Smith & Wesson Will Hear What Investors Think About Gun Violence and Smart Guns
BY Herschel Smith6 years, 1 month ago
Proxy service firms Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis are calling for American Outdoor Brands (NASDAQ: AOBC) investors to follow the lead of those at Sturm, Ruger (NYSE: RGR) and force management to draft a report stating that management is monitoring acts of gun violence in the country and the risks they represent to the company.
American Outdoor Brands — the former Smith & Wesson — is hosting its annual meeting on Sept. 25, and a number of activist healthcare and religious groups have jointly submitted a shareholder question for approval. Earlier this year, a similar effort succeeded at Ruger.
The ballot question asks the company to do three things:
- Monitor violent events in which Smith & Wesson products are used.
- Prove the gunmaker is working to produce safer firearms and related products.
- Assess the risks to the gunmaker’s reputation and financial well-being from gun violence in the U.S.
In a report issued by ISS, the corporate governance outfit endorsed the proposal as a way to prove American Outdoor Brands’ board of directors is keeping the long-term risks of gun violence in mind.
Reuters reported that ISS concluded, “There is reason to believe that smart gun technology could be employed to make guns safer in the U.S. and that any engineering problems could be overcome if there was a market for the product.” So-called smart guns use technology to make sure the weapon is in the hands of its owner before it fires.
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Sturm, Ruger CEO Chris Killoy accepted the vote by investors, saying, “shareholders have spoken,” but he also went on to point out, “What the proposal does not and cannot do is to force us to change our business, which is lawful and constitutionally protected.”
While American Outdoor Brands undoubtedly feels the same way, it’s possible it will have a very different result than Sturm, Ruger did.
First, Ruger’s meeting was held at a hotel and an activist representative appeared and made an appeal to shareholders; American Outdoor’s meeting is an online-only event. (It’s the second year the gunmaker has conducted the annual meeting this way.) And as noted above, institutional investors own a smaller proportion of American Outdoor stock, making it a little more difficult to compile enough votes in favor. The meeting is also further removed from the Parkland school shooting, while Ruger’s event was more contemporaneous with it and emotions were more raw.
As I’ve said before, if you open your stock to investors (go public) and you’re subject to the political whims of money-people, you’d better make sure your employees own a majority of the stock and can reject things like this.
I see both Ruger and Smith & Wesson as vulnerable.
On September 27, 2018 at 12:24 pm, Fred said:
What Smith & Wesson should answer:
“Monitor violent events in which Smith & Wesson products are used.”
The Company does not monitor or control the private property of others. It is not in our charter and spending on this is detrimental to our operating profits.
“Prove the gunmaker is working to produce safer firearms and related products.”
The detailed engineering Intellectual Property, US patent, and trademark protections are confidential. Our manufacturing processes and controls are well regulated and they are shared with appropriate government agencies as specified by law.
“Assess the risks to the gunmaker’s reputation and financial well-being from gun violence in the U.S.”
This is a valid concern. Sections of our annual report to shareholders and regular public disclosures to securities regulators, as required by law, already addresses the risks to our brands, as the Board of Directors deems necessary.
On September 27, 2018 at 2:51 pm, John said:
S&W jumped head first into bankruptcy back in the 90’s when it cut a gun tracking deal with Slick Willy.
Gun owners and buyers refused to purchase any of Smith’s firearms and it went bust very quickly.
It was then bought for the laughably cheap price of 2 million dollars. Someone at the company had
better remember this.
On September 30, 2018 at 2:54 am, Dan said:
ANY company making ANY product the liberal left doesn’t approve of that sells public shares is vulnerable to this type of blackmail. This tactic is working for the commie left…..expect them to continue and expand it.