Blackwells Sends Letter to Peloton Board of Directors, Calling for New Leadership and Initiation of Strategic Alternatives
Blackwells Capital LLC has called for the immediate removal of John Foley as CEO of Peloton Interactive, Inc. (NASDAQ: PTON), citing multiple leadership failures and the company's underperformance. Despite a significant opportunity during the pandemic, Peloton's stock has plummeted over 80% since its peak. Blackwells suggests that the company's assets, including its loyal customer base and technology, would be better utilized through a sale to a strategic acquirer. The firm emphasizes the need for the Board to explore maximizing shareholder value in light of ongoing management issues.
- Potential for maximizing shareholder value through a sale to a strategic acquirer.
- Possession of a loyal customer base and strong technology.
- Stock trading below IPO price and down over 80% from its high.
- High fixed costs and excessive inventory impacting financial stability.
- Leadership failures leading to significant shareholder losses, estimated at nearly $40 billion.
Repeated failures by current CEO
Board should begin sale process to fully maximize value of Peloton’s brand, team, customer base and technology
The text of the letter follows:
The Board of Directors
Dear Peloton Directors:
I am writing on behalf of
We believe the pandemic offered Peloton a tremendous and unexpected opportunity to accelerate consumer adoption of its category-defining products and drive performance of the business and value for shareholders. With the stock now trading below the IPO price, and down more than
Remarkably, the Company is on worse footing today than it was prior to the pandemic, with high fixed costs, excessive inventory, a listless strategy, dispirited employees and thousands of disgruntled shareholders. And no wonder, the latter, given that Peloton underperformed every other company in the Nasdaq 100 over the last twelve months.
Mr. Foley Should Be Fired as CEO, Immediately
-
Misleading Peloton investors that the Company did not need additional capital, just weeks before issuing
of equity;$1 billion - Vacillating on pricing strategy, leading to consumer, market and analyst confusion;
- Upending the product roadmap he himself authored, delaying rollouts and missing deadlines;
-
Being initially reluctant to work with the
Consumer Product Safety Commission despite selling a product that injured at least 29 children; - Demonstrating a repeated inability to forecast consumer demand, churn, and product returns – to the point of removing related metrics from the Company’s public guidance;
-
Committing to a 300,000 square foot, 20-year lease for office space in
New York City , the most expensive office and labor market in the country, seemingly because he enjoys living there (and owns a newly-acquired vacation home nearby);$55 million - Making significant capital investments to expand manufacturing capability only to then shut down manufacturing for multiple products for many months;
- Failing to ensure that the Company had effective internal controls over financial reporting, leading to a warning from his auditors;
- Hiring his wife as a key executive; and
- Leading a company that received the worst possible score for environmental disclosure and governance risk, and nearly the worst possible score for social and human rights disclosure, from a respected proxy advisory and governance firm.
All the while, shareholders have lost nearly
We believe that no Board exercising reasonable judgment could leave
The Board Should Put Peloton Up for Sale
Without
Despite the incontrovertible mismanagement of the Company, Peloton has a large and loyal customer base, skilled employees, great technology and content, and a respected brand. A stand-alone Peloton, however, will still not be able to fully exploit the opportunities its assets and brand enable – especially now with a pressured balance sheet, significant cash burn and loss of investor confidence.
Undoubtedly, Peloton and its customer base would be extremely attractive to any number of technology, streaming, metaverse and sportswear companies (e.g. Apple,
The Board should immediately begin to explore these strategic alternatives and find a proper owner of Peloton who can make the most of its coveted employees, customer base, technology, and brand.
* * *
We recognize that
Instead, you are charged with overseeing management and ensuring the best leader runs the Company. There can be no reasonable doubt that
We hope you will take our input to heart, and act as responsible fiduciaries. This short letter is but our first; the damage caused by unremedied mismanagement at Peloton could fill many more pages. We hope we do not need to write them, but make no mistake: we will not tire from the task of holding
The ride for
Sincerely,
/s/
Chief Investment Officer
About
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220124005269/en/
646-569-5897
Blackwells@gagnierfc.com
Source:
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