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Thursday, May 30, 2024

 SWEAT SHOP POLITICS

'We were going to win': Activist kingmaker stages coup at Gildan


Usman Nabi was certain from the beginning that it would end this way — with his firm seizing control of Gildan Activewear Inc. as the company’s directors headed for the exits.

“We’ve always known we were going to win,” he said. 

Six months ago, few people inside corporate Canada had even heard of Browning West LP, the investment partnership founded in 2019 by Nabi and Peter Lee. They know it now, after Browning triumphed in an expensive and high-profile proxy fight at Gildan, one of world’s largest makers of T-shirts and other cheap apparel.  

The battle — which began in December when Gildan’s board sacked longtime Chief Executive Officer Glenn Chamandy — featured lawsuits, conspiracy theories and plenty of mudslinging. Browning West wanted Chamandy back. The board hired a new CEO in Vince Tyra, an ex-Fruit of the Loom executive who’d had a stint as the University of Louisville’s athletic director.

In the end, Gildan spent some US$65 million on advisers, legal fees, severance and other related expenses, according to Chamandy — more than one per cent of its market capitalization. It’s even more than Walt Disney Co. paid to fend off activist shareholders including Nelson Peltz earlier this year. 

The dollar figure is one indicator of how hostile it was. Gildan’s board publicly accused Chamandy of being a checked-out CEO, more interested in his golf resort in Barbados than running a $6 billion public company. But inside Gildan, some executives were quietly organizing on his behalf and urging shareholders to back Browning’s campaign to oust the existing board and Tyra, their new boss. 

The rebellion worked. 

Faced with imminent defeat, Gildan’s entire board quit last week. The departures included former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. executive Tim Hodgson, who was brought in as Gildan’s new chair on May 1 — an unsuccessful attempt to persuade shareholders they could get an improved board without handing control to Browning West and Chamandy.

Now Tyra is gone, Chamandy is back and the directors are the eight men and women chosen by Browning West. All of them received at least 82 per cent of the shares voted in the board election, Gildan said in a statement Wednesday.  

“I think when we approach other public companies where change is required,” Nabi said, “folks are probably going to listen a little bit more carefully the next time.” 

Leadership focus

The Gildan proxy fight was shaped by Nabi’s time at H Partners Management LLC. There, he was part of the team that recapitalized Six Flags Entertainment Corp. and later pushed to replace the CEO of mattress maker Tempur Sealy International Inc. 

Under new leadership, both companies produced nice gains for investors, though in Tempur’s case it took several years for the strategy to work. Browning West is its fourth-largest holder today, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The experience showed that the quality of the top executives can make all the difference, Nabi said. Lee had a similar mindset. The two men, who both once worked for Lazard Inc., linked up to launch Browning West about five years ago and soon started building a stake in Gildan, which has produced annual returns of more than 18 per cent for shareholders since it went public in 1998. 

Chamandy — who ran Gildan with his brother Greg before becoming sole CEO in 2004 — is a supplier to Walmart Inc. and other apparel sellers. It has steadily built market share by exploiting a cost advantage over rivals such as Fruit of the Loom, a product of what Gildan executives said was Chamandy’s unparalleled knowledge of an intricate supply chain. 

The company takes cotton from the U.S. South and turns it into yarn that’s eventually transformed into T-shirts, socks and underwear by workers in low-wage textile centers such as Bangladesh. Chamandy knows better than anyone how to squeeze costs out of a vertically integrated manufacturing chain, Nabi said, and that’s the key. 

“It’s this game of inches,” Nabi said. “So the first thing you’d know is, let’s not hire someone who has no manufacturing experience, which is what the board did” when it chose Tyra, he said. 

Gildan’s board may have made a tactical error in the way it announced Chamandy’s departure on Dec. 11. The statement gave no explanation as to why the veteran CEO had left and said Tyra wouldn’t start working for two months. The stock fell 11 per cent that day.

It wasn’t until later that the board, then led by former alcohol executive Don Berg, came out with its story: that Chamandy, who’s in his early 60s, had run out of sensible ideas for growth, was proposing risky acquisitions and was stalling the board’s planning to find his eventual replacement. 

By that point, Chamandy had already grabbed control of the narrative, saying he’d been fired by a board that hadn’t consulted shareholders. Several of the largest investors went public with their unhappiness about the CEO change. 

By the end of December, Nabi and Lee had recruited former United Rentals Inc. CEO Michael Kneeland as a prospective new chair for Gildan, and the fight was on. “Our campaign started with a request for two board seats, then it went to five, and then it went to eight,” Nabi said. 

Browning West, which is based in Los Angeles, manages $1.6 billion for investors, including university endowments, wealthy individuals and the partners. Lee and Nabi say they have more than 90 per cent of their net worth in their fund. And the investment strategy is unusual. All of the money is in just six stocks, with the intention of owning them for years.

Under the operating plan unveiled by Browning West and Chamandy in March, Gildan will borrow more, repurchase stock, move additional production to Bangladesh and try to expand its sales of higher-quality products. There are ambitious targets — a $60 stock price by the end of next year, about 60 per cent higher than Tuesday’s closing price. If anything, the pressure on Chamandy is greater now: he’s accountable to a board that helped him get his job back. 

Gildan is Browning West’s second-largest holding, with a stake worth about $350 million. “What that means is, Gildan is extremely important to us as a fund,” Lee said, “but it’s also extremely important to us personally.


Proxy battle cost Gildan US$65M, as investors re-elect Chamandy, new slate to board

The bitter battle over who would run Gildan Activewear Inc. cost the company at least US$65 million, according to its newly returned CEO, as the apparel maker looks to turn a corner after a turbulent six months.

“This is probably the largest proxy fight in history, even more so than Disney, for example, which is 40 times our size,” said chief executive Glenn Chamandy, referring to a high-profile struggle at the entertainment company in recent years.

Shareholders of the T-shirt manufacturer voted to place Chamandy back on its board alongside a slate of candidates put forward by activist investors on Tuesday, capping a months-long leadership battle.

The election marks another vote of confidence for the company co-founder, who retook the helm last week after being ousted from the top job in December amid accusations he was no longer fit to lead the firm.

Chamandy told reporters in Montreal that Gildan's conduct over the past several months showed "poor judgement," causing a stressful period for him, his family and employees at the company. 

“I was a little saddened, I would say, by the way I think the board handled the succession — and handled me personally," he said.

Activist shareholders, including Browning West LP, pushed for Chamandy's return to the apparel manufacturer for months after former Fruit of the Loom executive Vince Tyra took over Gildan's CEO post. Gildan's largest shareholder, Jarislowsky Fraser, supported Browning West.

In a shock move last week, Tyra and Gildan's board stepped down, paving the way for Chamandy's return and for Browning West's slate of directors to be elected.

The US$65-million battle includes severances to outgoing board members and two executives, the company sale process — floated in March and since scrapped — as well as legal costs that include a pair of lawsuits launched by Gildan against Browning West, which were dismissed earlier this month, Chamandy said. That doesn't include his own severance, which he said he never received.

"This board was very entrenched and I think was very abusive to shareholders’ money,” he said of the departing directors. 

Roughly US$26 million of the US$65-million total went to Tyra, who headed the company for four months, and Arun Bajaj, Gildan's former human resources chief, said Chamandy, who called the compensation to his predecessor "shocking."

“They actually got the money for their severance and then left the company subsequently a couple days later, which is really strange,” he said. “From our view, it’s not very clean.”

Nonetheless, Chamandy suggested legal recourse is unlikely: “We’re putting this behind us.”

Meanwhile, the new board slate received “overwhelming support” from shareholders, the CEO said. The precise tally is expected by Wednesday morning.

Leading proxy firms Institutional Shareholder Services Inc., Glass Lewis and Egan Jones had all recommended Browning West's group of candidates be elected.

Gildan had previously replaced five directors in April and said it would back two Browning West nominees.

Browning West co-founder Peter Lee said Tuesday the legal battles cost his firm “millions of dollars.” The Los Angeles-based hedge fund will determine "down the road" whether Gildan might cover some of that expense, he said.

“Overall, justice has prevailed,” Chamandy told reporters. “The shareholders have spoken. This is a new beginning for Gildan.”

However, questions have already arisen around succession plans, given the tortuous saga of the past half-year.

“I’ve got a lot of energy. I’m in my early 60s, which is early 50s in the future," he said.

While Chamandy declined to speculate on when he might step down, chairman Michael Kneeland said, "Obviously, we’ll say three to five years — that’s probably good guardrails, but there’s no set time limit."

Chamandy also threw cold water on the idea of a sale of the clothing maker, which the previous board announced barely two months ago. The chief executive pointed to Gildan's ability as a publicly traded company to raise billions of dollars in capital for investment in garment factories.

“Private equity comes in and they buy the company and they put $5 billion of debt on the company, which is unmanageable," he said. "We're not going be able to reinvest in the company itself and we'll lose our competitive advantage."

Asked about complaints from factory workers in Honduras reported on by the Globe and Mail, Chamandy stood by the company’s practices, saying that most facilities are unionized and subject to periodic audits from monitoring and certification programs such as Worldwide Responsible Accredited Production. He also claimed high worker satisfaction among Gildan’s 44,000 employees and highlighted the whistleblower lines available to them.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 28, 2024.

Sunday, May 26, 2024

SWEAT SHOP BOARD ROOM POLITICS

Glenn Chamandy officially back at the Gildan helm after boardroom battle

Glenn Chamandy is officially back as the chief executive of Gildan after a months-long public battle over leadership of the Montreal-based clothing company he co-founded.

Chamandy was terminated last year to make way for Vince Tyra, kicking off protests by several major Gildan shareholders that disagreed with the decision.

Shareholders, led by activist investor Browning West, campaigned to have the Gildan board replaced at the company's annual meeting next week, and to have co-founder Chamandy brought back.

Browning West announced Thursday evening that its campaign was successful, as Gildan's board and new CEO stepped aside after preliminary votes showed the investor's plan was the clear favourite.

Gildan announced Friday that Chamandy is officially back in as its president and CEO, effective immediately.

The company says Michael Kneeland is now the non-executive chair of the board.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 24, 2024


Gildan's board resigns en masse, handing victory to activist Browning West

GILDAN ACTIVEWEAR INC (GIL:CT)

51.41 2.60 (5.33%)
As of: 05/26/24 5:17:46 am
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Gildan Activewear Inc.’s entire board of directors and Chief Executive Officer Vince Tyra quit on Thursday, conceding defeat after a bruising five-month battle with an activist shareholder over the future of the Canadian clothing maker.

The mass resignation marks a dramatic win for investment firm Browning West LP, owner of about five per cent of Gildan’s shares. It will take control of the board, install Michael Kneeland as chair and reinstate former CEO Glenn Chamandy to run the business under a new strategy.

Gildan’s board took the decision after shareholders “made their views clear” in advance of an investor meeting scheduled for May 28. Browning West said preliminary results suggested an “overwhelming majority” of shares would be voted in favour of its eight proposed directors at that meeting. 

The outgoing board halted all discussions on a previously-announced sale process, Gildan said in a statement. 

The company, one of the world’s largest makers of affordable T-shirts and owner of the American Apparel brand, has spent months embroiled in a toxic feud over its direction and who should be in charge. Browning West launched a campaign to eject the board in December after directors fired Chamandy and replaced him with Tyra, a former Fruit of the Loom executive and former athletic director at the University of Louisville. 

Montreal-based Gildan, which was founded by Chamandy’s grandfather, has become a US$6 billion company through a strategy of manufacturing in cheap-labour countries, allowing it to become a low-cost supplier of T-shirts and other apparel to retailers such as Walmart Inc. and to printwear shops and designers.

The board had accused Chamandy of being a disengaged CEO, of stalling an agreed-upon succession plan and of wanting to pursue a risky acquisition strategy — he proposed to acquire two distributors for more than $3 billion, according to documents seen by Bloomberg News.

But shareholders, led by Browning but including other large investors such as Jarislowsky Fraser and Janus Henderson Group, rallied to Chamandy’s side and called for his reinstatement.

The very public proxy fight already prompted Gildan to overhaul its board only one month ago. On May 1, five directors stood down, with replacements appointed including former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. executive Tim Hodgson as chairman. Another two said they’d leave at the May 28 shareholder meeting.

But that wasn’t enough. In recent days, proxy advisers Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. and Glass Lewis & Co. backed Browning West. Unusually, so did a group of Gildan’s own executives, who wrote a letter to shareholders suggesting they should support Browning West’s efforts so that Chamandy could return. 

In March, Browning West and Chamandy laid out plans to boost revenue, borrow more money and accelerate share buybacks to lift the stock price. Their strategy proposed that Gildan, which employs about 43,000 people worldwide, should shift more of its production to a facility in Bangladesh and away from Honduras, where energy and labor costs are higher, and focus on trying to grow in higher-end segments of the market, such as fleece products and clothing with better-quality fabric.

Their stated goal is to increase the share price to $60 by the end of next year and more than $100 in about five years. Gildan closed at $35.55 on Thursday in New York. 

“Our directors are eager to begin working toward their common goal of delivering enhanced shareholder value, which begins with reinstating Glenn Chamandy as CEO,” Browning West’s Usman Nabi and Peter Lee said in a statement. 

“Glenn is a visionary leader with a track record of value creation, an unparalleled knowledge of Gildan’s manufacturing business, a deep connection with the company’s employees and shareholders, and an impressive ability to foresee key industry shifts to keep Gildan one step ahead of competitors.”

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

 

ISS supports Gildan nominees put forward by activist shareholder Browning West

Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. is throwing its support behind a slate of board nominees and a former chief executive that dissident Gildan Activewear Inc. shareholders have been fighting to see run the company.

ISS, a prominent advisory service, is recommending shareholders vote for eight nominees put forward by Browning West and withhold votes from another slate pitched by the Montreal-based apparel manufacturer's current management.

The Browning West slate includes former Gildan chief executive Glenn Chamandy, while the group put forward by management features current chief executive Vince Tyra.

A report ISS issued to detail their recommendations points out that Gildan's operating performance over the last five years was moderately better than its peers and adds Tyra's past experience fails to establish him as a superior option to Chamandy.

Chamandy was ousted from Gildan last year to make way for Tyra. At the time, the company said it made the swap because Chamandy had no credible long-term strategy for the company and had lost the board's trust and confidence.

A spokesperson for Gildan says the company has no comment on the ISS recommendations.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 17, 2024.


Gildan investors should back browning and reinstate fired CEO, ISS says

Gildan Activewear Inc. shareholders should vote for all eight board nominees put forward by activist investor Browning West LP, including the chief executive officer who was fired by the board last year, proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. said. 

It’s a big victory for Browning West, which has a 5 per cent stake in Gildan and has been waging a monthslong campaign to turf the current board and bring back Glenn Chamandy as CEO. He was ousted in December after an internal battle over strategy and succession. 

“The dissident has presented a compelling case to reverse the change implemented by the legacy board,” ISS said in a report to clients.

Montreal-based Gildan makes cheap clothing for companies such as Walmart Inc. and owns the American Apparel brand.

Browning’s proposed slate is led by Michael Kneeland, the chair of United Rentals Inc., who would become the new chair of Gildan if the investment firm is successful in the shareholder vote that’s scheduled for May 28. 


Two Gildan lawsuits against Browning West dismissed amid leadership battle: investor

Browning West LP says two lawsuits launched by Gildan Activewear Inc.'s board against the investor have been dismissed.

The activist investor is among several major Gildan shareholders that have been campaigning to have the clothing maker's former CEO reinstated.

In a statement Thursday, Browning West said the two lawsuits were dismissed by the Superior Court of Quebec and the Quebec Financial Markets Administrative Tribunal.

Gildan announced late last year that longtime CEO Glenn Chamandy was being replaced, and several investors including Browning West are now fighting to have him brought back. 

Browning West has nominated eight people including Chamandy for election to the Gildan board of directors at the company's annual meeting on May 28.

Gildan did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 16, 2024.


Tuesday, April 23, 2024

 

Gildan taps ex-Goldman executive as chair in last stand against activist investor

The former Goldman Sachs executive who’s taking over as board chair at Gildan Activewear Inc. called for an end to the shareholder rebellion that has left the clothing company’s future in limbo.

“We need the egos and the drama-seekers to get away so we can get on with creating value,” Tim Hodgson, who was announced as the new leader of Gildan’s board on Monday, said in an interview.  

Gildan is one of the world’s largest makers of cheap T-shirts, the owner of the American Apparel brand and a supplier to Walmart Inc. and Nike Inc. But the Canadian company has been embroiled for months in a bitter fight with several of its largest investors over who should be in charge in the boardroom and the chief executive officer’s suite. 

Hodgson will have to contend with Los Angeles-based investment firm Browning West LP, which is campaigning to install eight new directors and to bring back longtime CEO Glenn Chamandy, who was fired in December after disagreements about the company’s strategy. 

On Monday, Gildan’s board appeared to seek a way out of a battle it may be losing. The company announced that seven out of its 12 directors will leave on their own — including Chair Donald Berg, who will be replaced by Hodgson on May 1. 

However, Browning West said it’s continuing with its proxy fight and will try to elect its full slate of nominees to the board at a shareholder meeting next month. And the firm doesn’t want Vince Tyra, the former Fruit of the Loom executive who replaced Chamandy as CEO, to stay. 

‘End the Drama’

Hodgson, who ran Goldman’s Canadian unit until 2010, is now the chair at Hydro One Ltd., an electrical utility in Ontario that had its own governance turmoil when its CEO and board resigned in 2018, under pressure from the provincial government.

“This isn’t my first rodeo,” said Hodgson, who criticized Browning West’s activist campaigns as “burning through CEOs like knife through butter.” 

“What we need to do is get back to selling T-shirts and not selling newspapers. Let’s end the drama,” he said.  

The current fracas began last fall when the board terminated Chamandy, the only CEO many Gildan employees have ever known. Bloomberg News has reported that before being fired, Chamandy looked into acquiring two major apparel distributors valued at a total of more than US$3 billion — a strategy the board disagreed with. He also locked horns with Gildan directors over succession planning. 

Hodgson said he fully supports the board’s actions so far, and that Chamandy needed to go. “I’ve been through 10 CEO succession processes,” he said. “Founder successions are often really complicated because founders are tied up in an ego way like no other type of CEO. And quite frankly, I think it got in the way here.” Gildan was founded by Glenn Chamandy’s grandfather. 

Gildan’s board also launched a strategic review that could lead to a sale — and hired Goldman for advice — after receiving an expression of interest from a potential buyer. When asked if he’s there to sell or grow the company, Hodgson said he took the job to “create value for shareholders, whichever way is the best value-creation opportunity.” 

The company said Monday it doesn’t expect to give an update on the review before the May 28 investor meeting, and the shares fell 1.2 per cent in Toronto. 

“We believe that today’s announcement was likely triggered by the collapse of the board’s reactive sale process, which it is clearly trying to bury in the 2,500+ word press release,” Browning West’s Peter Lee and Usman Nabi said in a statement. 

Monday, April 22, 2024

SWEAT SHOP POLITICKS

Gildan taps ex-Goldman executive as chair in last stand against activist investor

Canadian clothing manufacturer Gildan Activewear Inc. said several directors will leave within days and a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. executive will become chair, a last-ditch effort by the board to convince investors not to support the plans of an activist shareholder.

Tim Hodgson, the former head of Goldman’s Canadian unit, is to become chairman on May 1, replacing Donald Berg, who’s one of five directors planning to leave on that date. 

The company said its strategic review is still active and it’s listening to potential offers, but it doesn’t expect to announce anything soon. 

Gildan’s board has been fighting a monthslong battle with investment firm Browning West LP, which wants to install eight new directors, drop new Chief Executive Officer Vince Tyra and bring back former CEO Glenn Chamandy. Browning West has the backing of a number of other large holders for its plan — putting it in a good position to win control of the board when shareholders vote on May 28. 

Gildan said it’s now recommending that two people on Browning West’s slate, retail executives Karen Stuckey and J.P. Towner, join the board, along with Hodgson and four other new directors. 

But the board wants shareholders to reject the rest of Browning’s nominees and keep Tyra on. 

“Over the past five months, Gildan’s Board has engaged with, welcomed and sought out the views of the Company’s shareholders including Browning West and their supporters,” the Montreal-based company said in a news release Monday. “Our first choice has always been to resolve this unnecessary proxy contest in a mutually agreeable manner that benefits all shareholders of Gildan.”

In addition to the five directors who are planning to leave May 1, directors Luc Jobin and Chris Shackelton won’t stand for reelection on May 28, the company said. Shackelton, who represents shareholder Coliseum Capital Management LLC, joined the board in December. 

It’s the latest twist in an ongoing corporate saga that began after the board dismissed Chamandy in December and replaced him with Tyra, a former Fruit of the Loom executive. The decision was met with opposition from shareholders holding about a third of Gildan’s shares, led by Browning West, which them formally launched a campaign to vote out most of the current board. 

Gildan launched a sale process earlier this year after receiving an expression of interest from an unnamed potential buyer and hired investment banks including Goldman for advice. “There continues to be external interest in acquiring the company and the process is ongoing,” Gildan said Monday, adding that it does not expect to give an update about it before the May 28 annual meeting.

Monday, April 15, 2024

SWEATSHOP ECONOMICS

Gildan Activewear Inc.’s new CEO Vince Tyra gave an update to investors

 Three months into his time leading the company as shareholder infighting over his hiring continues.

Tyra outlined his strategic priorities for the company, with a focus on driving growth at the Montreal-based clothing manufacturer.

His priorities include strengthening Gildan's market position and brand awareness, and growing the company's market share internationally.

"I believe we are starting a new and exciting era at Gildan," said Tyra.

Gildan has been embroiled in controversy ever since it announced that long-time CEO and co-founder Glenn Chamandy was being replaced by Tyra. The company has said Chamandy had no credible long-term strategy and had lost the board’s confidence.

But several of the company’s investors have criticized the company for the move and are calling for Chamandy’s return.

Those investors include the company’s largest shareholder, Jarislowsky Fraser, which as of the end of 2023 owned 7.05 per cent of Gildan shares.

Other investors calling for change at Gildan include Browning West, which as of April 1 had 5.12 per cent; and Turtle Creek Asset Management, which had 2.56 per cent at the end of 2023.

Earlier in April, Browning West released a plan to cut costs at Gildan and grow its market share. The plan would include shifting production of fashion basics products from Honduras to Bangladesh and using excess capacity in Honduras for fleece production.

Gildan said last month that it has formed a special committee of independent directors to consider a "non-binding expression of interest" from an unnamed potential purchaser and contact other potential bidders.

But Browning West and Turtle Creek have said the current board cannot be trusted to oversee a sale of the company.

In previous statements, Chamandy has defended his leadership at Gildan, and has said he presented a comprehensive long-range plan in October that showed meaningful growth prospects for Gildan over the next five years.

The company said it plans to hold an investor day in the fall to provide a comprehensive strategic plan.

The clothing manufacturer saw profits rise in its fourth quarter to US$153.3 million, up from US$83.9 million a year earlier.

Gildan reconfirmed its 2024 guidance in Monday's press release, with revenue growth expected to be flat to the low single-digits.

Tyra said Gildan is on track with the first phase of its expansion in Bangladesh, a project that he said will enable the company to reduce costs, among other benefits.

One of his priorities is to successfully execute supply chain initiatives launched before his time as CEO.

"That includes delivering on Bangladesh, optimizing production in the Western Hemisphere and continuing to innovate our processes. These projects cannot be taken for granted," he said.

While the U.S. continues to be Gildan's most significant market, Tyra said the company is not capturing its "fair share" in Europe. Over the past years, sales from outside the U.S. and Canada have made up between seven and 10 per cent of the company's total revenue, he said.

"International markets were pursued opportunistically, often prioritizing available product to the U.S. and shorting international deliveries," he said.

Going forward, Tyra said he sees an opportunity to "double down" on certain regions.

As part of that, he said it's important that Gildan considers local needs and tastes as it looks to grow its market share outside the U.S., prioritizing "surgical product introductions" over a "one-size-fits-all approach."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 15, 2024.

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

SWEAT SHOPPE FASHION

Gildan investor blasts board's sale process as 'unintelligent'

GILDAN ACTIVEWEAR INC (GIL:CT)

49.80 0.98 (1.93%)
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Some major shareholders of Gildan Activewear Inc. are criticizing the sale process the board is conducting, blasting the move as unwise and ill-timed amid a fight over control of the company.

The process — which the Canadian clothing manufacturer’s board announced last week after receiving interest from potential buyers — is “unintelligent and irresponsible,” Turtle Creek Asset Management said in a letter to the board Monday.

“Just because an offer has been received does not require the board to seriously entertain it, especially when the company is in the midst of a boardroom battle,” said the Toronto-based firm, which owns 2.6 per cent of Gildan’s shares, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Representatives of Montreal-based Gildan declined to comment.

Gildan, the owner of the American Apparel brand, has been in turmoil since the board fired longtime Chief Executive Officer Glenn Chamandy in December. A dissident group of investors that owns about one-third of Gildan’s shares has fought to reinstate Chamandy and has questioned the board’s actions.

“To even a casual market observer, it is so obviously a bad time to initiate a sale process that we have been left stunned in disbelief,” said Turtle Creek, which says Gildan is worth more than US$60 per share.

Gildan’s U.S. shares fell 0.1 per cent to $37.39 on Monday in New York.

Cardinal Capital Management Inc., which owns 1.7 per cent of Gildan, said the company should only consider bids starting at $50 per share and that an offer of $60 per share “would make sense.”

“Any decent company is always going to have expressions of interests floating around,” said Evan Mancer, the Winnipeg-based firm’s president and chief investment officer. “So it’s very easy to grab onto one of those and then say that you’ve been approached.”

New York-based private equity firm Sycamore Partners is among the potential buyers for Gildan, Bloomberg has reported. Browning West LP, an activist investor in Gildan, said in a news release last week that a “rumored $42 per share indication from a potential buyer” has been circulating, “which effectively represents no premium.” 

Los Angeles-based Browning West plans to propose a slate of candidates at the company’s annual meeting in May to replace most of the board.

Gildan’s largest shareholder, Jarislowsky Fraser Ltd., hinted last week that a takeover would require a high premium as “the current share price does not reflect the long-term prospects of the company.”

“We strongly believe that the board has initiated a sale process in a desperate attempt to avoid the profound professional embarrassment that will befall the directors once they are voted off the board by Gildan’s shareholders,” Turtle Creek said in its letter.