Reiterates Need for Board and CEO Change at CN
Emphasizes Qualifications of Four Independent, Highly-skilled
Director Candidates
Sets the Record Straight on Inaccurate Claims from CN
Board
LONDON, Oct. 5, 2021 /CNW/ -- Long-term shareholders
CIFF Capital UK LP and The Children's Investment Master Fund,
acting by their investment manager TCI Fund Management Limited
(CIFF Capital UK LP, The Children's Investment Master Fund and TCI
Fund Management Limited, together, "TCI"), confirmed it will
nominate four independent Directors to the Canadian National
Railway Company (TSX:CNR)(NYSE:CNI) ("CN" or the "Company") Board
of Directors (the "Board") at the Company's special meeting of
shareholders (the "Special Meeting") scheduled for March 22, 2022.
As a long-term CN shareholder, TCI is fully committed to the
future health and performance of the Company and is acting to
enhance value for all CN shareholders.
"With the meeting date now set, CN shareholders have a clear and
certain path to exercise their rights as shareholders and hold the
Company's underperforming Board accountable," said Chris Hohn, TCI Founder and Managing Partner.
"We look forward to CN shareholders having the opportunity to make
the right choice for CN by electing the four independent,
highly-skilled director candidates that we have
nominated."
"A new, high-quality Board with extensive railroad experience
and expertise will help ensure CN is put on the right track to the
benefit of the Canadian and US economies, shippers, employees and
shareholders. CN can do better, and with a new Board, it
will."
The Board Candidates
- Gilbert
Lamphere: One of the most experienced railroad
executives in North America, with
40 years of experience in the railroad industry. Mr. Lamphere has
been a board member of several public and private railroad
companies.
- Allison
Landry: Currently an independent director on the
board of XPO Logistics, Inc., a leading North American
transportation company. Ms. Landry previously spent 16 years as a
highly respected equity research analyst at Credit Suisse
specializing in the railroad, trucking, airfreight and logistics
industries.
- Rob Knight: Former
Chief Financial Officer of Union Pacific, a position he held for
15-years. During Mr Knight's 40-year tenure at Union Pacific, he
held a variety of senior executive positions, including General
Manager of the company's energy and automotive businesses.
- Paul Miller: An
expert in transportation, logistics, safety management and
regulatory affairs and a former executive at CN from 1978-2011.
During his 33-year career at the Company, Mr. Miller held
leadership roles in operations, marketing and planning. He retired
as CN's Vice President of Safety, Sustainability and Network
Transportation in 2011.
The quality of the Board candidates is clear and indisputable.
It is therefore notable that the Board has said nothing negative
about the nominees but has instead chosen to attack TCI in an
attempt to divert attention from the excellence of the
candidates.
Gilbert Lamphere, Allison Landry, Rob
Knight and Paul Miller
represent a significant upgrade to the current Board and this has
not been denied by the Board or the Company's CEO, Jean-Jacques Ruest.
The Board has also not questioned the qualifications or ability
of Jim Vena to be CEO. Instead, the
Board has chosen to disparage TCI and question its motives when TCI
only wants what is best for CN: a high-quality, experienced Board,
a world-class railroader as CEO and a long-term plan for
sustainable growth.
Setting the Record Straight
CN shareholders deserve the truth. In its October 4, 2021 press release announcing the date
of the Special Meeting, CN included inaccurate and misleading
information about TCI and its motives:
- CN Claim: TCI is a "dissident shareholder" that
only recently acquired its stake and is seeking to assert effective
control over the Company.
- Fact: TCI has been a CN shareholder since 2018 and
increased its stake in the Company due to the huge success and
growth that will be achieved once CN has a strong Board and
world-class CEO. TCI's actions are guided by and aligned with the
interests of all shareholders, to re-establish CN as an efficient,
fast-growing and well-governed railroad. TCI is a long-term
shareholder with a compelling track record of advocating for strong
corporate governance and is committed to the long-term success of
CN. TCI invests in high-quality companies with deep and sustainable
moats and believes strongly in the power of long-term compounding.
TCI is not seeking to assert effective control over the Company.
Gilbert Lamphere, Allison Landry, Rob
Knight and Paul Miller are
independent of TCI and no member of TCI is up for election.
- CN Claim: TCI's stake in Canadian Pacific ("CP")
demonstrates a conflict of interest between TCI and other CN
shareholders.
- Fact: Like many other CN shareholders, TCI is a
firm believer in the long-term success and growth of the Canadian
railroad industry and therefore owns both CN and CP, with a larger
stake in CN. This is in no way unusual in the sector or in other
industries. For years, CN has been losing market share. TCI
believes that, with a strong Board and world-class CEO, CN will
regain its dominant market position and be the fastest growing and
most profitable Class 1 railroad once again. TCI's conviction in
the future success and growth of CN under a new Board is reflected
in the size of its investment in the Company, which is valued at
US$4.3 billion, substantially greater
than its investment in Canadian Pacific (US$3.7 billion) and Union Pacific (US$1.2 billion).
- CN Claim: CN's pursuit of Kansas City Southern
("KCS") resulted in "significant benefits for CN's shareholders"
and "was demonstrably positive for CN."
- Fact: It is disingenuous for the Board and CEO to
claim the bid was positive for CN when the positive outcomes were
due solely to luck because the Surface Transportation Board ("STB")
unexpectedly delayed its ruling on the voting trust by four weeks.
In fact, CN's failed attempt to acquire KCS was reckless and
exposed a basic misunderstanding of the railroad industry and
regulatory environment. The bid put C$2
billion of termination fees at risk and if the STB had
issued its negative ruling in July (as CN expected), the outcome
would have been very different. It is dishonest and misleading for
Mr. Ruest to claim credit for the entirely fortuitous outcomes and
to fail to acknowledge the serious negative outcomes of the bid,
specifically, damaging the reputation of CN, its Board and
management team, antagonizing the STB and distracting management
from running the network.
- CN Claim: TCI has been "attacking the Company
publicly."
- Fact: TCI has been critical of only the Board and
CEO, not the Company. TCI has not attacked the Company; quite the
opposite. TCI has said many times CN is a great company, and owns a
unique asset – the best rail network in North America. However, the Board is
inadequate, and has been responsible for multiple corporate
governance failures, while the CEO lacks the operational expertise
to run a railroad. TCI is a long-term CN shareholder because it
believes the Company owns a tremendous asset, but the Board and CEO
have been underperforming for too long. Change is required to make
CN the most efficient and fastest growing railroad in the industry
once again.
TCI cautions shareholders to expect the Board to continue to
allege TCI's campaign is against the Company rather than against
the Board. To be clear, this is an attempt to distract attention
from the failings of the Board and CEO and to escape
accountability.
The Board may also attempt to turn the special meeting into a
vote on TCI, rather than conduct an objective and informed debate
on the merits of the four nominees. Gilbert
Lamphere, Allison Landry,
Rob Knight and Paul Miller are independent of TCI and represent
a clear and significant upgrade to the current Board. No
member of TCI is up for election. Shareholders deserve to know what
the current Board thinks of the candidates. A campaign against TCI
is not productive, does not inform shareholders and will not put CN
back on track.
The truth is that CN's Board and CEO lack the necessary
operating and railway expertise to improve the performance of the
Company. Gilbert Lamphere,
Allison Landry, Rob Knight and Paul
Miller have significant operational experience and
analytical capabilities in the railroad industry, and their
election, together with a new CEO, will provide the essential
expertise required for CN to reach its full potential.
The CN Board is Responsible for Multiple Corporate Governance
Failures
Since 2016 (when Jim Vena left
CN), CN's operating and financial performance has lagged the other
Class 1 railroads. The Board has also presided over multiple
corporate governance failures:
- The Board has assembled a slate of directors with no meaningful
railroad operational experience or expertise.
- The Board has permitted a brain drain of high-quality operators
to leave CN while not addressing the cause of their
departures.
- A failure, twice, to appoint a world class CEO, instead first
appointing Luc Jobin – who held the
post for less than two years – and now Mr. Ruest.
- The Board has not held Mr. Ruest accountable for the
deterioration in CN's relative financial and operational
performance; instead, the Board has increased his
compensation.
- The Board approved an abrupt about-turn in strategy, involving
large headcount reductions, share buybacks, asset sales, capital
expenditure reductions and short-term financial targets, rather
than acknowledge and address the fundamental issue of a lack of a
culture of operational excellence.
- The new plan is being implemented without a credible succession
plan in place for a CEO who does not have the operational expertise
or credibility to execute it and who is unlikely to remain with the
Company beyond 2022.
- If leadership could execute on this plan – it should
have happened years ago. Management's performance has been poor,
and there is no evidence to suggest the same management team has
the capabilities to achieve the targets it has set.
- The Board failed to disclose material developments to
shareholders in an appropriate and timely manner. The resignation
of Julie Godin, CN's youngest female
director, the day before the announcement of CN's new strategic
plan, was not publicly disclosed. This exposed a deliberate lack of
transparency and a selective approach to disclosure with respect to
governance matters.
- Despite many offers to do so, the Board has failed to engage
with TCI, CN's second largest shareholder, when requisitioning a
meeting to elect credible, independent, highly-skilled Board
nominees supported by many shareholders.
- The CN share price has massively underperformed the North
American railroad sector.
CN Can Do Better
With a new Board and world-class CEO, TCI is confident CN can
get back on track and regain market share in the extremely
attractive Canadian railway industry.
- With the right Board and CEO, CN's operations, service and
efficiency will enable and enhance sustainable volume
growth.
- Gilbert Lamphere, Allison Landry, Rob
Knight and Paul Miller are
independent, highly-skilled and well-qualified individuals who have
considerable operational and analytical experience in the railroad
industry and will bring more balance and diversity to the
Board.
- Once elected, the independent Board members would work to
select a new CEO. TCI has identified Jim
Vena as the outstanding candidate. Mr. Vena has a proven,
40+ year track record as an exceptional railroad operator. He spent
40 years at CN, where he started as a unionized employee in 1976
and worked his way up to become Chief Operating Officer from 2013
until his retirement in 2016. Most recently, during his two years
as Chief Operating Officer and Senior Advisor to the Chairman at
Union Pacific, he drove remarkable improvement in Union Pacific's
operations, service, efficiency and profitability, resulting in a
650bps improvement in operating ratio, US$1.4 billion in efficiency savings and the best
service production in Union Pacific's history.
CN Shareholders Should Demand Change
CN's recent performance is the result of a railroad being run by
a CEO without operational experience. Shareholders of CN can take
steps to help get CN back on track by:
- Voting for Gilbert Lamphere,
Allison Landry, Rob Knight and Paul
Miller. They have all had long and distinguished careers
operating in and analysing the railroad industry. They bring vast
railroad experience and knowledge, and they share a common and very
achievable goal: to create a much-needed culture of operational
excellence at CN, which is essential if the Company is to reach its
full potential.
- Demanding CN delay any unilateral appointment of three new
Board members until after the Special Meeting where all
shareholders will have a say on Gilbert
Lamphere, Allison Landry,
Rob Knight, Paul Miller and the current Board. Given the
time between now and the Special Meeting, TCI is concerned that the
Board will attempt to identify and install management-selected
replacement directors, a common tactic for underperforming Boards
and evidenced by the resignation of Julie
Godin in September 2021. Allowing the current Board to
handpick successors will not result in the significant change that
CN needs.
- Asking the Board not to commence a CEO search until after the
shareholder vote at the Special Meeting to ensure Jim Vena is fully considered.
- Insisting change needs to occur because, once the KCS deal
closes, CP will be a much stronger competitor so CN needs to raise
its game now to prepare for a tougher competitive environment.
Advisors
Kingsdale Advisors is acting as strategic shareholder and
communications advisor to TCI. ASC Advisors is acting as
communications advisor to TCI. Allen McDonald Swartz LLP, Fasken
Martineau DuMoulin LLP and Schulte
Roth & Zabel LLP are acting as legal counsel to TCI.
About TCI Fund Management
Founded in 2003 by Sir Christopher Hohn, TCI Fund
Management Limited, the investment manager of CIFF Capital UK
LP and The Children's Investment Master Fund, is a value
orientated, fundamental investor which invests globally in strong
businesses with sustainable competitive advantages. Using a private
equity approach, TCI Fund Management Limited conducts deep
fundamental research, constructively engages with management and
adopts a long-term investment horizon. For more information on TCI
Fund Management Limited and its ESG policy,
visit www.tcifund.com/ESG
Disclosures
TCI has been a CN shareholder since 2018. TCI currently owns
more than 5% of the shares outstanding (valued at US$4.3
billion) and is committed to the long-term success of CN.
Contacts
Kingsdale Advisors:
Ian
Robertson
President, Canada
Direct: 416-867-2333
Cell: 647-621-2646
Email: irobertson@kingsdaleadvisors.com
Hyunjoo Kim
Director, Communications, Marketing & Digital Strategy
Direct: 416-867-2357
Cell: 416-899-6463
Email: hkim@kingsdaleadvisors.com
TCI Media Contacts:
ASC Advisors, New York
Steve Bruce:
sbruce@ascadvisors.com
Taylor Ingraham:
tingraham@ascadvisors.com
203-992-1230
Information in Support of Public Broadcast
Solicitation
The information contained in this press release does not and is
not meant to constitute a solicitation of a proxy within the
meaning of applicable corporate and securities laws. Although TCI
requisitioned the Special Meeting for the purposes of refreshing
the current Board by adding four nominees, shareholders are not
being asked at this time to execute a proxy in favour of TCI's
nominees for election to the Board or any other resolutions set
forth in the requisition. In connection with the Special Meeting,
TCI has filed a preliminary information circular dated September 27, 2021 (the "Circular") and expects
to issue a supplement thereto or amendment and restatement thereof
(the "Final TCI Circular") containing further disclosure concerning
TCI's proposals, together with additional details concerning the
completion and return of forms of proxy and voting information
forms ("VIFs") to be provided by TCI for use at the Special
Meeting.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, TCI is voluntarily providing the
disclosure required in accordance with corporate and securities
laws applicable to public broadcast solicitations.
This press release and any solicitation made by TCI in advance
of the Special Meeting is, or will be, as applicable, made by TCI
and not by or on behalf of the management of CN.
Shareholders of CN are not being asked at this time to execute
proxies in favour of TCI's nominees (in respect of the Special
Meeting) or any other resolution set forth in the requisition. TCI
intends to make its solicitation primarily by mail, but proxies may
also be solicited personally by telephone, email or other
electronic means, as well as by newspaper or other media
advertising or in person, by TCI, certain of its members, partners,
directors, officers and employees, TCI's nominees or TCI's agents,
including Kingsdale Advisors, who has been retained by TCI as its
strategic shareholder advisor and proxy solicitation agent.
Pursuant to the agreement between Kingsdale Advisors and TCI Fund
Management Limited, Kingsdale Advisors would receive a fee of up to
$3.5 million, plus customary fees for
each call to or from shareholders of CN, and would be reimbursed
for certain out-of-pocket expenses, with all such costs to be borne
by TCI. In addition, TCI may solicit proxies in reliance upon the
public broadcast exemption to the solicitation requirements under
applicable Canadian corporate and securities laws, by way of public
broadcast, including press release, speech or publication, and in
any other manner permitted under applicable Canadian laws. Any
members, partners, directors, officers or employees of TCI and
their affiliates or other persons who solicit proxies on behalf of
TCI will do so for no additional compensation. The costs incurred
in the preparation and mailing of the Circular and the Final TCI
Circular, and the solicitation of proxies by TCI will be borne by
TCI, provided that, subject to applicable law, TCI may seek
reimbursement from CN of TCI's out-of-pocket expenses, including
proxy solicitation expenses and legal fees, incurred in connection
with a successful reconstitution of the Board.
A registered shareholder of CN who has given a proxy may revoke
the proxy at any time prior to use by:
(a) depositing an
instrument or act in writing revoking the proxy, executed or, in
Quebec, signed by such registered
shareholder or by his, her or its personal representative
authorized in writing or by electronic signature or, if the
registered shareholder is a corporation, by an officer or attorney
thereof properly authorized, either: (i) at the registered office
of CN at any time up to and including the last business day
preceding the day of the Special Meeting or any postponement(s) or
adjournment(s) thereof, at 935, rue de La Gauchetière ouest,
Montréal, Québec, Canada, H3B 2M9;
or (ii) with the chairman of the Special Meeting prior to
commencement of the Special Meeting on the day of the Special
Meeting or any postponement(s) or adjournment(s) thereof; or
(b) revoking the proxy
in any other manner permitted by law.
A non-registered shareholder may revoke a form of proxy or VIF
given to an intermediary or Broadridge Investor Communications (or
any such other service company) at any time by submitting another
properly completed form of proxy or VIF, as the latest form of
proxy or VIF will automatically revoke any previous one already
submitted, or by written notice to the intermediary in accordance
with the instructions given to the non-registered shareholder by
its intermediary.
Based on information provided to TCI by each respective nominee,
none of TCI's nominees, nor any of their associates or affiliates,
has had any material interest, direct or indirect, in any
transaction since the commencement of CN's most recently completed
financial year or in any proposed transaction which has materially
affected or would materially affect CN or any of its
subsidiaries.
Based on information provided to TCI by each respective nominee,
none of TCI nor any member, partner, director or officer of TCI,
nor any of TCI's nominees, nor any associates or affiliates of the
foregoing, has any material interest, direct or indirect, by way of
beneficial ownership of securities or otherwise, in the matters
currently known to be acted upon at the Special Meeting, other than
in respect of TCI's ownership, control or direction of an aggregate
of 36,699,825 common shares of CN, and the removal of certain
incumbent directors and the election of the nominees as directors
of CN.
CN's registered office address is 935, rue de La Gauchetière
ouest, Montréal, Québec, Canada,
H3B 2M9. A copy of the Circular which contains the information
required in respect of each of TCI's nominees may be obtained on
CN's SEDAR profile at www.sedar.com.
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SOURCE TCI Fund Management Limited