Proxy Advisory Service ISS Acknowledges “Existential Issues” Facing GrafTech
April 29 2024 - 8:06PM
Nilesh Undavia, one of the largest shareholders of GrafTech
International Ltd. (NYSE: EAF) (“GrafTech” or the “Company”), today
made the following statement in connection with the election of
directors to the Company’s board of directors (the “Board”) at the
Company’s 2024 annual meeting of shareholders (the “Annual
Meeting”), which is scheduled to be held on May 9, 2024:
On April 26, 2024, independent proxy advisory
firm Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. (“ISS”) published a
report regarding the upcoming election.1
- ISS acknowledges that our campaign
“has successfully highlighted some of the [C]ompany’s many pressing
and existential issues” and agrees with us that, “the
issues facing the [C]ompany are serious, and if not adequately
handled, may soon prove to be existential.”
- ISS emphasizes, as did we, that
GrafTech’s Total Shareholder Return (TSR) “trails its peer median
and the relevant index over the past one-, three- and five- year
periods… and since the [C]ompany’s April 19, 2018 IPO,” displaying
the massive destruction of shareholder value under this Board and
management team.
Agreeing with many of our concerns, in its
report, ISS also notes the following:
- Revenue: “The
[C]ompany’s shrinking share of ex-China industry revenues is
greater cause for alarm, as this share has declined from 13.2
percent in 2019 to 4.7 percent in 2023. The [C]ompany has
clearly not been able to replace the ‘captive’ revenue that it once
had from LTAs.”
- Customers: “Year
to date, the [C]ompany’s management has met with customers
representing over 75 percent of the [C]ompany’s electrode sales
volume in the Americas. The corresponding figure for this portion
of 2023 was approximately 20 percent, ISS learned in engagement
with the [C]ompany. Given the disparity of customer
outreach between the two years, it is reasonable for shareholders
to question the intensity of effort involved in this campaign in
its early years.”
- Strategic Review:
“[A]round 18 months ago, the [B]oard began a strategic review aimed
at identifying opportunities in the battery anode space. The
campaign was not announced at the time, the Board explained in
engagement with ISS, because the [C]ompany did not want to disrupt
customer relationships. While this may be a valid concern,
it is unclear that the [B]oard made the right decision in
keeping this information from shareholders. The first
disclosure of this review appears to be in a [C]ompany presentation
filed on April 17, 2024, well after this proxy contest began.”
- ISS also observed that management
has not addressed concerns about the Company’s liquidity for
periods after 2024.
We are therefore baffled that—despite
recognizing massive shareholder value destruction, declaring the
issues facing GrafTech are “existential,” and questioning the
Board’s credibility and transparency regarding client outreach and
the commencement of a strategic review—ISS somehow concluded that
the same Board should be trusted to turn things around at the
Company.
Rather than hold the Board accountable for its
failures, it appears that ISS chose to focus on the personal
attacks, distractions and red herrings presented by GrafTech, such
as a couple of inadvertent errors in Mr. Undavia’s response to a
33-page director questionnaire, which were promptly corrected.
We urge investors to ask themselves a simple
question: How can Mr. Taccone, the incumbent nominee, be a better
steward of shareholder interests than Mr. Undavia? As a director
since 2018, Mr. Taccone:
- oversaw over $4 billion of
shareholder value destruction;
- failed to re-position GrafTech’s
business after claiming intimate knowledge of GrafTech’s
customers;
- oversaw the hiring of former CEO
Marcel Kessler, who lacked the necessary background and
qualifications; and
- has not bought even a single share
of GrafTech stock in the past four years.
In stark contrast, Nilesh Undavia has been an
exemplary fiduciary of client capital at Wellington Management
(“Wellington”), one of the world’s largest asset managers, is
intimately familiar with GrafTech’s industry, has concrete
solutions to solve the myriad challenges faced by GrafTech, and has
invested millions of dollars of his personal capital.
- Mr. Undavia has over a two-decade
track record as a partner and portfolio manager at Wellington.
- In his role at Wellington, Mr.
Undavia embodied its code of ethics, which demands that “clients’
interests must always come first; they cannot and will not be
compromised.”
- He continuously exhibited diligence
and exercised “duty of care” as a fiduciary for client assets in
the tens of billions of dollars.
- We find it absurd to question
whether Mr. Undavia would apply the same “duty of care” to the
interests of fellow GrafTech shareholders, especially given he has
invested millions of dollars of his own capital.
For these reasons, we believe Mr.
Undavia represents a better choice for GrafTech’s
Boardroom.
Last Week’s 1Q 2024 Earnings Report Was
DisappointingAnother clear sign that the Company continues
failing to meet investor expectations is the 17% drop in stock
price during the earnings conference call, ending down 2% for the
day, compared to the 0.5% jump in the NYSE Arca Steel
Index.
We attribute the fall in the stock price to
GrafTech’s continued failure to address the following
challenges:
- The implicit indication that the
Company’s financial performance would remain muted or could
potentially deteriorate in 2024 due to weakening pricing and
stagnant volumes;
- A significant portion of the cost
reductions announced in response to our campaign, were due to
accounting factors;
- No mention of a strategy or path to
regain market share; and
- Zero progress being reported by the
Company on incremental customer engagement for electric vehicle
battery producers, something it has been talking about for seven
quarters.
We patiently waited in the queue to ask
questions on the call, hoping to gain clarity on many of the issues
plaguing the Company. Unfortunately, GrafTech did not give us—one
of its largest shareholders—the chance to do so, further
demonstrating its utter disregard for shareholders.
Independent Analyst Recognizes the
Urgent Need for Change In a letter to the Board, dated
April 11, 20242, John Tumazos, a steel industry analyst for the
past 45 years, of Very Independent Research—a firm advising
institutional clients in the U.S. and Canada—wrote the
following:3
- “The irony of GrafTech suffering a
50% volume decline as new electric arc furnaces sprout like Spring
tulips made me very curious. …. [we] ask[ed] steel melters why they
buy from your competitors more than GrafTech. It shocked me
that GrafTech was visibly absent from [a recent] Louisville, KY
gathering of your customers.
- GrafTech’s marketing efforts lag
competitors.... [for example] Tokai Carbon told us afterwards that
it made 3 sales at the program, where GrafTech did not
embrace this opportunity to join its customers and was not even
listed as a donor to AIST.
- [I]t is urgent to repair and
improve your business relationship with Nucor, whose alumni are key
decision-makers at STLD, Big River Steel or elsewhere. Recently
they prefer Tokai Carbon or Resonac, where simply winning one-third
of Nucor’s business would add over 1/10th to your volumes.
The relationship appears ‘estranged’…
- The most important criteria in
selecting the new key executives should be existing relationships
with key customers, the ability to win new sales and repair
relations with key customers lost. The Board’s selection of
the prior CEO Marcel Kessler baffles me, where his prior employment
at McKinsey or as CEO of Pason Systems data firm reselling wellhead
data back to oil producers suggests no relevance or market
knowledge to sell electrodes to steelmakers. Marcel Kessler’s
tenure coincided with several setbacks.
- It saddens me that you rejected
Nilesh Undavia’s offer to join your board, where a 6% personal
ownership from a veteran institutional investor is a wonderful
endorsement. Further, it confuses me that you spend probably close
to $1 mm of shareholder funds opposing his proxy campaign, where
shareholder funds are precious as losses loom.”
In Conclusion, Vote FOR Nilesh
UndaviaIn concluding its report, ISS wrote: “If [GrafTech]
continues to struggle in the future, the points that the dissident
has made in this campaign could well serve as a foundation for a
more successful case for change at the board level, at that time.”
We are dumbfounded by this conclusion. Why wait for the Company to
get into a more precarious financial situation and destroy even
more shareholder value before adding a new highly qualified,
independent director with significant skin in the game?
Shareholders need to act now by
electing a director who will represent their interests with an
owner’s perspective and a deep commitment to shareholder value. To
achieve much-needed change in the GrafTech Boardroom, shareholders
should vote on the BLUE universal proxy card
FOR Nilesh Undavia.
Additional Information and Where to Find
It
Mr. Undavia and certain family trusts
(collectively, the “Undavia Group”) are participants in the
solicitation of proxies from shareholders of the Company in favor
of Mr. Undavia’s nomination for the Board at the Annual Meeting. On
April 2, 2024, the Undavia Group filed with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) its definitive proxy statement and
accompanying BLUE universal proxy card in
connection with its solicitation of proxies from the shareholders
of the Company for the Annual Meeting. ALL SHAREHOLDERS OF
THE COMPANY ARE URGED TO READ THE DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT
(INCLUDING ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS THERETO), THE ACCOMPANYING
BLUE UNIVERSAL PROXY CARD AND OTHER DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE
SOLICITATION OF PROXIES BY THE UNDAVIA GROUP, AS THEY CONTAIN
IMPORTANT INFORMATION, INCLUDING ADDITIONAL INFORMATION RELATED TO
THE UNDAVIA GROUP AND ITS DIRECT OR INDIRECT INTERESTS IN THE
COMPANY, BY SECURITY HOLDINGS OR OTHERWISE. Investors and
security holders may obtain copies of the definitive proxy
statement, BLUE universal proxy card and other
documents filed with the SEC by the Undavia Group free of charge
through the website maintained by the SEC at http://www.sec.gov/.
Copies of the definitive proxy statement and accompanying
BLUE universal proxy card filed with the SEC by
the Undavia Group are also available free of charge by accessing
the website at https://www.icomproxy.com/EAF.
19 Old Kings Highway S. – Suite 130Darien, CT 06820Toll Free
(877) 972-0090Banks and Brokers call collect (203)
972-9300info@investor-com.com
1 Permission to use quotations from the ISS report was neither
sought nor obtained.2
https://icomproxy.com/UPLOADBLOGSDIR/44/files/sites/44/2024/04/GrafTech-Letter-041124.pdf3
Permission to quote from his letter was granted by Mr. Tumazos.
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