Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Icahn takes eBay stake, seeks PayPal spinoff

-

EBay said Wednesday that activist investor Carl Icahn had taken a stake in the online retailer and was seeking a spinoff of its PayPal financial payments unit.

In the company's quarterly earnings report, eBay said Icahn and his affiliated companies this month "acquired shares and derivative securities that give him an economic interest of approximately 0.82 percent in the company."

Icahn, a billionaire known for taking stakes in companies to force changes or pay dividends to shareholders, has nominated two of his employees to eBay's board "and submitted a non-binding proposal for a spinoff of its PayPal business into a separate company," said an eBay statement.

The California-based group said it "welcomes the opportunity to listen to the perspective of all of its shareholders, including Mr Icahn" and that the nominations will be passed on to the board's appropriate committees.

But the statement also said: "We would note that eBay has a world-class board of directors with directors who have significant experience in technology and financial services."

It said eBay's board "routinely assesses the company's strategic direction and has explored in depth a spinoff or separation of PayPal" and added that the board "does not believe that breaking up the company is the best way to maximize shareholder value."

The PayPal unit enables people to make purchases on eBay without a credit card. In recent years it has developed other payment systems, including for mobile devices.

EBay said its profit in the fourth quarter rose 13 percent from a year earlier to $850 million, topping most forecasts. The annual profit for 2013 was up nine percent at $2.9 billion.

Icahn earlier Wednesday said he has invested some $3 billion in Apple, and claimed the tech giant is "doing a disservice to shareholders" by not increasing its share buyback.

EBay said Wednesday that activist investor Carl Icahn had taken a stake in the online retailer and was seeking a spinoff of its PayPal financial payments unit.

In the company’s quarterly earnings report, eBay said Icahn and his affiliated companies this month “acquired shares and derivative securities that give him an economic interest of approximately 0.82 percent in the company.”

Icahn, a billionaire known for taking stakes in companies to force changes or pay dividends to shareholders, has nominated two of his employees to eBay’s board “and submitted a non-binding proposal for a spinoff of its PayPal business into a separate company,” said an eBay statement.

The California-based group said it “welcomes the opportunity to listen to the perspective of all of its shareholders, including Mr Icahn” and that the nominations will be passed on to the board’s appropriate committees.

But the statement also said: “We would note that eBay has a world-class board of directors with directors who have significant experience in technology and financial services.”

It said eBay’s board “routinely assesses the company’s strategic direction and has explored in depth a spinoff or separation of PayPal” and added that the board “does not believe that breaking up the company is the best way to maximize shareholder value.”

The PayPal unit enables people to make purchases on eBay without a credit card. In recent years it has developed other payment systems, including for mobile devices.

EBay said its profit in the fourth quarter rose 13 percent from a year earlier to $850 million, topping most forecasts. The annual profit for 2013 was up nine percent at $2.9 billion.

Icahn earlier Wednesday said he has invested some $3 billion in Apple, and claimed the tech giant is “doing a disservice to shareholders” by not increasing its share buyback.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

Canadian startups are navigating a market where investors expect clarity in how the business works, what has changed, and why decisions make sense.

Business

Either the US gets on the ball, or the future is looking very nasty indeed.

Entertainment

The two-part documentary “My Nightmare Stalker: The Eva LaRue Story” is streaming on Paramount+.

Business

Meta will allow European users of Facebook and Instagram to share less data and see fewer personalised ads.