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FirstEnergy reaches deal to give Carl Icahn two board seats: WSJ
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FirstEnergy Corp. reached a deal with Carl Icahn that will give him two seats on the Ohio utility’s board and avert a potential proxy fight as the company looks to put a bribery scandal behind it.
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Two employees of the billionaire activist’s firm, Jesse Lynn and Andrew Teno, will join FirstEnergy’s board and serve on committees focused on helping the company improve its compliance and settle litigation, the company said Tuesday. The agreement, which was reported earlier Tuesday by The Wall Street Journal, would expand the board to 14 directors.
Icahn, who hasn’t disclosed his stake size, controls well over 3% of the company’s shares, according to people familiar with the matter. That makes him one of its top five holders with a stake worth over $600 million.
TIMING KEY IN CONSULTING DEAL BETWEEN FIRSTENERGY, REGULATOR
FirstEnergy, based in Akron, Ohio, provides electricity to about six million customers in a handful of states including Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. It has a market value of more than $19 billion. Last year, the company’s stock sank and it fired several high-ranking executives following an internal review related to government investigations of its potential role in an alleged state-bribery scandal.
Icahn took a stake in FirstEnergy with an eye toward pushing it to quickly settle litigation related to the scandal, the people said. A settlement would suggest at least some agreement between the two sides on next steps in that process and allow them to avoid the costly distraction of a proxy fight this spring. The window for shareholders to officially nominate directors opens later this week.
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