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AB Value-Radoff Group Highlights Continued Boardroom Dysfunction and Entrenchment at Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory
Rhea-AI Impact
(Neutral)
Rhea-AI Sentiment
(Negative)
Tags
Rhea-AI Summary
AB Value Management LLC and Bradley L. Radoff, holding 17.6% of Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory's shares (NASDAQ: RMCF), urge shareholders to vote for Mary Bradley and Correne Loeffler to the Board of Directors at the upcoming Annual Meeting on August 18, 2022. They criticize current governance, alleging dysfunction and lack of diversity. Key concerns include the reappointment of Chair Jeffrey Geygan, the perceived inexperience of director Brett Seabert, and the failure to enhance board diversity. The group stresses the need for new leadership to improve corporate governance and shareholder value.
Positive
Urging shareholders to elect independent candidates may enhance board governance.
AB Value Management's significant shareholding could signal shareholder support for changes.
Negative
Critique of current management's dysfunction suggests ongoing instability.
Concern over lack of board diversity and experience may deter investors.
Urges Stockholders to Vote on BLUE Proxy Card to Elect Mary Bradley and Correne Loeffler to the Board at the 2022 Annual Meeting – Only Latest-Dated Vote Counts
WESTFIELD, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
AB Value Management LLC and Bradley L. Radoff (together with their affiliates, the "AB Value-Radoff Group" or "we"), who own approximately 17.6% of the outstanding shares of Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, Inc. (NASDAQ: RMCF) ("Rocky Mountain" or the "Company"), today issued the following statement in connection with their campaign to elect two highly qualified and independent candidates – Mary Bradley and Correne Loeffler – to the Company’s Board of Directors (the “Board”) at the 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting") scheduled for August 18, 2022:
“We believe Rocky Mountain continues to be held back by dysfunctional corporate governance and insufficient boardroom diversity. Unfortunately for stockholders expecting greater competence and stewardship from new leadership, the Company has merely shifted from operating under the value-destructive regime of a failed founder to the unstable regime of Chair Jeffrey Geygan. The best evidence of this appears to be the independent directors’ poorly-communicated decisions to appoint, remove and then re-appoint Mr. Geygan as Chair over the past year. It is obvious to us that Mr. Geygan, who seemingly orchestrated the selection of his long-time associate, Robert Sarlls, as Chief Executive Officer and previously sought control of the Company, is prioritizing a self-serving agenda. We also question how Mr. Geygan has sufficient time to serve as Chair of Rocky Mountain when he is already Chief Executive Officer of Global Value Investment Corporation, which has four business lines, and Chairman of Nasdaq-listed Wayside Technology Group. Perhaps this is why he has not directly engaged with us since inappropriately seeking our vote solely for his election at last year’s annual meeting in violation of his cooperation agreement with the Company or why the Company failed to resolve open litigations over the last 12 months. It seems the independent directors recognize Mr. Geygan is unqualified to lead them, but they lack the conviction required to appoint a more experienced and viable permanent Chair. We hope this failure to act is not the result of all directors having received an increase in compensation following Mr. Geygan’s initial appointment as Chair.
We also believe Brett Seabert is a conflicted and problematic director. We suspect Mr. Seabert is only on the Board because the Company’s prior Chief Executive Officer was his long-time friend and best man. Mr. Seabert has no discernible experience in corporate governance, consumer brands or franchising. His irrelevant background includes serving as the Chief Financial Officer of a small private construction business and is almost entirely concentrated in the real estate development and construction sectors. After five years of service, it has become evident that he adds no detectable value to the Board and lacks strong alignment with stockholders based on his meager holdings.
Lastly, we contend Mark Riegel is ill-suited to serve as Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. While Mr. Riegel has additive marketing and manufacturing experience, his lack of a public company background makes his selection as Chair of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee particularly perplexing. Under his watch, the Board has failed to add individuals with necessary franchise experience. The Board has also recently suffered the resignation of Elisabeth Charles, who was appointed Chair after we initially conveyed concerns regarding Mr. Geygan. It seems Mr. Riegel has done little to find a suitable replacement for Ms. Charles or enhance gender diversity in the boardroom. Most recently, the Board demonstrated its further disregard for stockholder-friendly governance by accelerating this year’s Annual Meeting date in an apparent attempt to avoid having to use a universal proxy card. In addition, the Board has refused to agree to our settlement offer to appoint one female franchise expert to the Board in exchange for a multi-year agreement. It should be abundantly clear at this point that Rocky Mountain needs both of our candidates in the boardroom to foster proper corporate governance and unlock value for all stockholders.”