Comtech Corrects the Record About Outerbridge’s Latest False Information
Comtech Telecommunications Corp. (CMTL) filed a presentation with the SEC addressing false statements made by Outerbridge Capital Management regarding its director nominees. Comtech argues that Outerbridge's nominees lack qualifications and threaten shareholder value. The company's board cites its commitment to long-term value, noting a 126.7% return over five years, surpassing industry benchmarks. A $100 million strategic investment from White Hat Capital Partners is set to enhance Comtech's strategic growth. Shareholders are encouraged to vote for Comtech’s nominees using the blue proxy card.
- Five-year total shareholder returns of 126.7%, outperforming the S&P 600 at 99.7%.
- Secured a $100 million strategic growth investment from White Hat Capital Partners.
- Outerbridge's nominees are deemed unqualified, posing a risk to shareholder value.
- Outerbridge's actions perceived as prioritizing short-term gains over long-term business stability.
Outerbridge continues to mislead and publicize false information rather than offering any path to long-term commercial value creation
Outerbridge’s director nominees are unqualified and we believe their election would destroy shareholder value
Comtech’s presentation correcting Outerbridge’s false and misleading statements, along with supplemental information and other stockholder materials, are available at www.ComtechCreates.com
Outerbridge is a hedge fund that is in the process of fundraising for a dedicated activist fund, and a significant portion of its holdings consist of very short-term call options. Both of these factors create incentives for it to pursue strategies that are not in the best interests of all
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Outerbridge’s candidates are unfit to serve on Comtech’s Board of Directors and their election directly threatens the Company’s ability to do business. Even a cursory background check of its nominees reveals many red flags.
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Sidney Fuchs’ appointment would damage key
Comtech customer relationships and would be value destructive for shareholders. Fuchs’ role as Chairman ofEutelsat America Corp. presents a material conflict of interest. Several of Comtech’s largest customers – who compete directly withEutelsat America Corp. and its parent company Eutelsat – have already expressed serious concerns aboutMr. Fuchs serving on Comtech’s Board. Eutelsat America’s own assessment of the conflict is completely irrelevant and is circular, self-serving misinformation. Mr. Fuchs’ election would raise many questions, including: how can key customers continue to provideComtech sensitive information regarding their strategic and planned capabilities if a competitor is sitting on the Board? How could he sit on a hypothetical strategic review committee, as proposed by Outerbridge, recognizing his conflict may introduce bias and prevent Comtech’s shareholders from achieving a value-maximizing outcome?Mr. Fuchs has no accounting experience and served as a director of a public company for less than three months and as President and CEO of the same company for only a few days before resigning, with media reporting a conflict over the strategic direction of the company. -
Wendi Carpenter brings no relevant experience to Comtech’s business – whether industry, technical, financial, accounting, M&A, or for-profit operational.Ms. Carpenter has served on the board of only one public company, SkyWater Technology, for less than one year. SkyWater’s stock has plummeted36% following disappointing third quarter earnings in which the company reported a net loss and its principal accounting officer resigned without explanation. This turbulence raises governance concerns and underscores the importance of strong accounting skills on any board. Further, material omissions from her resume continue to raise significant questions about Ms. Carpenter’s ability to oversee corporate governance and complex businesses.
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Sidney Fuchs’ appointment would damage key
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Strictly speaking, Outerbridge is not on Comtech’s ballot, but its misaligned and short-term interests surely are in the form of its flawed nominees. Although Outerbridge claims its interests are aligned with all shareholders, it has been attempting to raise funds in the wake of its
Comtech campaign and has repeatedly traded short-term call options and/or common stock around the issuance of its public letters and Comtech’s earnings. The hedge fund's actions and highly questionable trades make clear its desire is to trade its many short-term options in Comtech’s stock at prices favorable to itself while creating volatility for Comtech’s long-term shareholders. For example, onJune 14, 2021 , Outerbridge issued its initial press release two business days after purchasing 100,000 options that were set to expire in just eight days. Later, onOctober 6, 2021 , it publicly issued another highly critical letter just days after purchasing 390,000 call options expiring the following month. Is its near-term profit-seeking the real reason why it brazenly publicizes false and misleading statements? This approach may be beneficial for Outerbridge but it is dangerous forComtech , its business, its customers, and other shareholders.
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Outerbridge’s repeated false statements about
Comtech are a smokescreen for the fact that it regularly obstructed a good faith attempt to evaluate their nominees. Outerbridge’s decisions over many months make us believe that Outerbridge had no desire to achieve a constructive solution with the Company. As admitted to us and a national publication, it was trying to build up its reputation. If it truly wanted a constructive process, it would not have advanced one slate of director candidates; allowed the standard due diligence process to begin; summarily interrupted that process on those candidates by publicly nominating an entirely different set of candidates – and subsequently refused to let Comtech’s Board complete its typical evaluation process. Although Outerbridge claims that Carpenter and Fuchs are independent, in reality, it was able to control them by preventing them from continuing with an interview process. One day our Board was communicating directly with the candidates themselves and then Outerbridge stopped the process. Its actions speak for themselves far more honestly than its words. What was Outerbridge trying to hide and why prevent those candidates from speaking with the very Board members they seek to join?
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Outerbridge’s own case study and limited experience exposes what happens when Outerbridge becomes involved: misstatements, value destruction, and an inability to develop a long-term plan. Outerbridge continues to tout the success of its investment in
Barnes & Noble Education (NYSE: BNED). In reality, BNED stock still trades at levels achieved in fiscal year 2015, the stock is down over40% over the past five years and the company is struggling mightily with COVID. For example, despite the return of students to school in the fall of 2021, BNED’s stock dropped21% following its most recent quarter results and41% sinceOctober 2021 . Further, Outerbridge has made questionable stock sales, with some occurring just days before BNED missed its earnings. For example, its stock sales in lateJune 2021 accounted for18% of trading volume. Additionally, while Outerbridge initially pressed BNED to pursue a sale of the company and expressed confidence that a strategic review would yield an acquirer, the company’s process failed to produce a buyer.
Outerbridge appears to be following a similar playbook atComtech : short-term trading, a singular short-sighted focus on selling the company, ownership of short-dated options that create a misalignment of incentives with other stockholders, no plan to create value from operations, and an attempt to use its campaign to raise additional funds for itself.
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Outerbridge has misrepresented Comtech’s Board and management, fully ignoring the notable progress the Company has made over the past eighteen months as part of a clear plan to build commercial value for the long term. Over the last five years,
Comtech has delivered five-year total shareholder returns of126.7% – exceeding the S&P 600 (99.7% ), the NASDAQ Telecommunications Index (87.5% ), and the appropriate peer set (36.7% ).1 Further, the qualifications of Comtech’s nominees clearly show relevance to, and understanding of, the Company’s business.-
Judy Chambers has highly valuable experience and expertise in categories relevant to Comtech’s business, including the telecom industry, infrastructure projects, finance, governance, and spearheading ESG initiatives. Even Outerbridge acknowledges that Ms. Chambers’ “background evinces a sharp focus on corporate governance principles.” Outerbridge’s wild claim regarding an alleged connection between Magnetar and Ms. Chambers’ employer,Meketa Investment Group , is blatantly false. Here are the facts: Magnetar is not a client of Meketa;Ms. Chambers has no relationship with Magnetar; andMs. Chambers has never recommended Magnetar to any of her clients. -
Larry Waldman has been instrumental in transformingComtech into an industry leader in NextGen 911 and satellite ground station technologies. SinceMr. Waldman joined the Board in 2015, Comtech’s revenues have grown from to$307 million . Importantly,$582 million Mr. Waldman is the Board’s Audit Committee Financial Expert – a designation that neither Outerbridge nominee could hold in the Board’s assessment. Outerbridge attempts to minimize Mr. Waldman’s professional background by blatantly ignoring his current role asLead Independent Director and Audit Committee Chair of APYX Medical, which was recently named to Forbes’ 2022 America’s Best Small Companies list. The truth isMr. Waldman brings significantly more public company board experience than either of the Outerbridge nominees combined.
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In addition to just making up statements about its own directors and misleading shareholders as to its true trading activities, Outerbridge has fabricated that Comtech’s incoming CEO is moonlighting as a professional money manager when Comtech’s proxy statements for the past 10 years clearly disclose that our CEO owns a holding company that owns intellectual properties and trademarks (including various websites). What Outerbridge failed to highlight is that
Comtech’s Board and management remain focused on executing the company’s strategic plan – leveraging its leading market positions to win new business, fulfilling its commitments to existing customers around the world, and investing to capitalize on a generational technology renewal cycle across core markets. The Company’s recent
With significant momentum and experienced, action-oriented leadership,
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YOUR VOTE IS VERY IMPORTANT! |
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To ensure your shares are represented, please follow the easy instructions on the BLUE proxy card to vote by telephone, by internet, or by signing, dating and returning the BLUE proxy card in the postage-paid envelope provided. If you received this letter by email, you may also vote by pressing the BLUE “VOTE NOW” button in the accompanying email. Please simply disregard any White proxy card you may receive from Outerbridge. |
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If you have any questions or require any assistance with voting your shares, please call Comtech’s proxy solicitor, |
Toll-Free: (877) 750-8198 (from the |
Or +1 (412) 232-3651 (from other locations) |
Comtech’s definitive proxy materials and other materials regarding the Board’s recommendation for the Fiscal 2021 Annual Meeting of Stockholders can be found at www.ComtechCreates.com. |
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1 Source: Bloomberg market data as of
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