By Saabira Chaudhuri 
 

Five of Hess Corp. (HES) director nominees released a letter to shareholders defending their role at the company, while Hess separately accused proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. of having an "institutional bias toward activist shareholders."

The communications on Monday are the latest in a months-long proxy contest between the oil company and Elliott Management Corp., a hedge fund that owns about 4.52% of Hess's shares.

Elliott argues Hess' board sat by as the company has zigged and zagged, allowing management to pursue costly and ineffective strategies that have eroded the company's value. Hess says it is on track to transforming itself into a more focused exploration and production company, and Elliott is pursuing a destructive and flawed plan to break up the company. New York-based Hess will hold its annual meeting May 16 in Houston.

In a letter, Hess' nominees urged shareholders vote for the oil company's nominees saying Elliott's characterization that Hess's board members were required to support the Hess strategic plan as a precondition for serving on the board "is simply false."

A representative of Elliott didn't immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

Hess's nominees also said Elliott's nominees, "who stand to be paid millions of dollars more than we do if elected," barely mention Elliott's initial plan for Hess, which they signed on to and which has now been "discredited by the market."

Meanwhile, Hess said ISS has "adopted a pervasive policy of bias in favor of the activist," citing a recent New York Times survey, showing that the advisory firm has backed the insurgent slate in 73% of cases so far in 2013.

Among the examples cited by Hess were proxy contests between AOL Inc. (AOL) and Starboard Value LP, Motorola Solutions Inc. (MSI) and Carl Icahn and Target Corp. (TGT) and Pershing Square Capital Management.

ISS last week cited the company's "significant underperformance," and what it said are signs that the board's "new-found attentiveness to the business is a response to the proxy contest," adding Hess's transformation appears to have occurred only on the surface and a slate of board members already aligned with the company's management isn't in the best position to oversee the company.

In response, Hess on Monday also said the ISS report fails to address key issues, including the fact that Hess has enhanced its governance "by nominating five new, world-class independent director nominees to oversee and regularly review the continued execution of a market-endorsed transformation plan, and the highly problematic compensation scheme put in place for Elliott Management's dissident nominees."

A representative of ISS also didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

Shares closed Friday at $73 and were inactive in recent premarket trading. The stock has risen 43% in the past 12 months.

Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@dowjones.com

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Grafico Azioni Motorola Solutions (NYSE:MSI)
Storico
Da Giu 2024 a Lug 2024 Clicca qui per i Grafici di Motorola Solutions
Grafico Azioni Motorola Solutions (NYSE:MSI)
Storico
Da Lug 2023 a Lug 2024 Clicca qui per i Grafici di Motorola Solutions