11/18/2025

Akzo Nobel to Acquire Axalta in Dutch-U.S. Paint Combination

Bloomberg (11/18/25) Hughes-Morgan, Charlotte; Carnevali, David; Gould, Ryan

Akzo Nobel NV (AKZA) agreed to acquire smaller rival paint maker Axalta Coating Systems Ltd. (AXTA) in a deal that will create a US-listed leader with combined annual sales of almost $17 billion. Under the agreement, which confirmed an earlier report by Bloomberg News, Amsterdam-based Akzo Nobel will own 55% of the combined entity, whose brands range from Dulux to Cromax. After trading for some three decades in Amsterdam, the share listing will move to New York while the companies will maintain headquarters in the Netherlands and Philadelphia. The deal follows several previous efforts to bring the two under the same umbrella, with talks breaking down in 2017 when they failed to agree on terms. It adds to a flurry of activity in the sector, with Carlyle Group Inc. agreeing in October to buy control of BASF SE’s (BAS) coatings business. Tariffs and a slowing economy have been weighing on the coatings industry, with Akzo Nobel last month lowering its earnings outlook because its customers, among them automotive clients directly hit by extra duties, have been spending less. It has been overhauling its strategy to cut costs and boost efficiency, closing some European sites and shedding 2,500 jobs. Akzo Nobel and Axalta framed the deal as a merger of equals. Akzo Nobel investors will get a special cash dividend of €2.5 billion, while each company will contribute four directors to the new board, in addition to three independent members. Current Akzo Nobel Chief Executive Officer Gregoire Poux-Guillaume will lead the combined company, while Axalta Chairman Rakesh Sachdev will lead the board. Ben Noteboom, chairman of Akzo Nobel’s supervisory board, will serve as vice chair. Efforts to consolidate have been under way for years. In 2017, when Akzo Nobel first explored a combination with Axalta, it also fended off a bid from US rival PPG Industries Inc. (PPG). “This is a combination that we’ve looked at multiple times in the past, but this is also a combination that the markets have been asking for for a long time,” Poux-Guillaume said in an interview. “There were further attempts since 2017. Now, from a business perspective, it makes too much sense to ignore.” Tuesday’s agreement will see shareholders receive 0.6539 Akzo Nobel shares for each Axalta common share. The deal reflects an overall estimated enterprise value of about $25 billion. The Dutch company’s stock fell 0.8% in afternoon trading in Amsterdam, after an earlier drop of as much as 4.4%. Axalta was up around 7% in U.S. premarket trading. “Management have their work cut out to convince shareholders that this is the right step for Akzo Nobel,” Bernstein analyst James Hooper said in a note. “Revenue growth expectations need to be addressed.” The new company will in time end trading in Amsterdam to move to the New York Stock Exchange, with a majority of Akzo Nobel shares already held by US investors, according to Poux-Guillaume. The deal combines companies with strengths in business-to-business as well as consumer markets. Axalta, a former division of DuPont de Nemours Inc., makes finishing materials for a variety of industrial uses, including powder coatings used in auto manufacturing. Akzo Nobel owns a number of consumer brands, including Dulux, Cuprinol and Hammerite, along with Polyfilla crack fillers. The business will span more than 160 countries and drive run-rate synergies of about $600 million, 90% of which are expected within the first three years of the close of the transaction, according to a statement. “The macro environment is impacting both companies in the same way and therefore there isn’t anybody that’s gaining an advantage from that macro environment,” said Poux-Guillaume, adding the targeted recurring cost synergies were “really reassuring for shareholders” because “that stuff is mechanical.” This year, Cevian Capital has built a 5% stake in Akzo Nobel, putting its weight behind a strategy change. The activist investor’s involvement in other European companies has often pushed its targets toward mergers and acquisitions. Cevian wasn’t involved in the decision to merge with Axalta, Poux-Guillaume said. Axalta went public in 2014, a year after Carlyle acquired the company from DuPont.

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11/17/2025

Johnson Controls' New CEO Explains Why He Spends 90% of his Time on Road

Milwaukee Business Journal (11/17/25) Kirchen, Rich

Johnson Controls' (JCI) new CEO Joakim Weidemanis spends 90% of his time away from the Glendale corporate offices visiting company and customer sites. Weidemanis said Wednesday his road trips are necessary as he clarifies and implements a new strategy for Johnson Controls. Weidemanis is playing the role of change agent after the retirement of George Oliver, who agreed in summer 2024 to step down as CEO after “constructive dialog” with activist investment firm Elliott Management. The new CEO said he has visited 35 of the company’s “40 or so” factories in 16 countries since joining Johnson Controls eight months ago. The company has thousands of employees across the globe. “I spend less than 10 percent of my time at the headquarters and most of my time with our people on the front lines,” Weidemanis said during the annual Baird Global Industrial Conference in downtown Chicago. “This is a way of working that I’ve learned over my career.” Before joining Johnson Controls, Weidemanis held executive leadership roles over a 13-year career at Danaher Corp. (DHR). “I’m out and about because I have to coach leaders at all levels on how to change the culture of this company,” he said. Weidemanis said he has determined the company lacks a business system, which he said includes a common way of working that allows the company to innovate. Weidemanis said his philosophy is to “speak the truth” to his team in person. “To be able to speak the truth, you have to seek the truth, and it’s not in the headquarters — the truth is out in the field,” he said. “And of course if I do this, I get a chance to assess our leadership talent.” Weidemanis said the company has conducted 50 kaizens since he started and about 700 employees participated. Also 200 or so leaders completed an activation boot camp, he said. He said he’s identified 10 “growth blockers” the company can address and discussed two of them. He said the goal is to improve operations and focus on markets that possess high growth potential to drive improved profits. Weidemanis related examples he previously discussed during the company’s Nov. 5 analyst call where he says the new business system already is delivering measurable progress. He credited collaborating across teams and employing lean tools to increase the amount of time HVAC sales reps in a local market spend engaging with customers. And the manufacturing team for chillers in North America improved on-time delivery by over 95%, he said.

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11/17/2025

South Korea Moves to Tighten Executive Pay Disclosure and Boost Shareholder Rights

The Korea Bizwire (11/17/25) Lee, M. H.

South Korea plans to impose stricter disclosure requirements on listed companies’ executive compensation and expand access to shareholder voting information, in a move aimed at improving market transparency and strengthening investor rights, the Financial Services Commission (FSC) announced Sunday. Under the reform package — titled Measures to Improve Corporate Disclosure for Better Market Access and Shareholder Protection — companies will be required to reveal in far greater detail how they determine executive pay, including clear links to earnings, stock performance and other quantifiable results. The changes come amid longstanding criticism that Korean firms provide only vague justifications such as “considering work performance,” with little explanation of how compensation reflects actual corporate outcomes. Currently, stock-based compensation such as restricted shares is disclosed separately from executive pay, often only by number of shares, without converting the value into cash terms. In addition, many forms of stock compensation do not require disclosure on a per-executive basis, making it difficult for shareholders to grasp the true scale of rewards. The FSC said the revised rules will require companies to publish three-year data on shareholder returns and operating profit alongside compensation disclosures, while also itemizing the rationale for each component of executive pay. Unrealized stock-based awards must be reported in both share counts and cash-equivalent value, and all stock-based compensation — not only stock options — must be disclosed individually for each executive. “This will encourage firms to more closely align executive pay with performance indicators such as earnings or stock prices,” said Choi Chi-yeon, head of the FSC’s Fair Market Division. The reforms also seek to broaden access to shareholder voting information. Companies will be obligated to disclose approval rates for each agenda item at annual general meetings, not only the overall outcome. To ease the congested late-March shareholder-meeting season, the FSC will offer additional incentives for firms that shift their meetings to April. Foreign investors’ access to information will also expand significantly. The requirement for English-language filings — currently limited to KOSPI-listed companies with assets above 10 trillion won — will be extended to firms with assets above 2 trillion won, with the number of disclosure items doubled. Large companies will also need to submit English filings on the same day they file Korean documents. By 2028, all KOSPI-listed companies will be required to provide English disclosures, with similar rules for large KOSDAQ firms under review. The Korea Exchange will bolster translation support and upgrade its English disclosure platform to help companies meet the new standards. The FSC will gather public comments through Dec. 8, finalize the rule revisions after regulatory review, and implement them in the first half of next year.

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11/17/2025

Comerica Investor Who Pushed for Sale Questions Fifth Third Deal

Bloomberg (11/17/25) McKay, Georgie; Wang, Yizhu

HoldCo Asset Management LP is demanding that Comerica Inc. (CMA) release additional details on its deal to be acquired by Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB), calling the sale process “flawed” ahead of a shareholder vote in early January. The activist investor pushed the regional lender to sell itself earlier this year, but now says Comerica failed to allow for an independent, competitive process, according to a HoldCo presentation seen by Bloomberg News. Comerica also failed to negotiate meaningfully with Fifth Third and accepted a deal at the low end of the valuation range of Fifth Third’s first offer, according to the presentation. “It appears that Comerica steered the sale toward a preferred bidder (Fifth Third) rather than running an open, competitive process designed to maximize shareholder value,” HoldCo said. At issue is the deal announced Oct. 6 for Fifth Third to acquire Comerica in an all-stock transaction valued at $10.9 billion. It came after mounting pressure from Comerica investors, tired of its underperforming shares following years of lagging behind competitors in loan growth and cost management. Cincinnati, Ohio-based Fifth Third has said the acquisition of Dallas-based Comerica would help accelerate its expansion, after it spent years building branches in the Southeast. But now HoldCo is demanding Comerica release additional disclosures about the sale process, including the identity of another bidder that came to light in a Nov. 5 regulatory filing, and Comerica’s correspondence with it. The unidentified “Financial Institution A” verbally proposed to Comerica Chief Executive Officer Curt Farmer a potential all-stock merger transaction in September, the filing shows. Fifth Third’s offer on Sept. 22 proposed that “Comerica stockholders would receive at least 1.8663 shares of Fifth Third common stock for each share of Comerica common stock,” and Comerica went on to accept this price, according to the filing. HoldCo questioned if there was proper negotiation from Comerica to push for the optimal outcome, when the wording of “at least” in the filing implies that that was the low end of what Fifth Third was willing to pay. If Comerica declines to amend the S-4 filing materially, HoldCo will consider suing it in the Delaware Court of Chancery to obtain the disclosures, according to HoldCo’s presentation. After it gets to review any supplemental disclosure, it would assess whether to oppose the transaction. It said it may also sue Comerica for breaching fiduciary duty in connection with the sale process. In July, HoldCo published a slide deck disclosing a 1.8% stake in Comerica and urging the company to pursue an immediate sale. Just over two months later, Fifth Third announced an all-stock acquisition at a 22% premium to HoldCo’s initial disclosure price. HoldCo currently owns about 2 million Comerica shares, or roughly 1.6% of shares outstanding, according to the presentation. On Sept. 23, Comerica’s board of directors held a meeting to discuss the Fifth Third proposal, including how it compared to a transaction with the unnamed bidder and other potential counterparties, according to the filing. The board believed the Fifth Third proposal “appropriately valued” Comerica with a higher valuation than the one implied in the proposal by “Financial Institution A.”

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11/17/2025

U.S. Regulator Will Permit Companies to Exclude Shareholder Proposals from Proxies

Financial Times (11/17/25) White, Alexandra; Palma, Stefania

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Monday said it would allow companies to exclude shareholder proposals from proxy materials, as Wall Street’s top regulator increasingly moves to limit investor activism. Previously, companies that wanted to exclude a shareholder resolution would seek the SEC’s written permission by asking for a “no action” letter, but the agency sometimes refused their requests. Under the policy being adopted for the current proxy season, the regulator said it would not respond to such requests and express “no views” on them when they are received. “The SEC has essentially announced that it will not enforce its own rules,” said Sanford Lewis, director and general counsel of Shareholder Rights Group, an investor advocacy association. “The ‘no action’ process and staff determinations regarding whether or not a proposal is excludable is a long-standing SEC rule.” The move follows the regulator’s decision in February to rescind guidance issued by Joe Biden’s administration that made it easier for shareholders to submit environmental and social proposals. The withdrawal of that guidance resulted in a rise of omitted resolutions, contributing to a significant decline in shareholder proposals compared to the previous proxy season. The policy could reshape the current proxy season by making it harder for shareholders to demand changes at companies. The SEC in September allowed companies to limit the risk of shareholder lawsuits by allowing the disputes to be heard privately. The regulator also approved ExxonMobil’s plan to build an automated voting system for retail investors that will automate voting in line with board of director positions. Shareholder advocates have objected to the moves. The International Corporate Governance Network, a group of global investors with assets under management of $90tn, warned in a letter to the regulator in October that the changes could lower governance standards in the US, thereby risking the “attractiveness of U.S. capital markets." The SEC said companies that intend to exclude shareholder proposals from proxy materials must notify the commission, but there is “no requirement” that they must seek the staff’s view and that no response from the regulator is required. It cited a large volume of filings and current “resource and timing considerations” following the government shutdown in deciding it would express “no views” on a group’s decision to exclude resolutions. Still, the new changes could make companies vulnerable to legal risk from shareholders. “There is a higher legal burden on the company side now because they don’t get to rely on the SEC,” said Ariane Marchis-Mouren, a senior researcher at The Conference Board’s ESG center. If a company wishes to receive a response for any proposal that it intends to exclude, the SEC will respond with a letter indicating that it will not object to the omission, the regulator said.

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11/17/2025

Enkraft Urges ABO Energy to Draw Up Fair M&A Process, Letter Shows

Reuters (11/17/25) Steitz, Christoph

Activist fund Enkraft has urged Germany's ABO Energy (AB9) to ensure all shareholders can benefit from a sales process started by the renewable firm, a letter to management showed, concerned smaller investors could lose out in case of a change of control. In late September, ABO Energy said it had mandated private bank Metzler to advise it on a deal that could see the firm's founders — whose families jointly hold 52% — cede control to an outside investor. While German takeover law stipulates that suitors must make a full takeover bid once they cross the 30% ownership threshold those rules do not apply to the less regulated open market, in which ABO Energy is listed. A spokesperson for ABO Energy, which is currently valued at around 315 million euros ($365 million), said management would seek to achieve a transaction that is equally fair for all shareholders. Enkraft, which owns more than 4% of ABO Energy, said management was still obliged to treat all shareholders fairly in the sales process and give them the same opportunity to sell their stock if a bidder emerges. In a letter dated November 5 that was seen by Reuters, Enkraft said management was required to act in the interest of all shareholders if it was "involved in preparing the acquisition, for example by providing non-public information as part of due diligence or by directly appointing an advisory bank for the benefit of a few shareholders." Enkraft has repeatedly criticized the firm for strategic decisions — most notably a recent change in its legal form that it said had hurt its access to capital markets.

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11/15/2025

Jana Partners Push to Break Up Cooper Cos. Could Change the Stock’s Outlook

CNBC (11/15/25) Squire, Kenneth

Cooper Companies (COO), a global medical device company, has a stock market value of $14.41 billion ($72.49 per share). On Oct. 20, Jana Partners announced that it has taken a position in Cooper Cos. and plan to push for strategic alternatives, including a potential transaction to combine its contact lens unit with peers such as Bausch + Lomb. Cooper Cos. operates through two segments: CooperVision and CooperSurgical. CooperVision (66% of revenue) is focused on the sale of contact lenses. CooperVision is the global leader by contact wearers and second in terms of market share (26%), competing against Johnson and Johnson (JNJ) (37%), Alcon (ALC) (26%), and Bausch + Lomb (10%) (BLCO). The global soft contact lens market is estimated to be worth about $11 billion and is growing at 4% to 6% annually. The segment has numerous tailwinds including a steady shift into silicone hydrogel 1-day lenses (about 40% of consumers are still using non-daily lenses), global growth in contact users, and high barriers to entry for competitors. As such, this is a great business that generates EBITDA margins in the mid-30s. CooperSurgical (33% of revenue) is focused on women’s health services, with 60% of its fiscal year 2024 revenue derived from office and surgical (Paragard IUDs, stem cell cryostorage, medical devices) and 40% from fertility (IVF consumables, equipment, genomic and donor services). Fertility treatment is a $2 billion global market, also expected to grow at a 4% to 6% pace annually. For most of its history, Cooper was a pureplay vision business, until they added CooperSurgical in the 90s. Initially, this was a small — arguably tax-motivated — add-on. However, the company began heavily investing in this segment in 2017 — spending over $3 billion on the segment since. The problem with this shift is pretty clear — Cooper is effectively siphoning off cash from a really good contact lens business and then reinvesting it in what most people would judge to be a less attractive business. This is evident in the company’s declining returns on capital, with CooperSurgical now operating at lower margins than they did in 2017 despite these massive investments. A key factor behind this operational shift may be management changes. The company’s CEO Albert White, who previously led CooperSurgical, assumed leadership shortly after this expansion began. This raises a larger question about the company’s strategic focus, leading many to question why the leader of this company would not have expertise in its core business. These strategic missteps have been further compounded by near-term headwinds across both segments, some self-inflicted. For CooperVision, the company mismanaged market expectations for the rollout of its new daily lens product, MyDay Energys, which is now behind schedule. For CooperSurgical, its highest quality business, IVF, has slowed meaningfully, likely attributable to comments from President Donald Trump suggesting potential reimbursements for IVF costs, causing patients to delay treatment in anticipation of this potential coverage. As a result, top-line organic growth fell meaningfully below expectations to 2%, down from 7% the prior quarter, forcing Cooper to significantly lower its full-year guidance at its third-quarter earnings call, sending the company’s share price down 12.85% the following day. Now, Cooper is trading at a 12-month forward P/E of 16.4x — a steep discount to its 10-year average of 23.1x. All of this has prompted Jana Partners to announce a top portfolio position in Cooper and plans to push for strategic alternatives, including a potential transaction to combine its contact lens unit with peers such as Bausch + Lomb. While a transaction of this nature would typically raise some antitrust concerns, this may actually be the opposite case here, according to Kenneth Squire, founder and president of 13D Monitor. First, a merger would not result in a market leader, as the combined market share of 36% would be just below market leader J&J’s share of 37% and not too far ahead of Alcon’s 26% share. Secondly, these businesses are highly complementary with minimal geographical and product overlap, suggesting a reduction in the likelihood of regulatory hurdles. Notably, Bausch + Lomb has not been shy about their potential interest and also sees no regulatory issues, as CEO Brent Saunders has publicly stated that a potential combination with Cooper would “strengthen competition and create a more scaled company in the contact lens segment.” But Bausch + Lomb is not the only potential acquirer. Companies like European eyewear manufacturer EssilorLuxottica (ESLOY) could also have interest and with even less regulatory uncertainty. As for CooperSurgical, there would certainly be private equity interest, as evidenced by Blackstone and TPG nearing a deal to acquire peer Hologic (HOLX). However, Cooper shareholders may realize more value from the company cleaning up this portfolio internally — focusing more on the higher-multiple IVF business, shedding certain non-core assets, and potentially putting in new operators to execute a strong turnaround. Overall, with short-term headwinds likely to ease, Cooper has multiple avenues to recover its discount and open itself up for a potential rerating. Jana’s thesis is straightforward: these two businesses make no sense under the same roof and a strategic combination for the vision business could yield $300 million to 500 million synergies, which is a lot for a business with $850 million in EBITDA. But step one in their plan is convincing management that separating the two businesses is the right strategic move; and despite growing public attention, there is no guarantee that management, especially with this type of operating history, will agree. Should management resist, this campaign changes dramatically from a strategic thesis to a leadership/governance thesis, likely centered on appointing a new CEO with a deep background in the contact lens industry to refocus the company on its core, while still positioning it for a separation down the line. "Jana is not outwardly calling for a management change and White may even be the best person to lead a standalone CooperSurgical business," concludes Squire. "But activism is about the power of the argument and Jana seems to make a persuasive one here. Let’s hope for all involved that management sees it that way."

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11/14/2025

Charles River Labs to Lay Off Workers at Wilmington HQ

Boston Business Journal (11/14/25) Baratham-Green, Hannah

Charles River Laboratories International Inc. (CRL) is laying off workers as it partially closes one of its Massachusetts facilities. The contract research organization is cutting 68 jobs at its headquarters facility in Wilmington, according to a state filing shared with the Boston Business Journal on Friday. Charles River Labs is one of the largest life sciences employers in Massachusetts, with about 2,200 local workers. Charles River Labs said in its filing that the workforce reduction is tied to the decision to partially cease operations at its Wilmington site. The company said its gnotobiotics, foundation, and humanized models work conducted at the site will be transferred to other locations. The site closure will begin in January 2026 and layoffs will continue after this date “for a number of months” as Charles River Labs transfers this work. The workers losing their jobs are largely technicians and technologists. Charles River Labs has been undergoing a shakeup in recent years, most recently driven by its new activist investor shareholder Elliott Investment Management. Earlier this year the company agreed to conduct a strategic review of its business and shake up its board, which resulted in the decision to sell “underperforming or non-core businesses,” and focus on areas with more growth potential. Prior to this, Charles River Labs had already been taking steps to cut costs after seeing a reduced demand for its services from customers experiencing their own financial headwinds. CEO James Foster said last year that the cuts will manifest in both layoffs and consolidating parts of the company’s global footprint. Charles River Labs’ workforce has indeed dropped. The company’s latest annual report shows it had 20,100 employees at the end of 2024, down by about 1,700 people from the end of 2023.

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