New York/Seattle: Three of the top 20 investors in Microsoft Corp.are lobbying the board
to press for Bill Gates to step down as chairman of the software company he co-founded 38 years
ago, according to people familiar with matter.
While Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer has been under pressure for years to improve the company’s performance and
share price, this appears to be the first time that major shareholders are
taking aim at Gates, who remains one of the most respected and influential
figures in technology.
A representative for Microsoft declined to comment on Tuesday.
There is no indication that Microsoft’s board would heed the wishes of the
three investors, who collectively hold more than 5% of the company’s stock,
according to the sources. They requested the identity of the investors be kept
anonymous because the discussions were private.
Gates owns about 4.5% of the $277 billion company and is its largest
individual shareholder.
The three investors are concerned that Gates’s role as chairman effectively
blocks the adoption of new strategies and would limit the power of a new chief
executive to make substantial changes. In particular, they point to Gates’s
role on the special committee searching for Ballmer’s successor.
They are also worried that Gates—who spends most of his time on his
philanthropic foundation—wields power out of proportion to his declining
shareholding.
Gates, who owned 49% of Microsoft before it went public in 1986, sells
about 80 million Microsoft shares a year under a pre-set plan, which if continued
would leave him with no financial stake in the company by 2018.
He lowered his profile at Microsoft after he handed the CEO role to Ballmer
in 2000, giving up his day-to-day work there in 2008 to focus on the $38
billion Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
In August, Ballmer said he would retire within 12 months, amid pressure
from activist fund manager ValueAct Capital Management.
Microsoft is now looking for a new CEO, though its board has said Ballmer’s
strategy will go forward. He has focused on making devices, such as the Surface
tablet and Xbox gaming console, and turning key software into services provided
over the Internet. Some investors say that a new chief should not be bound by
that strategy.
News that some investors were pushing for Gates’ ouster as chairman
provoked mixed reactions from other shareholders.
“This is long overdue,” said Todd Lowenstein, a portfolio manager at
HighMark Capital Management, which owns Microsoft shares. “Replacing the old
guard with some fresh eyes can provide the oxygen needed to properly evaluate
their corporate strategy.”
Kim Caughey
Forrest, senior analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group, suggested now was not the time
for Microsoft to ditch Gates, and that he could even play a larger role.
“I’ve thought that the company has been missing a technology visionary,”
she said. “Bill (Gates) would fit the bill.”
Microsoft is still one of the world’s most valuable technology companies,
making a net profit of $22 billion last fiscal year. But its core Windows
computing operating system, and to a lesser extent the Office software suite,
are under pressure from the decline in personal computers as smartphones and
tablets grow more popular.
Shares of Microsoft have been essentially static for a decade, and the
company has lost ground to Apple Inc and Google Inc in the move toward mobile computing.
One of the sources said Gates was one of the technology industry’s greatest
pioneers, but the investors felt he was more effective as chief executive than
as chairman.
No comments:
Post a Comment