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Automatic Data Processing, Inc.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
William A. Ackman
Veronica M. Hagen
V. Paul Unruh
Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P.
PS Management GP, LLC
Pershing Square, L.P.
Pershing Square II, L.P.
Pershing Square International, Ltd.
Pershing Square Holdings, Ltd.
Pershing Square VI Master, L.P.
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On November 1, 2017 Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. and certain affiliates delivered the following presentation relating to Automatic Data Processing, Inc., which may also be posted on www.ADPascending.com:
ADP
Ascending The Choice for Shareholders
November 1, 2017 |
Disclaimer
1 The information contained in this presentation (Information) is based on publicly available information about
Automatic Data Processing, Inc. (ADP or the Company), which has not been independently verified by Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. ("Pershing Square"). Pershing Square recognizes
that there may be confidential or otherwise non-public
information in the possession of ADP or others that could lead ADP or
others to disagree with Pershing Squares conclusions. This presentation and the Information is not a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. The analyses provided may include certain forward-looking
statements, estimates and projections prepared with respect to, among other things, general economic and market conditions, changes in management, changes in Board (defined below) composition, actions of ADP and its subsidiaries or competitors, the
ability to implement business strategies and plans and
pursue business opportunities in the human capital management industry.
Such forward-looking statements, estimates, and projections reflect various assumptions by Pershing Square concerning anticipated results that are inherently subject to significant uncertainties and contingencies and have been included
solely for illustrative purposes, including those risks and
uncertainties detailed in the continuous disclosure and other filings of
ADP with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) at www.sec.gov. No representations, express or implied, are made as to the accuracy or completeness of such forward-looking statements, estimates or projections or with respect to
any other materials herein. Actual results may vary materially from the estimates and projected results contained herein. The Information is made available exclusively by Pershing Square and not
by or on behalf of ADP or its affiliates or subsidiaries or any other person. While certain funds managed by Pershing Square and its affiliates have invested in common shares of, and/or derivatives referencing, ADP and certain principals
of Pershing Square may stand for election to serve on the
board of directors of ADP, Pershing Square is not an affiliate of ADP
and neither Pershing Square nor its principals or representatives are authorized to disseminate any information for or on behalf of ADP, and nor do we purport to do so. Pershing Square manages funds that are in the business of trading buying and selling securities and financial
instruments. It is possible that there will be developments in the future that cause Pershing Square to change its position regarding ADP. Pershing Square may buy, sell, cover or otherwise change the form of
its investment in ADP for any reason. Pershing Square
hereby disclaims any duty to provide any updates or changes to the
analyses contained herein including, without limitation, the manner or type of any Pershing Square investment. The Information does not purport to include all information that may be material with respect to ADP, Pershing Squares proposed
slate of directors, or any other matter. Thus, shareholders and others should conduct their own independent investigation and analysis of ADP, the proposed slate of directors, and the
Information. Except where otherwise indicated, the Information speaks as of the date hereof. This presentation is neither an offer to purchase nor a solicitation of an offer to sell any securities of any investment funds
managed by Pershing Square, ADP or any other person. This presentation relates to Pershing Squares solicitation of proxies in connection with the 2017 annual meeting (the
Annual Meeting) of stockholders of ADP. Pershing Square and certain of its affiliated funds have filed a definitive proxy statement and an accompanying GOLD proxy card
with the SEC to be used to solicit proxies in connection
with the Annual Meeting and the election of a slate of director nominees
at the Annual Meeting (the Solicitation). PERSHING SQUARE STRONGLY ADVISES ALL STOCKHOLDERS OF ADP TO READ THE DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT, ANY AMENDMENTS OR SUPPLEMENTS TO
SUCH PROXY STATEMENT AND OTHER PROXY MATERIALS RELATED TO
THE SOLICITATION WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE, BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION, INCLUDING INFORMATION RELATING TO THE PERSONS WHO MAY BE DEEMED PARTICIPANTS IN THE SOLICITATION. SUCH PROXY
MATERIALS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE ON THE SECS
WEBSITE AT WWW.SEC.GOV. IN ADDITION, THE PARTICIPANTS IN THIS PROXY SOLICITATION WILL PROVIDE COPIES OF THE PROXY STATEMENT AND OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS WITHOUT CHARGE, WHEN AVAILABLE, UPON REQUEST. REQUESTS FOR COPIES SHOULD BE
DIRECTED TO THE PARTICIPANTS PROXY SOLICITOR, D.F.
KING & CO., INC., 48 WALL STREET, 22ND FLOOR, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10005 (CALL COLLECT: (212) 269-5550; CALL TOLL FREE: (866) 342-1635) OR EMAIL: ADP@DFKING.COM. |
I
believe that change, and the ever increasing pace of change, that
were all witnessing, puts an incredible pressure on our
organizations, and the people in those organizations. I believe that
people, human beings, fundamentally do not like change. It causes
discomfort. I believe, that change and accelerating change without good
leadership can turn that discomfort into fear. I believe that
fear, left unchecked, can cause organizations good people to ignore reality. Do some really strange things. Ultimately cause the demise of their organization. Or, make them into something that is insignificant, compared to their past. - John Paul Jones ADP, Chairman of the Board Former Chairman and CEO of Air Products 2 ________________________________________________ Source: Villanova University. Summit on Leadership. Leading Today in a Changing World (Circa 2009). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHbDZ0c_hsM |
ADPs
Employer Services business is underperforming its potential ADP can
significantly improve its performance and competitive position with
improved operational efficiency and greater technology leadership Employer
Services, currently earning a ~19% operating margin, should achieve 35%
or greater margins Employer Services growth can increase to
~7%+ Achieving ADPs structural potential will drive enormous
shareholder value The long-term health of ADP will be driven by an
improved and superior culture, employee engagement, innovation, and
operational efficiency ADPs transformation can be accomplished without
undue risk The transformations of Solera (f.k.a. Claims Services) and CDK
(f.k.a. Dealer Services),
previously owned by ADP, provide a roadmap ADP has an Enormous Opportunity for Improvement 3 |
4 We believe there is likely a valid case for accelerated margin expansion at ADP...
There is a 10-15 [percentage point] delta between ADP and competitor margins which cannot be easily explained by structural differences
Lisa Ellis, Bernstein (Aug 31, 2017)
[W]e
agree that there are significant margin expansion opportunities and expect the activist involvement to potentially help drive greater focus on improving the Employer Services margins
going forward. Bryan Keane, Deutsche Bank (Sep 5, 2017) We agreed with many of the points highlighted by Pershing
There is an opportunity to further improve margins. ADP's revenue [per] employee lags
competitors reflecting multiple platforms and redundant service
centers. Mark Marcon, Baird (Aug 18, 2017) ________________________________________________ Note: Permission to use quotations throughout this presentation neither sought nor obtained. Emphasis added.
Wall Street Analysts Agree
We believe there is sufficient evidence to suggest that additional margin expansion should be achievable in Employer Services,
specifically the [Paychex] comp, the CDK case, headcount intensity, and lack of committed-to margin expansion from current initiatives.
Lisa Ellis, Bernstein (Oct 31, 2017) |
83% of
ADPs current long shareholders support Pershing Squares involvement in ADP 83% of ADPs current long shareholders find it somewhat compelling or compelling that ADPs
Employer Services should achieve operating margins of 35% or greater
88% of ADPs current long shareholders find it somewhat compelling or
compelling that ADPs Employer Services revenue growth
can be accelerated through operational improvements and a best-
in-class offering in ADP's Enterprise business
5 Shareholders support Pershing Squares views: (1) Shareholders and Proxy Advisory Firms Agree The proxy advisory firms see the opportunity (emphasis added): [ADP] is not performing to its full potential,
operationally or financially, and is not maximizing value for long-term shareholders.
In our view, when compared to the productivity, profitability
and growth of ADP's competitors in the HCM industry
the substantial opportunity that Pershing Square has outlined for ADP to potentially achieve becomes readily apparent. - Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017) [T]he dissident does appear to make a valid point when noting that ADP's margins fall far short of Paychex's
Moreover,
economies of scale in areas such as R&D and corporate expense
should help ADP's margin relative to Paychex. ADP's revenues (excluding pass-throughs and clients' funds' interest) are approximately three times that of Paychex, and its payroll-related
revenue is more than four times that of Paychex.
- ISS (Oct 25, 2017) ________________________________________________ (1) Lisa Ellis, Bernstein. ADP vs. Ackman: And the Investor Survey
Says...The Vote Might Be Closer Than You Thought. October 13, 2017. |
6 ________________________________________________ (1) ADPs gross margins adjusted to exclude float income (-$397m) but add-back Systems Development and Programming Costs (+$628m) and
Depreciation and Amortization (+$226m) to be more consistent with
competitor gross margin presentation. Competitor gross margins have similarly been adjusted (as relevant) for comparability purposes. Gross profit margins presented as a percentage of adjusted net operational revenue, excluding float income and reporting the PEO net of pass-through
costs. (2)
Excludes services and implementation revenue / associated gross profit.
(3) Assumes ES achieved competitor-level gross margins of 74% on $8.5bn of Net Operational Revenue.
Adjusted Net Operational Gross Profit Margins
(1) (%) Recurring Median: 74% Median: 71% ES: ~58% (2) Achieving competitor-level gross margins would drive ~$1.35bn of profit uplift or ~1,600 of margin improvement in Employer Services (3) Smallest Largest ADP has a Substantial Opportunity to Improve its Gross Margins 60% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% ADP (1) Paychex Workday Ultimate Insperity TriNet Cornerstone Paycom Paylocity ADP Excluding PEO (ADP) SMB Enterprise PEO HCM Major Accounts Recurring Adjusted Gross Profit |
Net
Operational Revenue per Employee (1)
(Ex-Float) 7 ADP has a Substantial Opportunity to Improve its Labor Efficiency Median: $232 Smallest Largest ES: ~$153 (2) ________________________________________________ Note: Based on latest fiscal year end, as relevant. Note that Kronos and Ceridian are two privately-owned competitors which do not have full
public financials. (1)
Net operational revenue excludes float income (Funds Held for Clients) and
PEO Services pass-through costs (~$2.6bn for ADP, estimated at $165m for Paychex). (2) Insperity Net Operational Revenue estimated based on TriNets gross margins.
(3) Estimated based on the average of two methodologies: (1) assumes ES achieved peer-level productivity on current headcount driving an
additional $3.9bn of revenue with an estimated
40% margin flow-through implying a $1.5bn uplift in EBIT, and (2) assumes a headcount reduction on the current base of revenue at an estimated fully-burdened cost per employee of $70k, driving a $1.2bn EBIT uplift. Achieving competitor-level labor productivity would drive ~$1.4bn of profit uplift or ~1,600bps of margin improvement in Employer Services (3) ES: ~$212 $214 $238 $209 ~$269 $249 $232 $159 $148 $161 $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 $300 ADP Paychex Workday Ultimate Insperity Trinet Cornerstone Paycom Paylocity ADP Excluding PEO SMB Enterprise PEO HCM Major Accounts |
While
Paychex historically generated similar Revenue per Employee to ADP (from
2008-2011), it has dramatically outperformed ADP since 2011
8 ADP vs. Paychex: the Gap is Widening Revenue per Employee (1) ($000) Revenue Per Employee (1,3,4) ($000) ________________________________________________ (1) For both ADP and Paychex analysis excludes Client Funds and PEO pass-through costs. Source: SEC public financials and/or financial press
releases. (2)
2008-2014 includes Dealer Services given lack of consistent disclosure. 2015
through 2017 excludes Dealer Services. Note that dealer services had revenue per employee of ~$220k at the time of the spinoff from ADP. (3) PEO estimated at ~11% of total revenue based on management commentary noting PEO comprises ¼ of HRS revenue (Q22017 earnings call), growing double-digits. Pass-through costs estimated at $165m. Adjusted results for Paychex change in accounting with respect to PEO pass-through costs in FY 2014. Assumed PEO
has achieved a 15% CAGR since 2011, consistent with management
commentary. (4)
ADP excludes Dealer Services in both periods. 2009 employee headcount excluding Dealer
Services based on disclosure from ADPs March 2009 Analyst Day presentation. $100 $150 $200 $250 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 ADP (2) Paychex (3) $159 $161 $158 $214 $100 $150 $200 $250 2009A 2017A ADP Paychex +1.4x 4.4% CAGR |
9 ADP vs. Paychex Paychex is a mature ADP competitor with a similar growth profile; yet, ADPs Employer Services trails Paychex significantly across all key metrics:
revenue productivity, gross margin, and operational profit margin
Net Op. Revenue per Employee (1) ($000) Adjusted Gross Profit Margin (1,2) (%) Adjusted Operational EBIT Margin (1,3) (%) +2,200 bps +1,600bps +38% 19% 41% 22% ADP Paychex 58% 74% 60% ADP Paychex $153 $212 $161 $214 ADP Paychex ADP (Employer Services) Paychex (Excluding PEO) Total: Including PEO, Net (1) For both ADP and Paychex analysis excludes Client Funds and PEO pass-through costs. Paychex PEO pass-through estimated at $165m on ~$340m
of gross PEO revenue. Assumes ADP has 2,500 dedicated PEO employees.
Assumes Paychex has 650 dedicated PEO employees, 75% gross profit margins and 40% net operational profit margin.
(2) ADPs gross margins adjusted to exclude float income (-$397m) but add-back Systems Development and Programming Costs (+$628m) and
Depreciation and Amortization (+$226m) to be more consistent with
competitor gross margin presentation. Gross profit margins presented as a percentage of adjusted net operational revenue, excluding float income and reporting the PEO net of pass-through costs. Assumes ADPs PEO has a 72% net gross profit margin (excluding
pass-throughs). (3) Excludes float income and pass-through costs. Note ADPs Employer Services margin of 19%; ADPs PEO has a 48% net operational
margin. |
Paychex (~41% EBIT Margins) is Comparable to At
Least ~$3bn of ADPs Employer Services Business Paychex has ~35k clients and ~$0.7bn of revenue in its mid-market business (avg. 75-100 EEs),
(1) comparable to the smaller client sub-vertical of ADPs mid-market (~$1bn of ADP revenue)
10 Our client base in the mid-market is about a little bit over 6% of our total clients. And you can assume
that, from a revenue standpoint, that's three to four times what our client base is [18-24%], if that helps. - Efrain Rivera, Paychex CFO (Dec 21, 2016) ADP vs. Paychex: Revenue Composition by Underlying Client Size Implies all other ES revenue (>150 EEs) margins of ~6% Implied ADP Employer Services Margin Excl. Paychex Comparable Revenue x41% ADP Mid-Market (50-999) ~$2bn ~$2bn (RUN by ADP) ~$0.6bn ~$1bn $2.8bn $8.5bn ~$2bn $1.7bn $1.8bn ~$5.5bn $8.5bn ~$2bn ~$1bn ~$0.8bn ~$0.4bn ________________________________________________ (1) EEs is an ADP / HCM industry term which denotes the number of underlying employees per client.
$1.6bn $0.4bn $5.5bn = 6% Workforce Now $0 $1 $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 Paychex ADP SMB (1-49) Large-Mid Market (150-999) Enterprise (1,000+) International All Other Net Operational Revenue Operational EBIT Small-Mid Market (50-149) |
ADPs Management Has Admitted That There is Plenty of Room for Improvement Carlos Rodriguez, President & CEO
When you look at ADP's overall pretax operating margin, it's pretty darn good, but when
I stack it up against other companies that are in similar industries to us, I think there is plenty of room there.
So we have one or two competitors that have higher operating margins than we do [e.g. Paychex] and that would be a good example of how much space,
how much room there is.
So we believe there is room inherently, but I think there are data points out there that would lead you to believe that a 20% pretax operating margin is nice, particularly for some other industries, but in our world it leaves, I think, plenty of room for improvement over the years. ADP Sanford Bernstein Conference May 29, 2013 11 Management should be held accountable to deliver margin expansion which, based on the companys own statements, is clearly achievable |
Growth in ADPs Employer Services is Deteriorating Growth in Employer Services has deteriorated in recent years and must dramatically accelerate to meet ADPs September 12th plan 12 ________________________________________________ Source: ADP SEC financials, financial press releases. (1) FY 2012 through FY 2016 based on ADP managements Constant Dollar Internal Revenue Growth metric. FY 2017 based on ADP
managements Organic Revenue Growth.
ADPs Plan (18-20) calls for ES growth of 6-7%; will require 19-20 inflection Employer Services Revenue Growth (%) ACA (Obamacare) related activity significantly boosts revenue growth ACA tailwinds fade, growth declines 6% 6% 7% 6% 6% 4% 2% 3% 7% 9% 7% 9% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% 8% 9% FY 2012 FY 2013 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017 FY 2018E FY 2019E FY 2020E Organic Revenue Growth (%) Implied FY 2018 - FY 2020 Plan (Midpoint) (1) |
ADP is Falling Behind Competitors, Particularly in Enterprise HCM (~20% of Employer Services) 13 ADPs board and management have failed to develop a best-in-class offering for the
Enterprise market, a failure which has allowed competitors to capture meaningful
market share and value at the expense of ADP
Change in HCM Client Count
(Since Launch of Vantage)
(1) Change in Revenue (FY 2009 FY 2017) ($bn) (3) Enterprise Value Creation (FY 2009 FY 2017) ($bn) (5) ________________________________________________ (1) Presented as the change in client count from FY 2011 through FY 2017 (consistent with the launch of Vantage). Note client counts may not be directly comparable. (2) Current Vantage count from 5/3/2017 commentary when ADP described having 350 live Vantage clients. (3) Based on the change in revenue from FY 2009 FY 2017. Workday 2009 revenue of $50m based on public news articles (Forbes. Duffield Scores Biggest Round.
4/30/2009). (4) Fiscal year 2009 based on ADPs 2009 Analyst Day Investor Presentation. FY 2017 estimated at 20% of headline Employer Services revenue for
comparability. (5)
Workday 2009 valuation based on its Series E private financing round, per Fortune.
http://fortune.com/2012/10/15/the-vc-firm-that-turned-down-workday/ (6) Assumes 40% flow through from revenue to EBIT, a 33% tax rate and a 25x unlevered earnings multiple.
(2) (4) (6) In the case of an ADP
So I consider them a more coopetition. They're not really trying to be best to beat in HR
When I
think about people that we compete against for cloud HR, performance,
learning, recruiting
I'd say probably more Ultimate. That's where
we want to dominate.
Aneel Bhusri, Workday CEO, June 2, 2016 In the case of an ADP
So I consider them a more coopetition. They're not really trying to be best to beat in HR
When I
think about people that we compete against for cloud HR, performance,
learning, recruiting
I'd say probably more Ultimate. That's where
we want to dominate.
Aneel Bhusri, Workday CEO, June 2, 2016 Despite ADPs installed base (circa 11) of ~4k, a large client base to sell to Est. ~40% directly comp- arable to ADP Enterprise bn bn bn bn bn bn 350 1,344 1,400 ADP (Vantage) Workday Ultimate Software ($0.2) $1.5 $0.6 ADP (Enterprise) Workday Ultimate Software ($1.3) $20.2 $5.1 ADP (Enterprise) Workday Ultimate Software |
Ultimate Software Wins ~45% of Clients from ADP; What These Clients Say About ADP is Instructive 14 Why are they looking to replace their old vendor (e.g., ADP)? What factors are allowing Ultimate to win versus incumbent providers (e.g., ADP)? ________________________________________________ Source: Ultimate Software Investor Presentation. Competitors published reasons for why theyre winning in the marketplace invalidates
ADPs claim that its current service offering is a point of competitive
advantage |
15 ________________________________________________ (1) Net operational revenues, excludes float allocations. Adjusts for currency and divestitures. Consistent with ADPs prior presentation of
Internal Revenue Growth. (2)
Based on ADPs 2009 Analyst Day disclosure as contrasted against recent comments
(Q32017 Earnings Call). Employer Services has achieved a ~5%
constant-currency organic revenue CAGR
since 2009 (1) , despite Enterprise revenues declining ~10% (2) over that time If Enterprise had a best-in-class product and grew at least in-line with the
broader ES business, growth would accelerate to ~7%+
ADPs PEO business is massively underpenetrated relative to ADPs client base (at 5% to 7% of ADPs addressable client base vs. 14% to 16% for the broader economy) the PEO has extremely attractive
relative unit economics Additional growth drivers include: (1) big-data,
(2) gig economy or other related HCM offerings, and (3)
consumer-focused product extensions & adjacencies
ADP Can Grow More Quickly
With best-in-class technology capabilities, Employer Services could
increase growth from mid-single-digits% to
high-single-digits% |
Root
Causes 16 |
ADPs senior executive management
Executives have decades of tenure at ADP and effectively no outside experience or perspectives ADPs CTO is not a technologist by training (previously a GM) Hes [Bill Ackman] saying that somehow the company is insular and that people stick around forever,
and the people that have worked for me have been around the company for a long, long time. What hes not aware of is that my team is almost entirely new from the time I became CEO.
Carlos Rodriguez (CNBC August 10, 2017) ADPs Senior Management Team is Insular 17 Name Position Age Joined Tenure Carlos Rodriguez CEO, President & Director 53 1999 18 Jan Siegmund CFO & Corporate VP 53 1999 18 Thomas Perrotti President of Worldwide Sales & Marketing 48 1993 24 Edward Flynn President of Global Enterprise Solutions 57 1988 29 Deborah Dyson President of National Account Services and Client Experience, Continuous Improvement
51 1988 29 John Ayala President of Major Account Services & ADP Canada 50 2002 15 Maria Black President of Small Business Solutions & HR Outsourcing 43 1996 21 Douglas Politi President of Added Value Services & Corporate VP 55 1992 25 Stuart Sackman Corporate VP, Global Product and Technology 56 1992 25 Donald Weinstein Corporate VP, Chief Strategy Officer 48 2006 11 Michael Bonarti Corporate VP, General Counsel & Secretary 51 1997 20 Dermot OBrien Chief Human Resources Officer 51 2012 5 Average Tenure 20 |
________________________________________________
Source: Glassdoor, Inc. July 2017.
Overall Rating Approval of CEO Approve of Senior Management ADP Rank: Last 2 to Last Last ADP Trails Major Peers Across a Variety of Employee Satisfaction Metrics 18 4.4 3.7 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.6 3.8 3.7 3.5 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 Paylocity Paycom Cornerstone OnDemand Intuit Kronos Ceridian Ultimate Software Workday Paychex ADP 95% 81% 95% 96% 96% 91% 97% 91% 93% 86% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% 4.3 3.7 4.1 3.9 3.9 4.1 4.6 3.7 3.5 3.1 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 ADP SMB Mid-Market Enterprise "Beyond Payroll" nd Note: Green stars denote Glassdoor Highest Rated CEOs from 2016 or 2017 based on U.S. employee feedback between 5/2/15 - 5/1/17. |
________________________________________________
Source: Glassdoor, Inc. July 2017.
Culture & Values Recommend to a Friend Positive Business Outlook ADP Rank: Last Last Last ADP Trails Major Peers Across a Variety of Employee Satisfaction Metrics 19 4.5 3.9 4.5 4.4 4.2 4.3 4.7 4.0 3.8 3.5 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 Paylocity Paycom Cornerstone OnDemand Intuit Kronos Ceridian Ultimate Software Workday Paychex ADP 86% 69% 85% 86% 85% 88% 92% 72% 71% 68% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% 85% 67% 80% 83% 82% 83% 93% 77% 66% 59% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% ADP SMB Mid-Market Enterprise "Beyond Payroll" |
ADPs Culture Needs to Change ADPs insular, bureaucratic, and staid corporate culture causes the Company to trail competitors in recruiting talent, eroding the Companys long-term competitive position Many of ADPs direct competitors rank amongst the best places to work in the country, according to prestigious lists such as the Fortune 100 Best Companies to Work For Challenge in recruiting employees Insular, outsiders dont get ahead Outside views arent considered or embraced, change never pursued ADP is an accounting and processing company ADP is not a technology or software company 7. Ultimate Software 8. Salesforce 13. Intuit 18. Workday 20 ADP is notably absent
|
Prior
Dispositions Provide a Roadmap for ADP
21 |
ADPs Prior Dispositions Demonstrate The Opportunity For Improvement 22 CDK (f.k.a. Dealer Services) Solera (f.k.a. Claims Services) Adjusted EBIT Margins (%) Adjusted EBIT Margins (%) ________________________________________________ Source: ADP, Solera and CDK Global financials. Adjusted EBIT as presented includes certain non-GAAP adjustments consistent with the
companys individual presentation format. See page 76, ADP Ascending: Detailed Supporting Materials (October 11, 2017). ADP Owned Solera ADP Owned CDK These dispositions highlight ADPs inadequate business oversight and governance
+2.2x +2.2x ADP has recently sold yet another business (CHSA / COBRA to WageWorks) which is also poised to double margins (1) In our view, the Solera and CDK cases are perhaps the most compelling evidence of the ADP board's
sub-optimal business oversight and the validity of the opportunity asserted by
Pershing Square for ADP's Employer Services to substantially improve its
performance given more effective board oversight, proper direction, a
different mentality and a new operating plan. -
Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017)
18% 40% FY 2005A FY 2011A 16% ~35% FY 2014A FY 2019E (Exit) |
Adj.
Rev Growth (excl F/X):
Adj. EBITA Margins: CDK embraced the views of shareholders, hired a consultant to evaluate its potential, and publicly announced a transformation plan. CDKs financial results and share price performance have been consistently positive 23 CDK: Dividend-Adjusted Share Price Performance 2015A 8% 18% Jun 16, 2015: CDK announces Transformation Plan to Strengthen the Business and Enhance Long-term Value 2016A 7% 22% 2017A 6% 26% May 23, 2016: CDK announces a comprehensive reorganization streamlining the organization around a new operating structure Aug 3, 2016: CDK reports FY 2016 results including FY 2019 target of Adj. EBITDA exit margin of 40% or above Oct 27, 2014: Sachem Head files 13D, announces 9.8% stake in CDK May 4, 2016: Elliott letter identifies an opportunity for CDK to expand Adj. EBITDA margins to 42% 2018E ~4-5% ~30% CDK Embraced the Views of Shareholders and Delivered on its Potential Aug 3, 2016: CDK adds two independent directors after agreement with Elliott Oct 1, 2014: CDK spins-out of ADP at $31 per share ________________________________________________ Source: CapIQ, CDK Global SEC financials and public press releases. $20 $25 $30 $35 $40 $45 $50 $55 $60 $65 $70 Sep-14 Feb-15 Jul-15 Dec-15 May-16 Oct-16 Mar-17 Aug-17 |
CDK Global: What Was CDKs Transformation Plan? 24 Under ADPs Ownership / Post-Spin CDK Transformation Plan Segments Sales R&D Were committed to an avg. 40-50bps of margin improvement over the next five years (10) ________________________________________________ (1) CDK 8K (May 23, 2016). (2) Q32016 Earnings Call (May 5, 2016). (3) CDK at JPMorgan TMT Conference (May 24, 2016). (4) CDK Global Investor Day (June 16, 2015). (5) CDK 8K (May 23, 2016). (6) CDK Fiscal 2017 Results (August 1, 2017). (7) CDK at Robert W Baird Global, Consumer, Technology & Services Conference (June 9, 2016).
(8) Q22017 Earnings Call (February 2, 2017). (9) Q12016 Earnings Call (November 3, 2015). (10) ADP 2009 Analyst Day Presentation (March 25, 2009). Margins (%) ~16% to ~35% over 5 years Seven R&D organizations reporting to six different places (3) Five sales organizations (3) Reducing complexity One global R&D organization (7) Duplication Multiple organizations doing the same thing (3) 12 different old and clunky systems (3) CDKs Transformation Plan is comprised of 200 discrete projects with individual project leaders
One sales organization (7) Billing Systems Product Sprawl 1,500 software version; 74 products (2) <400 versions and declining (6) Complexity Excessive legacy complexity (3) Simplified structure (5) One system (8) Implementations Reducing average implementation times by approximately 30% (9) Overly cumbersome and lengthy product implementation process (4) Reducing duplication Three separate entities (1) |
CDK was NOT a risky and complicated technology transformation neither is ADP CDKs transformation consisted mostly of basic blocking-and-tackling and operational excellence: 25 All of these initiatives improve the client experience and will lead to higher client retention and satisfaction Simplifying the organizational structure Delayering middle-management Engaging in facility rationalization Improving labor productivity Streamlining service and implementation Enhancing strategic sourcing Promoting pricing discipline |
ADPs Response is Not Adequate
26 |
Attempting
to discredit Pershing Square, including claiming we are uninformed about
ADPs business Promoting a false TSR which it claims is in excess of
its HCM competitors
Selectively recasting its historical operating performance in a
misleading light for shareholders
Using fear tactics that our plan will introduce unacceptable
risk including necessitating drastic headcount
reductions Claiming to already be doing it and having a plan in
place to deliver 500bps of margin improvement by FY
2020 An Overview of ADPs Engagement Throughout this
Proxy Contest
27 The Company's selective presentation of certain metrics, calculated inconsistently or without
context, purportedly to make ADP's absolute or relative performance appear better, in
this case is a tactic which considerably weakens the Company's defense,
in our view. -
Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017)
ADPs defense has consisted of:
Reality [W]hen ADP's total returns are calculated appropriately and objectively, and judged in proper context against a peer set consisting of the most directly comparable publicly-listed companies that compete with ADP in the HCM industry, ADP's TSR performance is not as strong as the Company claims. - Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017) |
ADP Says to Shareholders That It Is Outperforming But This is Not True 28 ________________________________________________ Source: Capital IQ; Total Shareholder Return. Dividend adjusted share price, assuming dividends reinvested (including CDK proceeds reinvested at
time of spin-off). (1)
See pages 30-43 of Pershing Squares Response To ADPs September 12 th Investor Presentation (September 25, 2017) available at www.adpascending.com. (2) Actual HCM Competitors comprised of a market-cap weighted index of Paychex, Ultimate Software, Insperity, and Cornerstone
OnDemand. (3)
Includes the TSR of competitors which went public subsequent to the TSR measurement
date. The starting date for the respective competitors is the later of November 8, 2011 / May 9, 2012 (respectively) or the competitors IPO date/price (for Workday, TriNet, Paycom and Paylocity). ADPs Actual TSR Since Mr. Rodriguezs Appointment as CEO ADP claims a 203% TSR over CEO Carlos Rodriguezs tenure and claims to be outperforming its HCM-related peers ADPs purported TSR is misleading: (1) Uses the day after the CEO starts Does not use the unaffected price; instead includes the increase in the stock price from Pershing Squares investment Inappropriately includes CDK outperformance (CDK underperformed under ADP and was fixed by post spin-off board and management) Uses a distorted peer group of largely unrelated companies to assert its outperformance (2,3) Public Competitors as of Nov 8, 2011 (2) -50% Includes Subsequent IPOs (3) Upon review, we consider several of the Company's reported TSR figures to be overstated,
and the Company's TSR comparisons to be less relevant than those presented in the Dissident's materials
we
find ADP's TSR performance to be far less impressive than touted by the board and
management. Most notably,
ADP's total returns are either merely consistent with or meaningfully lower than the average returns of the Company's closest HCM competitors.
- Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017) 141% 126% 165% 191% ADP ADP Purported "HCM-Related Players" (Market Cap Weighted) Actual HCM Competitors (Market Cap Weighted) |
Instead of Embracing the Opportunity, ADP Management Has Affirmed the Status Quo 29 On September 12 th , ADP responded to Pershing Square and released its Transformation Plan, which: Is an affirmation of the status quo Delivers no meaningful improvement despite the fact that ADP significantly trails competitors and its potential [ADPs] rebuttal was, in our view, a confident, well-articulated, detailed, reiteration of the status quo for ADP, providing plenty of insightful incremental data points and disclosures, but no material change to the financial outlook for the company.
ADP established three-year guidance for the first time, but the guidance was consistent with its already-disseminated FY18 guidance and long-term business
model. (2) - Lisa Ellis, Bernstein (Sep 13, 2017) ADPs Transformation Plan ADPs board and management have effectively said they cant do any better
+40-75 bps per annum
________________________________________________
(1) Presented on an as-reported basis for comparability purposes. Includes both Client Funds income and PEO pass-through
revenues. (2)
Permission to use quotations throughout this presentation neither sought nor obtained.
Emphasis added. Adjusted EBIT (%)
(1) 20% 21-22% 32% ADP, Current (FY 2017) ADP's Long-Term Plan (FY 2020) PSCM Plan (FY 2022) |
ADP Has Failed to Address The Substance of Our Business Case 30 Perhaps most concerning has been the company's failure to directly address the dissident's main criticisms.
In its public response to the dissident, the board did not seem to provide adequate answers as to why its EBIT margin trails Paychex's so widely or how it plans to reverse
market share losses among large customers, focusing instead on making pointed
criticisms of the dissident's
track record, fee structure, and behavior in this contest
the company's lack of direct public response to two key issues raised by the dissident - how it will reverse market share loss among large customers and why its EBIT margin trails Paychex's so widely - suggests that having a significant shareholder on the board could help ensure that the company is addressing those
challenges and responding to them with sufficient urgency.
- ISS (Oct 25, 2017) [T]he Company's lack of a substantive response to several of the Dissident's arguments, including a series of questions raised by Pershing Square during this campaign with respect to
ADP's operational performance (such as ADP's profit margins in Employer Services by
sub- segment),
suggests that particularly convincing evidence to refute the Dissident's critique does not exist... In our view, the board's
response, or lack thereof, to the substance of Pershing Square's argument leaves much to be desired by shareholders and, similarly, the board's stated operational and financial plan strikes us as being inadequate and underwhelming given the substantial opportunity thoroughly detailed by Pershing Square. - Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017) ________________________________________________ Note: Emphasis added. |
ADP Is Now Attempting to Pivot Its Tone and Message In Response to Shareholder Support for Our Views 31 Im directly saying [Bill Ackman] doesnt know what hes talking about - Mr. Rodriguez, CNBC (Aug 10, 2017) [W]e strongly disagree with many of the assertions made by Mr. Ackman
[it] betrays a fundamental lack of understanding of the current state of ADP's business
- Press Release (Aug 17, 2017) ADPs strategy is working - Shareholder Materials (Sep 12, 2017) ADPs Original Messaging (Aug / Sep) [ADP] has not offered a convincing rebuttal, or even attempted to squarely address
the substance of the Dissident's core arguments
Upon review, we find the
Company's plan to be underwhelming
[T]he board's plan fails to
acknowledge the magnitude of the opportunity
- Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017) ADPs Revised Tone and Message (Oct) ________________________________________________ Source: Various ADP press releases, shareholder letters, and management public commentary available on ADPs website and/or filed with the
SEC. (1) We have noted that neither Pershing Square, Wall Street research analysts (including Glass Lewis), or other shareholders with whom we have spoken can reconcile this claimed 500 bps number with their stated aggregate margin goal of 100-200bps through FY 2020 (which is entirely consistent with their existing
long-term plan). We probably agree on a lot of different things
from a thematic standpoint: The need to transform our
technology at ADP, the need to be efficient, to improve
margins
hes a few years late in terms of the ideas
that he has
- Mr. Rodriguez, Yahoo Finance (Oct 20, 2017) [W]e just guided to another 500bps (1) improvement over the next three years, so if Ackman is advocating for a 1200 bps margin improvement weve, over the course of six to nine years, weve been able to accomplish the same thing. - Mr. Rodriguez, Bloomberg TV (Oct 18, 2017) |
ADPs stated Adj. EBIT margin guidance is only 100 to 200 bps by FY
2020 Implies only ~220bps of Employer Services margin
expansion Consistent with the natural flow-through margins of the
business suggesting that the various productivity initiatives claimed by
ADP will have no net impact on the business 32
ADP Claims Its Plan Achieves 500bps of Margin
Expansion
It Is Not True ADPs current plan calls for just ~300bps of net operational margin expansion Operational Margin Expansion of ~500 bps ADPs Claim Reality Upon closer scrutiny, ADP's three-year plan calls for only approximately 300 basis
points in net operating margin expansion, and only 220 basis points of margin
expansion in Employer Services, which is consistent with ADP's historical
performance and long-term plan of delivering 50 to 100 basis points
per year. -
Glass, Lewis & Co. (Oct 23, 2017)
ADP is attempting to overstate its operational progress, but this is not
credible Pershing Square has publicly demanded that ADP provide detailed
support for this 500bps claim or retract this misleading
statement |
33 There Is Much More That ADP Can Do To Improve Current initiatives should be paired with a more comprehensive plan to achieve ADPs full structural potential ADP has additional opportunities to improve performance, including: Corporate restructuring / reducing legacy silos / spans-and-layers Design products for self-sufficiency; restructure support organization, reduce labor intensity Implementation automation Back-end technology improvements Reduced spending on legacy platforms Technology and innovation leadership ADP claims to have some elements of these workstreams underway, while entirely ignoring others, and the company has made no commitment to deliver on the margin improvement these changes should drive |
ADPs Transformation is Timely and
Actionable Without Undue Risk |
The Time is Now Small- (~25% of ES revenue) and Mid-market (~35%) migrations will be complete by year-end International and Multinational (~20%) generally do not require significant product
migrations for efficiency improvements to be delivered
While Enterprise (~20% of ES, ~15% of total) will require product migrations over
the coming years to achieve ADPs full potential,
Pershing Square has suggested
various risk-mitigating strategies which ADP is now adopting We believe the majority of Enterprise customers can and should be considered for
migrations to Workforce Now. (1) This would accelerate the timing and reduce the risk of migrations while driving further platform density and efficiency we understand that ADP has now communicated it intends to adopt this strategy (2) ADPs slow and plodding approach of small, incremental improvement risks ADPs
long-term competitive position and is not good for employees, customers, and
shareholders
35 ________________________________________________ (1) Workforce Now functions quite well for most companies with up to 3-4k employees. According to US census data (2014 County Business Patterns) ~75% of total businesses with more than 1k employees are in the 1-4k range; this is consistent with estimates of the percentage of ADPs clients below ~4k employees
we have heard from prior executives. (2)
We first suggested this as a potential strategy during our August 17th presentation. This was referenced by Stifel following our presentation: One tidbit we found most interesting. The Enterprise market has been a known challenge for ADP and perhaps one of Pershings most interesting points was that they argued a
substantial portion of the Enterprise market could run on
WorkForce Now, ADPs mid-market platform. (Source: Stifel,
Aug 17, 2017) More recently, management appears to be suggesting this to be a viable solution as noted by BMO: [M]anagement
stated it could migrate some of the smaller Enterprise clients to its Workforce Now platform as Pershing
suggested. (Source: Jeff Silber, BMO Capital Markets, Sep 13,
2017). |
As a
proxy tactic, ADP has made vague and alarmist assertions about the risk of a transformation claims which are not supported by facts and do not align with our proposals The vast majority of our proposed initiatives do not involve touching ADPs clients or
product migrations, but rather focus on improving ADPs underlying operations basic operational excellence Our plan for ADPs transformation is responsive to clients needs (better technology,
improved support, etc.) and will improve ADPs client experience ADP has recently claimed our plan will require drastic headcount reduction, introducing
risk that is not accurate and not supported by the facts (1) ADP has high (>10%) associate attrition ADP needs to hire ~6,000 new employees each year to keep headcount flat ADP can grow into its labor productivity, much like Paychex; at ADPs growth rate it
should be able to achieve competitor-level productivity within 5 years
CDK made enormous margin improvement while maintaining headcount at ~9k
Most of the changes necessary for ADP to achieve its potential will never be visible to
ADPs client, beyond a better client implementation process and a higher-quality and more
responsive service experience
36 ________________________________________________ (1) See pages 12 13, Pershing Square Letter to ISS (October 30, 2017).
ADPs Transformation Can Be Accomplished in a
Prudent and Measured Way |
A Transformation of ADP Will Not Require a Reset of Earnings While a transformation of ADP may require new or redirected investments, such investments should not cause a decline in ADPs near-term earnings ADPs resources (e.g., technology spend, salesforce, financial strength) are vast, even
relative to its greater scale versus competitors
ADPs technology R&D spend is already dramatically higher than
competitors $859mm per annum of total R&D spend and
~9,000 employees in technology is a multiple of
competitors Innovative R&D spend of $450mm per
annum o
ADP is already spending on needed next-generation strategic initiatives; the
output from these initiatives remains to be seen
Bloated legacy technology maintenance spend of $410mm per annum has increased despite platform migrations and should be substantially decreased Significant and immediate savings from operational efficiencies and reduced legacy
technology spend will more than offset any necessary investments
The transformations of CDK (f.k.a. Dealer Services) and Solera (f.k.a. Claims Services)
were highly successful, with immediate and consistent
progress 37
A transformation of ADP should provide for immediate and consistent improvement
in performance, while driving significant long-term value for
shareholders |
The
Choice for Shareholders |
With Support From Shareholders, ADP Can Create Enormous Value Add a major shareholder and two new independent directors to the Board Establish a long-term vision for ADP Form Board Committee to oversee the transformation plan Hire an independent consultant to help develop detailed plan Evaluation of necessary product, technology, and operating enhancements required to deliver on ADPs significant potential Evaluation of management necessary to execute transformation Redesign management incentives and compensation to align with transformation objectives and long-term value creation Highlight long-term opportunity to shareholders and outline path to achieve long-term potential 39 Step One Step Two Step Three Step Four Step Five Build a best-in-class HCM software, technology, and service company |
The Choice for Shareholders 40 The choice for shareholders is clear support the status quo or support ADP in achieving its potential Pershing Square Plan Achieve Potential Management Status Quo [N]o material change to the financial outlook for the company (1) Nominal margin expansion (but significantly below ADPs competitors and its potential) [R]eiteration of the strategy and business outlook that the company has already had under way (1) Requires meaningful increase in Employer Services growth to achieve long-term revenue guidance No concrete plan or urgency to fix ADPs enterprise business Fresh perspectives and a focus on operational efficiency and margin expansion Achievement of efficiency and margins approaching ADPs competitors and its potential Acting urgently to strengthen ADPs competitive position, most notably in its Enterprise business Accelerated revenue growth Accelerated earnings growth ________________________________________________ (1) Lisa Ellis. ADP vs. Ackman - Where do things stand, and what to do with the stock? Bernstein. September 19, 2017. Permission to use quotations neither sought nor obtained. |
The Nominees for ADPs Transformation Will Bring Fresh Perspectives & Relevant Skills to ADPs Board To fulfill its potential, ADPs board needs expertise in both (i) business
transformation and operating efficiency and (ii) technology and the HCM
industry ADPs board already has relevant technology and HCM
experience ADPs own board skill set matrix suggests just 4 of 10
existing directors have technology and HCM industry
experience (1)
We are not
seeking to replace any
of these directors ADPs board does not have directors with business transformation and operating efficiency experience We are proposing three directors to ADPs board, The Nominees for ADPs
Transformation, who bring a shareholder orientation, fresh perspectives and
relevant skills in business transformation and operating
efficiency ADPs board committees are chaired by the longest tenured
directors replacing these directors will allow newer board additions
to assume greater responsibility within the boardroom
41 ________________________________________________ (1) See page 39 of ADP: Driving Superior Results Through Market Leadership and Continuous Innovation (September 12, 2017). |
Director since 2007 (10 years)
Has overseen ADPs underperformance relative to its
peers and its potential
No technology / HCM experience beyond ADP board role
Divested assets which promptly doubled margins
didnt see the opportunity As Audit Committee Chair, has presided over significant reduction in disclosure despite business simplification 42 The Nominees for ADPs Transformation Bring Relevant Skills and Fresh Perspectives The Nominees for ADPs Transformation Incumbent Long-Tenured Directors John Jones (Board Chairman) Glenn Hubbard (Chair, Nominating
& Governance) Eric Fast (Chair, Audit) William Ackman (CEO of Pershing
Square Capital Management, LP) Veronica Hagen (Former Chief Executive
Officer, Polymer Group) Paul Unruh (Former Vice Chairman,
Bechtel) Director since 2005 (12 years)
Has overseen ADPs underperformance relative to its
peers and its potential
No technology / HCM experience beyond ADP board role
Divested assets which promptly doubled margins
didnt see the opportunity Prior Chairman and CEO of Air Products. Led Air Products underperformance under Mr. Jones tenure, fell behind direct competitor, Praxair Director since 2004 (13 years) Serial board member; sits on an excessive number of boards Has overseen ADPs underperformance relative to its peers and its potential No technology / HCM experience beyond ADP board role Divested assets which promptly doubled margins didnt see the opportunity No operating experience, business school dean Extensive management, financial and investment experience Significant public company board experience, including seven years as Chairman of Howard Hughes Corporation (217% TSR) Investor in the HCM industry for a decade Investments in a number of successful business transformations similar to ADP, providing valuable insights that can be applied to the benefit of ADP As one of the largest owners of ADP with a long-term outlook, total alignment with all shareholders Currently serves as a director of three large, highly respected publicly traded companies, including having served as lead director of Southern Company Successfully led and sold her business (Polymer Group) to Blackstone; continued as CEO under oversight of private equity Extensive global executive leadership experience in competitive industries where focus on operational efficiency and productivity were paramount to long-term success Personally invested over $300,000 in ADP common stock, more than any current ADP director Held several senior leadership positions at Bechtel (including Vice Chairman and CFO); obtained technology, finance, human resources, legal, and strategic planning expertise Significant experience on audit committees of public company boards (currently Chair of Symantecs Audit and Risk Committee) Instrumental in leading the cost and business transformation at Symantec as a member of a board subcommittee responsible for generating >$400 million of cost savings Personally invested over $300,000 in ADP common stock, more than any current ADP director |
43 A Vote for The Nominees for ADPs Transformation The election of The Nominees for ADPs Transformation would add to the board:
A major shareholders voice
Fresh perspectives Relevant expertise in business transformation and operating efficiency Directors who are ADP shareholders with significant skin in the game
(1) If elected, The Nominees for ADPs Transformation will represent three of ten
directors, with only one representative from Pershing Square
These new directors will not have the ability to make unilateral changes to the
companys strategy or management, and instead will work with the
other directors to seek consensus on the best outcome for all
stakeholders While our nominees, if elected, will represent a minority of
the board, their election by shareholders will provide a clear mandate
for the reconstituted board to transform ADP into a more efficient,
profitable and competitive company
________________________________________________
(1) Pershing Square has invested approximately $2.3 billion to acquire our stake in
ADP. Our two independent nominees, Veronica M. Hagen and V. Paul Unruh, have each recently invested over $300,000 of their personal funds in ADP common stock. Together, Ms. Hagen and Mr. Unruh have made a larger investment of their
out-of-pocket, personal funds in ADP than all ADP directors
combined. |
Independent Proxy Advisors Support Pershing Squares Campaign for Change at ADP 44 ________________________________________________ Note: Permission to use quotations throughout this presentation neither sought nor obtained.
Dissident nominee Ackman would bring a strong understanding of the company, with
the resources and analytical ability that his firm has demonstrated
while digging deeply into ADP's business, asking valid questions,
presenting detailed data, and proposing solutions. His real estate
background could also be helpful at this point in the company's life cycle, given ADP's ongoing initiatives to rationalize its footprint
[T]he company's lack of direct
public response to two key issues raised by the dissident - how it will reverse market share loss among large customers and why its EBIT margin trails Paychex's so widely -
suggests that having a significant shareholder on the board could help ensure that the
company is addressing those challenges and responding to them with
sufficient urgency. [W]e believe Pershing Square has argued
the more convincing case, particularly that: (i) ADP is underperforming
its potential; (ii) ADP's historical leadership position and scale
advantages breed complacency with incremental improvements that accrue relatively
easily year after year; (iii) ADP is not keeping pace with smaller
competitors in key market segments in the evolving HCM industry; (iv) an
inefficient corporate structure and insular culture restrain ADP from
identifying and urgently responding to business opportunities and
threats; and (v) ADP's performance can be significantly improved, and shareholder returns enhanced, pursuant to a transformation plan implemented in a prudent manner
under the oversight of a partly reconstituted board of directors. In our view, the
board's response, or lack thereof, to the substance of Pershing Square's
argument leaves much to be desired by shareholders and, similarly, the
board's stated operational and financial plan strikes us as being
inadequate and underwhelming given the substantial opportunity
thoroughly detailed by Pershing Square.
We believe that Pershing Squares nominees will reinforce the Board and
management in addressing operational inefficiencies, strengthen
corporate governance and unlock ADPs potential in order to
maximize shareholder value. Support for Bill
Ackman; withhold on Eric Fast Support for all three of The Nominees for ADPs Transformation Support for all three of The Nominees for ADPs Transformation |
To Support ADPs Transformation Vote GOLD The ONLY way to support ADPs transformation is to vote GOLD Three highly-qualified and experienced independent director nominees: o Bill Ackman, Veronica (Ronee) Hagen, V. Paul Unruh A withhold vote on the white card IS NOT a vote for any of the Nominees for ADPs Transformation and DOES NOT ensure any or all of our nominees will be elected to the Board We proposed a universal ballot to ADP on September 15 th after ADPs board rejected all of our candidates. This proposal was rejected 45 [W]e agree with the Dissident's assessment that the ADP board appears to be lacking
in business transformation and operating efficiency experience, which forms the basis
of Pershing Square's nomination of Ms. Hagen and Mr. Unruh. Furthermore,
in nominating Mr. Ackman, Pershing Square believes his election would
address a lack of significant stock ownership by the incumbent directors,
promote an owner's mentality in the boardroom and add the perspective of
an investor who has been involved in several business
transformations. -
Glass Lewis (Oct. 23, 2017) |
46 You can vote by Internet, telephone or by signing, dating and returning the GOLD Proxy Card or GOLD Voting Instruction Form today. Shareholders are urged NOT to use any white proxy card received from ADP and are strongly encouraged to discard the white proxy card. If you previously voted ADPs white proxy card you may change your vote by voting a later dated GOLD Proxy Card or GOLD Voting Instruction Form. Only your last dated proxy card will count. Additional information regarding the proxy contest, as well as Pershing Squares presentation to ADP shareholders is available at www.ADPascending.com.
For questions about how to vote your shares, please contact our proxy solicitor, D.F. King & Co., Inc., at (866) 342-1635.
|
Q&A |