
U.S. technology giant Hewlett-Packard said board Chairman Raymond Lane would resign as chairman, but continue as a board member. At a shareholder meeting in March, Lane was named on 59 percent of the ballots, which secured his re-election. However, a vote tally below 60 percent is considered a very poor showing, The New York Times reported Friday. Two other board members, John Hammergren, who received 54 percent of the vote and G. Kennedy Thompson, who received 55 percent, left the board after receiving such weak support. "Having under 60 percent is not a vote of confidence. They worked hard to secure support, and in the end they barely got a majority for these three people. It reflected the sins of the past," said Toni Sacconaghi, an industry analyst with Bernstein Research. "Directors must be willing to ask tough questions, challenge assumptions and have the capacity to walk away from a deal that is unlikely to add value for shareholders," said ISS, a proxy advisory firm. "That clearly didn't happen at HP, and shareholders hold Mr. Lane accountable for that failure," the firm said. Lane was chairman when HP replaced CEO Mark Hurd with Leo Apotheker, Hurd having left quickly after it surfaced that he had had an affair with a contracted employee. Apotheker didn't last a year, but while there he agreed to the acquisition of Autonomy, a British software company, for $11 billion. That expensive deal has not paid off. In 2012, HP said they had been deceived about the health of the software firm and took an accounting charge of more than $8 billion on the deal.
GMT 17:56 2018 Wednesday ,17 January
Ericsson to write down 1.4 billion euros in fourth quarterGMT 19:16 2018 Saturday ,13 January
China shuts Marriott website over Tibet error, scolds other firmsGMT 17:31 2018 Thursday ,11 January
UK group bids for Europe's biggest aluminium smelterGMT 17:24 2018 Thursday ,11 January
UK supermarket Sainsbury's lifts outlook after bumper ChristmasGMT 17:52 2018 Tuesday ,09 January
H&M removes 'black boy' ad after racism accusationGMT 19:38 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
Petrobras pay $2.95bn to settle US class action on corruptionGMT 13:49 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
China’s Ant Financial drops $1.2 billion MoneyGram deal as US approval failsGMT 17:47 2017 Sunday ,31 December
BA owner to buy bankrupt Austrian airline Niki
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor