Entertainment

Dungeons & Dragons maker Hasbro wins board battle against activist investor Alta Fox

Key Points
  • Hasbro has fended off a challenge from an activist investor that wanted to shake up its board and spin off the company's lucrative division that includes Dungeons & Dragons.
  • On Wednesday, the Rhode Island-based toymaker said its shareholders voted to reelect its 13 directors by a "substantial margin," according to preliminary vote tallies.
  • The proxy battle was sparked by Alta Fox Capital Management, which owns a 2.5% stake in the company worth around $325 million.
A Dungeons & Dragons classic dragon hand painted by Alan Cooley, 27, of Huntington Station, New York, at Main Street Game Cafe in Huntington on November 26, 2019.
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Hasbro has fended off a board challenge from an activist investor that wanted to shake up its board and spin off the toymaker's lucrative division that includes Dungeons & Dragons.

On Wednesday, the Rhode Island-based company said its shareholders voted to reelect its 13 directors by a "substantial margin," according to preliminary vote tallies.

"As the vote indicates, our highly skilled and recently refreshed board possesses experience and expertise directly relevant to overseeing Hasbro's world-class portfolio of assets across multiple play and entertainment categories," the company said in a statement Wednesday.

The proxy battle was sparked by Alta Fox Capital Management, which owns a 2.5% stake in the company worth around $325 million. Alta Fox nominated five directors to the company's board in February, but narrowed the slate down to one ahead of Wednesday's vote.

Alta Fox wanted to do away with Hasbro's current "brand blueprint" strategy and suggested spinning off the company's Wizards of the Coast and digital gaming business as part of a broader push to boost profitability in the company's consumer products and entertainment divisions.

"After five consecutive years of underperformance relative to the S&P 500 and an even longer period of questionable corporate governance, Alta Fox believed targeted boardroom change was necessary at the onset of a new chief executive officer's tenure," Connor Haley, managing partner of Alta Fox, said in a statement Wednesday.

"We ran a campaign based on the facts: absolute and relative underperformance, numerous capital allocation blunders under long-serving incumbents, and extremely poor disclosure reflective of an insular culture," he said. "While we are disappointed in the outcome at today's annual meeting, we agree with Institutional Shareholders Services, Inc. that 'all shareholders likely benefited from the campaign.'"

Alta Fox told shareholders in February that the spinoff would increase Hasbro's share value by $100. The toy giant refuted that claim, saying that separating Wizards of the Coast from its core business would be detrimental to both the division and the company as a whole.

Hasbro's strategy uses storytelling to drive toy sales. Under the late CEO Brian Goldner, the company successfully expanded beyond its core business into television, movies and digital gaming.

It uses toy brands like Transformers and My Little Pony to fuel movies and television shows, which then propel toy sales. The company is currently producing a Dungeons & Dragons movie and television show through eOne. It has also used these brands for publishing, apparel and accessories.

Hasbro shares were off less than 1% at the close of trading Wednesday.