Reiterates Interest in Potential Acquisition of
DMC and Calls on the Company to Facilitate Comprehensive Due
Diligence
Urges DMC to Constructively Engage around
Steel’s Other Proposals, Including the Acquisition of
DynaEnergetics and NobelClad for $185-$200 Million in Cash, and the
Purchase of Preferred Stock to Allow DMC to Acquire Remaining 40%
of Arcadia
Troubled by Company’s Continued Destruction of
Stockholder Value, Disappointing Financial Results, Failed
Succession Planning and Seemingly Stalled Strategic Review
Process
Disturbed by Excessive $4.5 Million
Compensation Package – Which is Not Tied to any Value Creation
Metrics – Granted to Executive Chairman and Interim CEO James
O’Leary, who is Conflicted and No Longer Independent
Steel Connect, Inc. (together with its affiliates, “Steel”),
which beneficially owns approximately 9.9% of the outstanding
shares of DMC Global Inc. (Nasdaq: BOOM) (the “Company” or “DMC”),
today issued a public letter to the Company’s Board of Directors
(the “Board”). The full text of the letter is below.
January 27, 2025
Board of Directors DMC Global Inc. 11800 Ridge Parkway, Suite
300 Broomfield, Colorado 80021
Dear DMC Board Members,
We have consistently attempted to engage with you in a
constructive manner to help maximize value for all stockholders –
of which we are the largest. We have made three actionable
proposals to the Board:
- Our first proposal in May 2024 to acquire
all the outstanding shares of DMC we do not already own for $16.50
per share in cash:
- Our second proposal in September 2024 to
acquire the Company’s DynaEnergetics and NobelClad businesses for
between $185-$200 million in cash and DMC stock that we own;
and
- Our third proposal in November 2024 to
purchase preferred stock (similar to the preferred stock that the
Company could have issued upon the exercise of the Arcadia put
right) to enable DMC to acquire the remaining 40% portion of the
Arcadia business.
As a reminder, in January 2024, the Board publicly announced it
would run a process to sell its DynaEnergetics and NobelClad
businesses. After 10 months and likely substantial advisory fees,
the Board failed to complete any transactions whatsoever.
While stockholders wait patiently, no progress on this strategic
review or our proposals has been publicly communicated other than a
statement that the sales process for DynaEnergetics and NobelClad
was terminated and a brief public statement that our initial
proposal of $16.50 per share for the entire Company was inadequate.
This lack of engagement and urgency from the Board has been
disappointing.
DMC Needs to Run a Real Process
While the Company and its advisors continue to explore a
potential sale of the Company, this process appears to have
suffered from serious flaws. The Company’s financial and business
information has been in many cases delayed, incomplete, and
seemingly inaccurate. In view of this, we find it hard to believe
that anyone, including Steel Connect, could make a bid for the
Company as a whole or Arcadia based on a valuation significantly
above the current stock price of $7.31 per share, especially given
the Arcadia put/call obligation that remains outstanding.
Nevertheless, we reiterate our interest in participating in the
process. It is critical, however, that we receive timely responses
to our due diligence requests, and it is our hope that, through
this diligence, the Company can demonstrate a higher valuation than
today’s stock price.
At the same time, we remain interested in acquiring
DynaEnergetics and NobelClad, as we indicated in our September 17,
2024 public letter, for between $185-$200 million, on a debt-free,
cash-free basis. We reiterate our earlier proposal to acquire these
two businesses, and now are proposing to simplify our bid by
providing that the acquisition consideration would be fully in
cash. We hereby request a response from the Board to this proposal
by the close of business on January 31, 2025.
We also reiterate our proposal to purchase preferred stock from
the Company so that it may acquire the remaining 40% portion of the
Arcadia business and remove the overhang of the put/call
obligation. As described in our November 13, 2024 letter to the
Board, we would be willing to purchase from the Company Series A
convertible preferred stock, on the same terms as the Series A
preferred stock which the Company is permitted to issue to the
Munera family in the event the Munera family were to exercise its
Arcadia put option. We would be willing to fund the entirety of
this preferred stock issuance – an amount equal to $162 million
minus the existing debt at Arcadia.
We believe that any of the above potential transactions would
create superior value for DMC stockholders, as opposed to the
alternative of inaction and remaining a standalone Company with the
Arcadia overhang. Our conclusion is based on the following facts,
to which we would like to call your attention – and that of our
fellow stockholders:
Massive Destruction of Stockholder Value at DMC
The Company’s Board has overseen the continued destruction of
stockholder value. Total stockholder return is exceedingly poor and
significantly trails key indices over several time periods.
TOTAL STOCKHOLDER
RETURNS1
1 Year
3 Years
5 Years
Since Steel’s First Proposal
Became Public (June 13, 2024)
DMC
-57.52
-82.40
-82.61
-44.70
Russell 2000
19.23
18.47
48.24
14.08
S&P 500
27.03
44.86
100.14
13.17
Source: Bloomberg.
Missed Expectations
DMC has frequently missed its targeted guidance and recently
downgraded its expectations for 2024. This disturbing pattern of
disappointing stockholders was extended most recently when, in
October 2024, DMC reported preliminary financial results stating it
would miss prior Q3 guidance.2 Then, perhaps unsurprisingly, DMC
announced that it would only be providing guidance on consolidated
sales and adjusted EBITDA going forward – citing “volatility and
uncertainty in its energy and construction markets.”3
Disastrously Structured Arcadia Transaction
In 2021, the Board entered into a poorly designed and ultimately
disastrous transaction to acquire a 60% interest in Arcadia from an
ex-DMC director, Gerard Munera, for $282.5 million in cash and DMC
stock.4 The Company clearly overpaid for the Arcadia business. In
addition, Munera and his family retained a 40% interest in the
business and received the ability to put that interest to DMC at a
minimum price of $162 million, net of debt. While the Board
recently decided to pay Munera $2.5 million to have him temporarily
refrain from exercising his put right, this liability remains a
major obligation that must be dealt with – especially as part of
any acquisition of Arcadia or the Company as a whole. The Company
has also mismanaged this business since the acquisition and has
recently written down more than $140 million of the investment.
Ultimately, the Board oversaw what amounted to a substantial wealth
transfer from the Company’s stockholders to an ex-Board member and
his family.
Conflicted and Excessively Compensated Executive
Chairman
We believe the $4.5 million compensation package recently
granted to Executive Chairman and Interim President and CEO James
O’Leary is outrageous and runs counter to stockholders’ best
interests. Under this package, Mr. O’Leary has been given a base
salary of $500,000, been granted a total of $2 million in
restricted stock, and is eligible to receive a cash payment of $2
million by June of this year.
Mr. O’Leary’s lump sum payment does not
appear to be tied to any metrics that align his interests with
stockholders. His compensation arrangement is not related to
the Company’s financial performance or value creation and seems to
be the result of a complacent Board. This is not surprising, given
how the Board has wasted cash on a revolving door of outside
advisors and on payments to departing executives as described
below.
Moreover, Mr. O’Leary was elected to the Board as an independent
director. Now, as Interim President and CEO of the Company, he is
not independent and is clearly conflicted with respect to the
Company’s strategic review process. His significant compensation,
which again is not tied to DMC’s performance, calls into serious
question his commitment to the best interests of all shareholders
in this process.
Failed Succession Planning and Irresponsible Executive
Severance Payments
The Board has utterly failed in its duty to properly plan for
leadership succession and has approved an outlandish amount of
executive severance for a Company of its size. Over approximately
the past two years, DMC has had four CEOs, co-CEOs, or interim
CEOs, and those who have departed have received a total of more
than $4 million in severance payments. Arcadia has cycled through
three Presidents in as many years. Arcadia has also had excessive
turnover throughout its management team, and now has an Interim
President who does not appear to have any experience managing a
P&L. This type of churn is not healthy for any business and is
emblematic of the Board’s failure to install competent
leadership.
***
In closing, we believe the Company should redeem its poison
pill, which was instituted in June 2024 without stockholder
approval. We believe it runs directly contrary to the best
interests of stockholders to limit investor purchases at a time
when the Company’s stock has been declining precipitously. In our
view, the pill serves purely as an entrenchment mechanism.
We call on the Board to act swiftly to address our concerns and
respond to our proposals. We reserve all rights to take any action
we deem necessary to protect stockholders’ best interests.
Sincerely,
Warren Lichtenstein
Executive Chairman, Steel Connect LLC
___________________________
1 Based on the closing price of DMC stock
on January 24, 2025.
2 See “DMC Global Provides Business and
Strategic Review Update; Announces Governance Changes,” October 21,
2024,
https://ir.dmcglobal.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/159/dmc-global-provides-business-and-strategic-review-update.
3 See “DMC Global Reports Third Quarter
Financial Results,” Nov. 4, 2024,
https://ir.dmcglobal.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/161/dmc-global-reports-third-quarter-financial-results.
4 See “DMC Global Completes Acquisition of
60% Controlling Interest in Arcadia Inc.,” Dec. 23, 2021,
https://ir.dmcglobal.com/news-events/press-releases/detail/16/dmc-global-completes-acquisition-of-60-controlling.
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250126538289/en/
Longacre Square Partners Joe Germani
jgermani@longacresquare.com
DMC Global (NASDAQ:BOOM)
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