud, but the company is currently suing the former CEO to live up to that deal, while he and Plantro are countersuing for $200-million, alleging the board and company acted this year to thwart their interests. “We are encouraged by the steps the company has taken and view the reconstituted board as an important catalyst for the next phase,” Tyler Proud said in a statement.
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