Doug McIntyre, the editor of 24/7 Wall Street, writes that BusinessWeek bidder Zelnick Media’s track record of involvement with some companies it has invested in has not been good.
“In May of 2005, Strauss Zelnick was part of the dream team of directors that Carl Icahn helped put on the Blockbuster board of directors. Icahn joined the board himself. The other member of the group was Edward Bleier, a former Warner Bros. Entertainment executive. Since the three joined the board, Blockbuster’s shares have dropped from $10 to $1. From 2005 to 2008 Blockbuster has had net losses of over $1 billion. Zelnick made $77,671 serving on the company’s board last year, according to its proxy.
“The situation at Take-Two Interactive, where Strauss Zelnick is the chairman, is even worse. Zelnick Media took over effective day-to-day control of Take-Two under a management contract in March 2007. The share price of the video game company was $23 then. The stock trades just above $11 now. The stock rose as high as high as $27 in mid-2008 when Electronic Arts made a bid to buy Take-Two. The board turned the offer down. Over its last four fiscal quarters ending July 31, Take-Two has had a net loss of $130 million, and revenue has declined each quarter over that period.”
Read more here, where McIntyre goes through the SEC filings that detail the large management feeds that Zelnick charges.
Wall Street Journal's Naharika Mandhana has become a chief correspondent in Singapore. She previously was Southeast Asia…
Wall Street Journal Asia editor Deborah Ball spoke with Campaign about the region's growing importance for the…
Lachlan Cartwright and Ravi Somaiya of Breaker write about the performance incentive plan issue at The Wall…
WSJ. Magazine editor in chief Sarah Ball sent out the following on Tuesday: Dear all,…
Debtwire reporter Amelia Weitzman is now covering private credit in New York. She has spent the last…
Financial Times associate editor Edward Luce writes about Gwen Robinson, the former Financial Times and Nikkei…