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posted by LaminatorX on Thursday March 06 2014, @07:30AM   Printer-friendly
from the won't-someone-think-of-the-shareholders dept.

regift_of_the_gods writes:

"Corporate raider Carl Icahn has turned his attention to eBay, announcing a proxy fight for board seats via open letters to shareholders. Icahn thinks the company should spin off its PayPal division and distribute the proceeds to the shareholders. The current board thinks differently, but Icahn says that's partly because of massive conflicts of interest held by board members (Netscape founder, now venture capitalist) Marc Andreessen and (Intuit CEO) Scott Cook. For Exhibit A and B, Icahn mentions the large profits Andressen Horowitz made from eBay's earlier spinoff of Skype, and its subsequent sale to Microsoft; and the fact that Intuit and PayPal are competitors in the payment processing space.

Andreessen has been posting responses on his blog. The latest references Icahn's three year proxy campaign for control of pharmaceutical company Forest Labs, that ended several weeks ago with Forest's sale to a company called Actavis. Forest's directors cried foul in 2011 over one of Icahn's nominees to the board, claiming Eric Ende had an unusual compensation clause allowing him to share directly in Icahn's profits on the Forest deal achieved within 30 months, i.e. in the short term."

 
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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by TheGratefulNet on Thursday March 06 2014, @08:43AM

    by TheGratefulNet (659) on Thursday March 06 2014, @08:43AM (#11836)

    you've just described (the mentality, at least) of every Very Rich person in america.

    they never do things for the common good. very very rarely, and usually only by accident.

    they are the most selfish fucks out there and they hoard they riches. they don't enrich society, they DRAIN society.

    I'm not at all surprised. but then again, the rich are 'not like you and I'. (sigh).

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  • (Score: 1) by davester666 on Thursday March 06 2014, @09:17AM

    by davester666 (155) on Thursday March 06 2014, @09:17AM (#11843)

    You mean the trickle-down economy that the Republican's keep pushing at us as the reason for lowering taxes on the very wealthy is just a scam so they don't have to pay taxes?

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 06 2014, @03:46PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 06 2014, @03:46PM (#11995)

    > you've just described (the mentality, at least) of every Very Rich person in america.

    Yeah, what other stereotypes do you believe in? All poor people are lazy? All poor people are "the salt of the earth"? All poor people are dumb? All poor people like NASCAR?

    Do you seriously believe that the rich are any different than the rest of us?

  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by GungnirSniper on Thursday March 06 2014, @05:55PM

    by GungnirSniper (1671) on Thursday March 06 2014, @05:55PM (#12081) Journal

    Don't lump the producers of imaginary value, banksters like Icahn and Madoff, in with those who created great things like Gates, [wikipedia.org] Ellison, [wikipedia.org] and countless other successful people who donate to causes near to them. There will always be people who love nothing more than money, but fortunately most people, even most wealthy people, are not like that.