Forest Laboratories, Inc. : Forest Laboratories Sends Letter to Shareholders
07/16/2012| 07:05am US/Eastern

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Recommends Shareholders Support All 10 of Forest's Candidates, Who
Are Committed to Delivering Value for All Shareholders
Asks Shareholders to Vote the WHITE Proxy Card Today
Forest Laboratories, Inc. (NYSE: FRX) ("Forest") today announced that
its Board of Directors has sent a letter to all Forest shareholders in
connection with the Company's Annual Meeting on August 15, 2012. The
letter highlights Forest's qualified slate of director nominees and
states that Carl Icahn's dissident slate has significant and obvious
conflicts and entanglements that compromise their independence and
ability to represent all Forest shareholders.
Forest's Board of Directors recommends that you vote for all 10 of our
highly qualified director nominees on the WHITE proxy card.
For information about Forest's 2012 Annual Meeting of Shareholders,
please visit:
www.FRX2012annualmeeting.com.
The text of the July 16th letter follows:
July 16, 2012
Dear Fellow Forest Shareholders,
We write to ask for your support in advance of this year's Annual
Meeting of shareholders, which is scheduled for August 15, 2012. This
meeting will have a major impact on your investment in Forest.
Carl Icahn is again attempting to replace four of your directors with
four of his own hand-picked representatives. We find it curious that Mr.
Icahn has again proposed four directors when he has very publicly stated
that what he really wants is for Forest to agree to place Eric Ende and
Daniel Ninivaggi on your board - both of whom are beholden to Icahn
because they are paid directly by him.
While avoiding a proxy contest may serve the interest of expediency, in
this case it would not serve your
interests. The quality of Board nominees is of paramount importance.
Your full Board was fully engaged in the careful consideration of both
Mr. Icahn's proposals and his slate of nominees. Your Board is unanimous
in its view that Icahn's nominees are unqualified.
Although Mr. Icahn has tried to position his candidates as independent,
the fact is that three of his candidates
have significant conflicts and entanglements that we believe compromise
their independence and all of his nominees
are far less qualified than the Company's candidates. As detailed in Mr.
Icahn's proxy, his nominees lack relevant experience and - with the
exception of Eric Ende who served as Icahn's representative on the
Genzyme board for less than 10 months - their prior healthcare board
service was at small, start-up companies that are not remotely
comparable to the size, scale and complexity of Forest. Every member of
your Board believes you should reject Icahn's designees and support all
10 of Forest's candidates, who are committed to delivering value for ALL
shareholders.
ICAHN'S NOMINEES HAVE SIGNIFICANT CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND
ENTANGLEMENTS THAT WE BELIEVE COMPROMISE THEIR ABILITY TO REPRESENT THE
INTERESTS OF ALL FOREST SHAREHOLDERS
It is ironic that Mr. Icahn - the well-known corporate raider and
self-proclaimed corporate governance guru - would nominate a slate of
individuals with significant and obvious conflicts that we believe
compromise their independence and ability to represent all
Forest shareholders. For example:
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Eric Ende, a serial Icahn board nominee who is being paid
$65,000 per month to lead Icahn's proxy contest, also has an
unorthodox profit-sharing arrangement with Icahn under which he would
receive 1% of Mr. Icahn's profits above $47.50 per Forest share, but
only if achieved within 30 months of starting Board service. This
highly unusual compensation arrangement, which has already drawn
criticism from corporate governance experts,1 aligns Ende's
interests with the profits of one
shareholder - Carl Icahn - at the potential expense of all other
Forest shareholders. It provides a powerful incentive for Ende to
pursue risky and short-term "swing for the fences" strategies to the
detriment of our long-term strategy that will create greater overall
returns over the long term. In addition, Ende is subject to highly
unusual restrictions that would prevent him, even if elected a
director of Forest, from speaking on a variety of topics related to
Forest or his services to Carl Icahn without the prior approval
of Carl Icahn.2 We believe these arrangements compromise
any true "independence" Mr. Icahn claims Ende would bring to the Board.
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Like Ende, Daniel Ninivaggi, an Icahn insider and serial
nominee, also has an interest in representing Icahn's interests rather
than yours. He is a salaried employee and President of Icahn
Enterprises, and as such, you can fairly question whether he will put
your interests above the financial objectives of Icahn Enterprises.
-
Andrew Fromkin is the former CEO of Clinical Data, which Forest
acquired last year. As part of the transaction, Fromkin received a
security called a contingent value right (CVR) that could be worth
millions of dollars to him based on the sales of just one of our
products - Viibryd. Board members must act in the interest of the
company as a whole, but the CVR gives Fromkin a powerful incentive to
favor Viibryd at the expense of other products in our current
portfolio or others we might acquire. Importantly - and as Mr. Icahn
has himself acknowledged - Fromkin would not be considered an
independent director under the New York Stock Exchange's Corporate
Governance Rules.
We believe it's clear that the majority of Mr. Icahn's nominees do not -
and cannot - bring the independence he claims, and that Mr. Icahn is not
really a champion of corporate governance. In fact, his own public
company, Icahn Enterprises, was recently ranked as having one of the
three worst boards in corporate America!3
ICAHN'S NOMINEES ARE FAR LESS QUALIFIED TO SERVE ON YOUR BOARD
THAN
FOREST'S NOMINEES
Icahn's nominees are far less qualified than the Company's nominees and
taken together, they lack experience in areas critical to our business,
including operational and management experience and the understanding of
what it takes to bring multiple new drugs to the market. For example:
-
Pierre Legault's operational track record is questionable at
best. While serving as an Executive Vice President at The Jean Coutu
Group, the company suffered numerous earnings misses and its
integration of Eckerd, an effort led by Legault, was fraught with
missteps.4 Interestingly, Icahn makes no mention of
Legault's employment or management record at Jean Coutu in his proxy
materials. Legault also was dismissed from Rite-Aid Corp. in a
management shake-up announced at the time of the company's fifth
straight earnings miss.5
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Daniel Ninivaggi has no healthcare or other relevant experience
whatsoever, and like Legault and Ende, he has never been directly
involved with bringing a new drug to the market, which is the single
most important aspect of Forest's business. His previous experience
was as a lawyer for Lear Corporation, a supplier of interior
automotive systems. He currently serves on the boards of five publicly
traded companies, all of which are controlled by Icahn, and to our
knowledge, Ninivaggi has never been elected to a Board of a company
that Icahn does not control. If elected, Ninivaggi would be
"over-boarded," serving on six public company boards, in addition to
his role as the chief executive at publicly traded Icahn Enterprises.
-
Andrew Fromkin became a Forest employee for about a month
following Forest's acquisition of Clinical Data in April 2011, and he
left the company by mutual agreement. He now seeks to return to Forest
as a director, and nothing in his background indicates he is qualified
to serve on the Board of a company as large and complex as Forest.
-
Eric Ende, whom Icahn is paying to lead the proxy fight, has
spent the vast majority of his career as a financial analyst and has
no previous corporate operating or management experience of which to
speak. More importantly, our shareholders already rejected him in 2011
by an overwhelming margin, and we agree that he is ill-suited to
create value for Forest. Other than the 10 months he served as Icahn's
representative on the Board of Genzyme, he has not served on any
public company boards.
ICAHN'S EFFORTS TO APPEAR REASONABLE ARE NONSENSE
Mr. Icahn's recent media interviews and letters touting his settlement
offers in an effort to appear like a reasonable, constructive
shareholder are pure nonsense. Icahn has never once sought to
engage with Forest without the threat of a proxy contest. In fact,
there was utter silence from the Icahn organization in the nine months
that followed last year's Annual Meeting. His tirades and baseless
criticisms over the past few weeks have neither demonstrated a need for
change nor articulated any constructive ideas for delivering value to
shareholders.
Contrary to media reports, Icahn insisted as a condition of settlement
that Ende and Ninivaggi join your board. Clearly, it was not reasonable
for Mr. Icahn to insist that the Company nominate Eric Ende - a man who
was overwhelmingly rejected by you - our shareholders - last year and
who has significant conflicts and entanglements this year. Excluding Mr.
Icahn's votes, Ende was supported by a mere 6% of Forest shareholders
last year, the lowest of any of the fourteen candidates nominated last
year. As far as we're concerned, our shareholders spoke loud and
clear on Ende last year. We listened. Icahn obviously did not.
Mr. Icahn also insisted that Ninivaggi - his paid employee - join your
board. As detailed above, we simply do not believe that your interests
would be served by nominating a man who lacks the proper qualifications
and who we believe would be inclined to serve the interests of one
shareholder rather than all shareholders.
We believe corporate boards should be assembled based upon the
leadership qualities, experience and expertise of the directors - not
based upon the obvious self-interest of a single, vocal shareholder.
While we have no interest in an unnecessary proxy contest, we will not
sacrifice our principles for the sake of expediency. We have to consider
the quality of the candidates, and this year, just like last year, the
Icahn nominees simply do not measure up.
YOUR STRONG AND INDEPENDENT BOARD WILL DRIVE CONTINUED GROWTH
Our director candidates have diverse and specialized skills that will
help guide Forest through the near-term commercialization of the
Company's next generation of key products, support our recently launched
products, and drive our strategy for the future.
Our slate of nominees represents an effective balance of leadership
continuity and fresh perspectives. In 2011, three new highly experienced
independent directors were elected to our Board, adding financial
acumen, operational skills, investor perspective and corporate
governance experience. In their first year on our Board, all three have
been extremely active, each serves on two Board committees - two as
committee chairman - and all three serve on the Board's Compensation
Committee. Our independent directors, five of whom were elected in the
last six years, include a current CEO, a former CFO, and former COO of
major companies, top medical professionals at leading medical
institutions, an attorney, and experienced healthcare professionals with
a track record of identifying, developing and launching new drugs. We
believe that our Board represents the right mix of new perspectives,
continuing leadership and professional and medical expertise needed to
sustain the momentum we have behind our late-stage pipeline and
promising new products.
PLEASE VOTE THE WHITE CARD TO SUPPORT FOREST'S HIGHLY QUALIFIED
BOARD
NOMINEES
Your Board unanimously recommends that you vote for all 10 of our highly
qualified director nominees on the WHITE proxy card. Your vote is very
important, no matter how many shares you own. You may vote by telephone,
Internet, or by signing, dating and returning the enclosed WHITE proxy
card in the postage-paid envelope. We also urge you to discard any GOLD
proxy card sent to you by Icahn or his affiliates.
On behalf of the Board of Directors, we thank you for your continued
support of our Company.
Sincerely,
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/s/
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Howard Solomon
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Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
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/s/
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Kenneth E. Goodman
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Presiding Independent Director
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Forward-Looking Information
Except for the historical information contained herein, this document
contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements involve a
number of risks and uncertainties, including the difficulty of
predicting FDA approvals, the acceptance and demand for new
pharmaceutical products, the impact of competitive products and pricing,
the timely development and launch of new products, and the risk factors
listed from time to time in Forest Laboratories' Annual Report on Form
10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q and any subsequent SEC filings.
Important Additional Information
Forest Laboratories, its directors, director nominees and certain of its
executive officers may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation
of proxies from Forest shareholders in connection with the matters to be
considered at Forest Laboratories' 2012 Annual Meeting. Forest
Laboratories has filed its definitive proxy statement (as it may be
amended, the "Proxy Statement") with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (the "SEC") in connection with such solicitation of proxies
from Forest shareholders. FOREST SHAREHOLDERS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO
READ THE PROXY STATEMENT AND ACCOMPANYING PROXY CARD AS THEY CONTAIN
IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Information regarding the ownership of Forest's
directors and executive officers in Forest stock, restricted stock and
options is included in their SEC filings on Forms 3, 4 and 5, which can
be found at the Company's website (www.frx.com
) in the section "Investors." More detailed information regarding the
identity of potential participants, and their direct or indirect
interests, by security holdings or otherwise, is set forth in the Proxy
Statement and other materials to be filed with the SEC in connection
with Forest Laboratories' 2012 Annual Meeting. Information can also be
found in Forest's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended March
31, 2012, filed with the SEC on May 25, 2012. Shareholders can obtain
the Proxy Statement, any amendments or supplements to the Proxy
Statement and other documents filed by Forest Laboratories with the SEC
for no charge at the SEC's website at www.sec.gov.
Copies are also available at no charge at Forest Laboratories' website
at www.frx.com
or by writing to Forest Laboratories at 909 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10022.
This document contains quotes and excerpts from certain previously
published material. Unless otherwise indicated, consent of the author
and publication has not been obtained to use the material as proxy
soliciting material.
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If you have any questions, require assistance with voting your
WHITE proxy card,
or need additional copies of the proxy materials, please contact:
MACKENZIE
PARTNERS, INC.
105 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
frxproxy@mackenziepartners.com
(212) 929-5500 (Call Collect)
Or
TOLL-FREE (800) 322-2885
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About Forest Laboratories
Forest Laboratories' (NYSE: FRX) longstanding global partnerships and
track record developing and marketing pharmaceutical products in the
United States have yielded its well-established central nervous system
and cardiovascular franchises and innovations in anti-infective,
respiratory, gastrointestinal and pain management medicine. Forest's
pipeline, the most robust in its history, includes product candidates in
all stages of development across a wide range of therapeutic areas. The
Company is headquartered in New York, NY. To learn more, visit www.FRX.com.
1 Reuters News, "Icahn dangles bounty for nominee in
Forest fight," 29 June 2012.
2 Ende's May 29, 2012 Agreement with Icahn Enterprise
Holdings provides that "Ende will not at anytime on or after the date
hereof, engage in any non-public
communication relating to Forest, the transactions contemplated in the
Agreement, any proxy contest or Services relating to Forest, or any
communication with Icahn Enterprises or Carl Icahn, unless the matters
to be discussed by Ende are first discussed with and approved by, Icahn
Enterprises" (emphasis added).
3 Reuters News, "FACTBOX: Corporate America's best and
worst boards," 11 July 2012.
4 Reuters News, "Jean Coutu shares sag amid analyst
downgrades," March 8, 2006.
5 Wall Street Journal, "Rite Aid Sees Wider Loss,
Makes Management Changes," September 26, 2008.

Investor:
Forest Laboratories, Inc.
Frank J. Murdolo,
1-212-224-6714
Vice President - Investor Relations
media.relations@frx.com
or
Media:
Sard
Verbinnen & Co
Hugh Burns/Renee Soto/Lesley Bogdanow
1-212-687-8080
© Business Wire 2012
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