Details How Independent Third Parties and the
Evidence in Legal Proceedings Have Consistently Refuted Masimo’s
“Defensive Rhetoric” and How Company’s Attacks on Politan Continue
to “Crumble Under Basic Scrutiny”
Shareholders Can Vote for Politan’s Independent
Nominees, Darlene Solomon and William Jellison, on the WHITE Card
and Can Visit www.AdvanceMasimo.com for Further Information
Politan Capital Management (together with its affiliates,
“Politan”), an 8.9% shareholder of Masimo Corporation (“Masimo” or
the “Company”) (NASDAQ: MASI), today issued an open letter to
shareholders in advance of the Company’s 2024 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”), set for September 19.
This press release features multimedia. View
the full release here:
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240916328957/en/
The full text of the letter is below:
Dear Fellow Masimo Shareholders,
Over the past several months, Politan and our independent
director nominees have been fortunate to have had the chance to
hear from many of you, and to offer our own perspectives on
Masimo’s vast potential. In a few days the Annual Meeting will
occur, and shareholders will finally be able to select a Board
comprised of a majority of truly independent directors. We know
there has been an overwhelming volume of materials to digest in the
last few weeks – and a seemingly unending number of attacks and
claims published by Masimo’s Board. We encourage you to visit here
for detailed comments by courts, blue-chip financial advisors,
proxy advisory firms and expert witnesses to Masimo’s seemingly
endless false and misleading assertions.
The efforts of Masimo’s Board to block a fair election continued
this past weekend, when Masimo on Friday asked the California
Federal Court to again delay the meeting, and then the following
day asked to effectively invalidate Politan’s current proxy card –
which the Court denied earlier
today. Masimo justified these requests by claiming it
has been greatly harmed by Politan having disclosed that the Court
denied the Company’s request for a preliminary injunction a day
earlier than the Court intended. The Court did find Politan
violated the sealing order and therefore was in contempt. Though we
relied on the advice of counsel and as such believed we were in
compliance with the Court (see statement from our counsel here),
ultimately the buck stops with me and I regret this occurred. In
order to be as transparent as possible around these issues, we made
the Court’s orders and Masimo’s Saturday brief readily accessible
for shareholders by publishing them on our website. This way,
shareholders can get the facts as opposed to Masimo’s spin.
Masimo has also desperately attempted to get shareholders to
ignore ISS and Glass Lewis, by falsely implying the reports are
stale. In fact, both groups could have revised their reports and
have chosen not to. Consider what they wrote about the Board’s
credibility:1,2
- “The board's various arguments were generally unsupported by
the facts, and were disingenuous or clearly
false…There was no convincing evidence that the board
exercised genuine oversight of management, and by extension, there
was not a shred of observable accountability
to shareholders.”
- “…Kiani has demonstrated that he has no
regard for public shareholders. He has been at the center of
so many corporate governance scandals and abuses that no credible
argument exists to the contrary.”
- “In summary, they have continued their established pattern of
presenting arguments that they apparently think will resonate with
the investor base, but that crumble under
basic scrutiny.”
- “Masimo investors have, in our view, abundant cause to conclude
that the existing board remains obdurately committed to legacy
oversight methodologies which have consistently enabled and
amplified poor governance architecture, wide operational misses,
nil-return strategic excursions, seemingly de minimis
accountability and, ultimately, a lax commitment to acknowledging
and addressing profound damage to shareholder
value.”
As Thursday approaches, we urge you to focus on the
following:
- Masimo’s frivolous litigation further confirmed the Board’s
failure of oversight: The Company’s unsuccessful attempt to
prevent Politan from voting its proxies by filing the lawsuit in
California federal court – which was initiated the day after Masimo
suffered a “scathing” rebuke from a second leading proxy advisor
and was accompanied by a two-month delay of the vote – demonstrated
the following:3
- Mr. Kiani withheld information fundamental to directors’
ability to fulfill their most basic fiduciary duties: Discovery
confirmed numerous examples of Ms. Brennan and I being denied basic
information. Despite Masimo’s constant insistence during the
campaign to the contrary, the Court noted that the Company could
not provide evidence of ever showing the Board a budget. Further,
as the Court observed, “…Koffey’s requests for information were
denied by Kiani, even though former Masimo Board member Adam
Mikkelson acknowledged in a private e-mail to Kiani that some of
the information requested ‘will likely be relevant for all board
members.’”4 As we have previously warned, the Board at Masimo is
kept in the dark. This includes not being adequately informed of
material risks like the DOJ and SEC investigations, the
whistleblower lawsuit involving 16 former employees and Mr. Kiani’s
pledge of 75% of his stock ownership as collateral for a personal
loan.
- Mr. Kiani knew about RTW’s empty voting scheme to manipulate
the election – and then repeatedly and publicly denied it:
Discovery has revealed multiple communications between Mr. Kiani
and the executives at RTW in charge of voting the firm’s Masimo
position. The communications show Mr. Kiani and his advisors not
only knew about RTW artificially inflating its vote totals to ~10%
through empty voting, but even knew which specific shareholder
would only be able to vote “a fraction of the…shares…the firm
owns.” Discovery also showed that Mr. Kiani shared a confidential
press release and 8K with RTW regarding Politan’s nominations the
night before it was issued – a clear violation of the SEC’s
Regulation FD rules and further evidence of the improper
relationship between Mr. Kiani and RTW.5 This collusion to
manipulate the election is only one of the ever-increasing number
of examples demonstrating Mr. Kiani’s disregard for the shareholder
franchise.
- The Board’s threats of disruption are not credible:
Masimo has repeatedly claimed that if the Company loses the
shareholder vote, Mr. Kiani will leave and the result would be
significant disruption to the business. In truth, Masimo’s core
healthcare business consists of multi-year contracts involving
best-in-class technology and high switching costs – a business
structure that is highly resilient to management change. Moreover,
we believe it is clear that Mr. Kiani does not run the day-to-day
business and was already planning to leave, along with the COO, as
part of the separation transaction he proposed – without any
business disruption concerns. In addition, employee disapproval of
Mr. Kiani is the worst in the industry by a significant margin, and
discovery has further revealed that, as the Head of Engineering stated, Company engineers have “lost
trust in what Joe says.” Politan has had months to prepare
for the possibility that Mr. Kiani decides to leave the Company. We
also question how the Board could ever argue it can provide
effective oversight when it also continuously claims Mr. Kiani is
“irreplaceable.” Under this framework, the Board would never be
able to disagree with Mr. Kiani – much less hold him
accountable.
- Masimo’s central accusation was false and based on
“quadruple hearsay”6 and Politan’s use of expert networks was
entirely appropriate: The Company initially alleged that
Politan was conspiring with the Wolf Haldenstein law firm to assist
in litigation against Masimo. This was categorically false. During
the course of discovery, it was revealed that the confidential
witnesses who were the basis of the accusation did not exist. Once the Wolf Haldenstein
accusation was refuted, the Company pivoted to another fantastical
allegation: trying to paint Politan’s use of standard expert
network firms for investment diligence as a nefarious act. Instead,
the Court wrote this was more like the “conduct of a responsible
investor than one bent on smearing the company it invested
in.”7
- Masimo’s characterizations of our voluntary disclosures are
false: The Company is trying to spin supplemental information
we provided during the course of the proceeding as something it is
not. The facts are that we proactively filed Masimo’s entire
complaint and made clarifying disclosures – no matter how minor,
including ones the Court found to be immaterial – such as our
September 9 filing, in order to ensure there was no confusion on
any points relevant to the Court or to shareholders. We were not
ordered to make a single disclosure. We believe that
had we chosen to countersue, the Company
would have had extensive corrections to issue, as demonstrated by
the overwhelming written record produced in discovery
and statements from expert witnesses. Instead, our focus was on
ensuring the Annual Meeting occurred as expeditiously as
possible.
- If the necessary level of change does not occur at Masimo
this year, it likely never will: The unique set of
circumstances at Masimo requires a unique level of urgency.
Consider the following:
- We believe Mr. Kiani’s proposed separation of the consumer
business presents a clear and imminent
threat to shareholder value: Following the 2024 Annual
Meeting, Mr. Kiani may enter into an irreversible separation of
Masimo’s consumer business with permanent negative valuation
implications. Blue-chip investment bank Centerview Partners, which
was hired to advise the Special Committee evaluating the
separation, submitted a declaration stating that it advised the
directors on the committee that the separation of IP proposed by
Mr. Kiani would create a “negative valuation
overhang,” and that if a separation were to proceed on such
terms, it would “decrease value for Masimo
shareholders.” Further, Glass Lewis stated that the
“functionally unchecked separation effort spearheaded by Mr. Kiani”
could “place the interests of Mr. Kiani well above those of the
Company and its shareholders.” As well, when commenting on how
immaterial Masimo’s allegation was, the Court wrote, “From the
Court’s perspective, a reasonable shareholder would be more
concerned with Kiani signing a term sheet, albeit a non-binding
one, with a potential joint-venture partner without consulting
Masimo’s complete Board.”
- Mr. Kiani’s disruption keeps getting worse: Over five
years, Masimo stock has underperformed peers by nearly 100% and the
stock has collapsed by ~40% or more on multiple occasions, the
Company has consistently missed financial targets, received
multiple DOJ subpoenas regarding its recall processes, an SEC
subpoena regarding accounting allegations by multiple employees and
whistleblower lawsuits involving 16 former employees. Meanwhile,
Mr. Kiani has continually sought a separation that risks
permanently impairing Masimo, was aware of a scheme to deprive
shareholders of their voting rights and launched frivolous
litigation (using shareholders’ resources) intended to preserve his
control. Without independent board oversight, shareholders will be
left asking, what is next?
- The Masimo Board has a track record of broken governance and
empty promises: The issues harming the Company and its
stakeholders are not new. As ISS noted, “[Masimo] has a corporate
governance track record that is firmly among the most troubling of
any modern public company.” For over a decade, shareholders have
made their desire for better governance and accountability clear
with votes against directors and compensation that rank among the
very bottom of any public company in the U.S. Instead, the Company
has consistently responded with promises that aren’t fulfilled and
potential that goes unrealized. For example, over a decade ago and
again last year before the 2023 Annual Meeting, Masimo promised to
expand the Board to at least seven members, yet today it remains at
five. As well, last year Masimo promised shareholders in the run up
to the Annual Meeting to improve governance and that the business
was doing great. Weeks later, Masimo reported an unprecedented
collapse in revenues that led to a ~50% stock price decline and
went on to block any effort by Mr. Koffey and Ms. Brennan to
improve oversight. Without a majority of independent directors,
this pattern will continue.
- If Mr. Kiani remains in control of Masimo’s Board, we
believe that he intends to continue to pursue frivolous litigation
in an effort to make the cost of defending itself too onerous for
Politan to remain on the Board: For more than two years, we
have navigated a “phalanx of impediments”8 to our efforts at Masimo
– incurring immense costs in the process. We believe Mr. Kiani and
his affiliated directors have demonstrated that if we are not able
to ensure a majority of independent Board members, they will stop
at nothing to remove any shred of independence from Masimo’s
boardroom. We estimate that Company spending against Politan has
climbed to ~$75M as of the end of second quarter of this year. The
cost of defending ourselves against such frivolous litigation is
immense and unsustainable; we believe that is precisely why Mr.
Kiani pursues it.
- Politan’s nominees would bring critically needed expertise
to Masimo’s boardroom: We worked with an independent,
nationally recognized executive search firm to identify two
directors that have no pre-existing relationship with Politan or
Masimo and who bring crucial expertise that is sorely needed on the
Board:
- Dr. Darlene Solomon, former CTO of Agilent Technologies,
Inc. (NYSE: A), brings deep expertise in R&D strategy, a
successful public board track record and experience overseeing
three large scale, successful separation transactions requiring
critical expertise in the division of IP and retention of technical
talent. She is ideally suited to help Masimo navigate a separation
of its Consumer Business and the associated IP division and
technical talent retention matters in a manner that maximizes
value. She can also support the Company in aligning its product
portfolio and R&D pipeline to realize its long-term growth
potential.
- William (Bill) Jellison, former CFO of Stryker
Corporation (NYSE: SYK), brings deep medical technology executive
capability, successful public board experience and a strong track
record of value-creating capital allocation including significant
transaction expertise. He is ideally suited to chair the Audit
Committee amidst an SEC investigation into accounting, as Masimo
has not had an experienced audit chair in over five years, and
could help oversee cost structure optimization efforts and the
alignment of spending to long-term growth plans.
- As Glass Lewis stated: “…[W]e ultimately find both Mr. Jellison
and Dr. Solomon to be highly credible and
capable candidates bringing appropriate industry expertise,
potentially critical M&A/IP knowledge and reasonable public
board experience (including relevant committee service). We believe
there is suitable cause to conclude these nominees will
act independently and that neither candidate
is beholden to the interests of Politan or Quentin
Koffey.”
***
In these last few days before the Annual Meeting, we remain
focused on the exceptional opportunity at Masimo and the chance
this election represents to make clear that shareholders deserve
better. Once again, we appreciate your time and engagement
throughout this process.
Sincerely,
Quentin Koffey
Politan Capital Management
Your vote is important, no matter how many
shares of Common Stock you own. We urge you to sign, date, and
return the WHITE universal proxy card today to vote FOR the
election of the Politan Nominees and in accordance with the Politan
Parties’ recommendations on the other proposals on the agenda for
the 2024 Annual Meeting.
If you have any questions, require assistance
in voting your WHITE universal proxy card or voting
instruction form, or need additional copies of Politan’s proxy
materials, please contact D.F. King using the contact information
provided here:
D.F. King & Co., Inc. 48 Wall
Street New York, New York 10005 Stockholders call
toll-free: (888) 628-8208 Banks and Brokers call: (212)
269-5550 By Email: MASI@dfking.com
CAUTIONARY STATEMENT REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENTS
The information herein contains “forward-looking statements.”
Specific forward-looking statements can be identified by the fact
that they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts and
include, without limitation, words such as “may,” “will,”
“expects,” “believes,” “anticipates,” “plans,” “estimates,”
“projects,” “potential,” “targets,” “forecasts,” “seeks,” “could,”
“should” or the negative of such terms or other variations on such
terms or comparable terminology. Similarly, statements that
describe our objectives, plans or goals are forward-looking.
Forward-looking statements are subject to various risks and
uncertainties and assumptions. There can be no assurance that any
idea or assumption herein is, or will be proven, correct. If one or
more of the risks or uncertainties materialize, or if any of the
underlying assumptions of Politan Capital Management LP (“Politan”)
or any of the other participants in the proxy solicitation
described herein prove to be incorrect, the actual results may vary
materially from outcomes indicated by these statements.
Accordingly, forward-looking statements should not be regarded as a
representation by Politan that the future plans, estimates or
expectations contemplated will ever be achieved.
Certain statements and information included herein may have been
sourced from third parties. Politan does not make any
representations regarding the accuracy, completeness or timeliness
of such third party statements or information. Except as may be
expressly set forth herein, permission to cite such statements or
information has neither been sought nor obtained from such third
parties. Any such statements or information should not be viewed as
an indication of support from such third parties for the views
expressed herein.
Politan disclaims any obligation to update the information
herein or to disclose the results of any revisions that may be made
to any projected results or forward-looking statements herein to
reflect events or circumstances after the date of such information,
projected results or statements or to reflect the occurrence of
anticipated or unanticipated events.
CERTAIN INFORMATION CONCERNING THE PARTICIPANTS
Politan and the other Participants (as defined below) have filed
a definitive proxy statement and accompanying WHITE universal proxy
card or voting instruction form with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (the “SEC”) to be used to
solicit proxies for, among other matters, the election of its slate
of director nominees at the 2024 annual stockholders meeting (the
“2024 Annual Meeting”) of Masimo
Corporation, a Delaware corporation (“Masimo”). Shortly after filing its definitive
proxy statement with the SEC, Politan furnished the definitive
proxy statement and accompanying WHITE universal proxy card or
voting instruction form to some or all of the stockholders entitled
to vote at the 2024 Annual Meeting.
The participants in the proxy solicitation are Politan, Politan
Capital Management GP LLC (“Politan
Management”), Politan Capital Partners GP LLC (“Politan GP”), Politan Capital NY LLC (the
“Record Stockholder”), Politan
Intermediate Ltd., Politan Capital Partners Master Fund LP
(“Politan Master Fund”), Politan Capital Partners LP (“Politan
LP”), Politan Capital Offshore Partners LP (“Politan Offshore” and, collectively with Politan
Master Fund and Politan LP, the “Politan
Funds”), Quentin Koffey, Matthew Hall, Aaron Kapito (all of
the foregoing persons, collectively, the “Politan Parties”), William Jellison and Darlene
Solomon (such individuals, collectively with the Politan Parties,
the “Participants”).
As of the date hereof, the Politan Parties in this solicitation
collectively own an aggregate of 4,713,518 shares (the
“Politan Group Shares”) of common
stock, par value $0.001 per share, of Masimo (the “Common Stock”). Mr. Koffey may be deemed to own an
aggregate of 4,714,746 shares of Common Stock (the “Koffey Shares”), which consists of 1,228
restricted stock units that vested on June 26, 2024 as well as the
Politan Group Shares. Politan, as the investment adviser to the
Politan Funds, may be deemed to have the shared power to vote or
direct the vote of (and the shared power to dispose or direct the
disposition of) the Politan Group Shares, and, therefore, Politan
may be deemed to be the beneficial owner of all of the Politan
Group Shares. The Record Stockholder is the direct and record owner
of 1,000 shares of Common Stock that comprise part of the Politan
Group Shares. Both the Politan Group Shares and the Koffey Shares
represent approximately 8.9% of the outstanding shares of Common
Stock based on 53,478,694 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of
August 12, 2024, as reported in Masimo’s revised definitive proxy
statement filed on August 15, 2024. As the general partner of
Politan, Politan Management may be deemed to have the shared power
to vote or direct the vote of (and the shared power to dispose or
direct the disposition of) all of the Politan Group Shares and,
therefore, Politan Management may be deemed to be the beneficial
owner of all of the Politan Group Shares. As the general partner of
the Politan Funds, Politan GP may be deemed to have the shared
power to vote or to direct the vote of (and the shared power to
dispose or direct the disposition of) all of the Politan Group
Shares, and therefore Politan GP may be deemed to be the beneficial
owner of all of the Politan Group Shares. Mr. Koffey, including by
virtue of his position as the Managing Partner and Chief Investment
Officer of Politan and as the Managing Member of Politan Management
and Politan GP, may be deemed to have the shared power to vote or
direct the vote of (and the shared power to dispose or direct the
disposition of) all of the Koffey Shares.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION AND WHERE TO FIND IT
POLITAN STRONGLY ADVISES ALL STOCKHOLDERS OF MASIMO TO READ ITS
DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT, ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS TO SUCH
PROXY STATEMENT AND OTHER PROXY MATERIALS FILED BY POLITAN WITH THE
SEC AS THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT
INFORMATION. SUCH PROXY MATERIALS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE ON
THE SEC’S WEBSITE AT WWW.SEC.GOV. THE DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT
AND OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS ARE ALSO AVAILABLE ON THE SEC WEBSITE,
FREE OF CHARGE, OR BY DIRECTING A REQUEST TO THE PARTICIPANTS’
PROXY SOLICITOR, D.F. KING & CO., INC., 48 WALL STREET, 22ND
FLOOR, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10005 STOCKHOLDERS CAN CALL TOLL-FREE:
(888) 628-8208.
_______________________________
1
Glass, Lewis & Co., proxy
paper, July 11, 2024 (permission to quote Glass Lewis was neither
sought nor obtained).
2
Institutional Shareholder
Services Inc., vote recommendation, July 15, 2024 (permission to
quote ISS was neither sought nor obtained).
3
CNBC, July 12, 2024.
4
Masimo v. Politan Capital
Management LP, et al., 8:24-cv-01568-JVS-JDE, Dkt. 221, Order
Regarding Motion for Preliminary Injunction (PUBLIC VERSION) at 30
(Sept. 11, 2024) (“PI Order”).
5
CNBC, September 6, 2024.
6
Bloomberg Law, August 30,
2024.
7
PI Order at 10.
8
Politan Capital Management LP v.
Kiani, et al., C.A. No. 2022-0948-NAC, Transcript at 138 (Nov. 17,
2023).
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240916328957/en/
Investor D.F. King & Co., Inc. Edward McCarthy
emccarthy@dfking.com
Media Dan Zacchei / Joe Germani Longacre Square Partners
dzacchei@longacresquare.com / jgermani@longacresquare.com
Grafico Azioni Masimo (NASDAQ:MASI)
Storico
Da Mar 2025 a Apr 2025
Grafico Azioni Masimo (NASDAQ:MASI)
Storico
Da Apr 2024 a Apr 2025