By Drew FitzGerald 
 

Dell Inc.'s (DELL) largest independent shareholder Tuesday accused the company of withholding information from investors in an effort to take the company private, a proposal the shareholder continues to oppose.

Southeastern Asset Management of Memphis, Tenn., repeated its charge that the computer maker placed management's interests above shareholders by backing a leveraged buyout lead by founder Michael Dell that valued the company at $24.4 billion. The fund manager, which holds 8.4% of Dell's common shares, attacked the February proposal shortly after its announcement, calling the bid "grossly" undervalued.

The fund Tuesday criticized Dell for declining to pass cash held overseas to shareholders, as many companies do to avoid incurring higher taxes, noting Dell and private-equity firm Silver Lake Partners plan to reverse that stance to fund the buyout.

"A more equitable approach would have returned the cash to all shareholders instead of using it to fund the proposed buyout at the expense of other shareholders," the fund's general counsel said in a letter filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

A Dell spokesman wasn't immediately available for comment.

Longleaf Partners Fund, Southeastern's largest client, also demanded access to shareholder information it could use to contact other investors as it continues to fight the proposal.

Southeastern also criticized Dell for allegedly refusing to comment on the proposed buyout or provide investors with certain segment results from last year. The fund accused Dell's management of reporting more recent results in a way that highlighted the company's declining PC sales to spur a buyout.

Southeastern last month told Dell it opposed the deal "as currently structured," suggesting instead that the company stay public, raise $9 billion of new debt and pay stockholders a $12 per-share dividend partly with cash now held overseas.

Southern Asset Management manages about $34 billion in assets and has a history of shaking up companies after their stock prices fall--most recently Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK).

Dell needs an absolute majority of public shares to approve the deal, not just a majority of those voting, so abstaining votes don't help the buyout proposal.

Dell shares were up four cents at $14.05 early Tuesday, above the buyout team's $13.65 per-share offer.

-Stephen Grocer contributed to this story.

Write to Drew FitzGerald at andrew.fitzgerald@dowjones.com

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