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ISS Recommends Shareholders Approve Kimberly-Clark's Planned Kenvue Deal

Jan 16 (Reuters) - Institutional Shareholder Services on Friday recommended that shareholders approve plans by Kleenex ​maker Kimberly-Clark to buy Tylenol maker Kenvue, saying a ‌tie-up could improve financial metrics.

"On balance, support for the transaction is warranted," wrote ISS, whose recommendations often guide how large investors vote on hot-button issues like mergers and who serves on boards. Shareholders ‌will vote on January 29.

Kimberly-Clark in early November proposed buying ​Kenvue for more than $40 billion to create a global consumer health company with brands like Band-Aids and Huggies diapers.

Activist ‍investors, including Toms Capital and Third Point, had been pushing Kenvue to sell itself at the same time the company faced ongoing liability ⁠litigation over talcum-containing baby powder and warnings from the White ‍House that the active ingredient in Tylenol could cause autism.

ISS, in ‌its ‌note, acknowledged that a critical question for shareholders will be the "sustained negative market reaction" and uncertainties about the litigation revolving around Kenvue products.

Kimberly-Clark's share price has dropped roughly 17% since ⁠the deal was ⁠announced. Kenvue's ​share price has tumbled 35% since the former consumer healthcare division of Johnson & Johnson was listed as a public company in 2023.

But ‍ISS noted that a tie-up between Kimberly-Clark and Kenvue would bring positive synergies and benefits for the company's strategic goals. It also noted ​that it is positive that no shareholder ‍has publicly criticized the planned deal.

Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss Editing by Mark Potter and Louise Heavens

Source: Reuters


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