Peltz On Procter & Gamble: Sign of The Future For ROIC Laggards

 | Jul 27, 2017 09:49AM ET

One of the largest activist investors in the world is taking on his biggest target yet. Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management is seeking a board seat at Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE:PG). Now, the Consumer Staples giant is the largest company ever to face a proxy fight, signaling that size alone is no longer enough to keep activists away from poorly run companies.

Activist investors have a mixed track record when it comes to creating shareholder value, but Peltz appears to have found an ideal situation. P&G has lagged its competitors in recent years, Peltz has experience revitalizing consumer brands, and the stock trades at a discount to its peers.

Peltz has not yet released a detailed plan for P&G, but any reform of the company’s corporate structure should include a renewed focus on return on invested capital (ROIC). ROIC ranks as the most important metric for global investors and has demonstrable links to valuation. Linking executive compensation to ROIC could create immediate shareholder returns and drive a long-term commitment to the lean and disciplined corporate structure that Peltz wants P&G to adopt. This strategy should become part of the playbook for companies looking to avoid activist takeovers.

Procter & Gamble’s Underperformance

The best way to understand the recent failures of P&G’s management team is to compare the company to one of its largest competitors, the excellently run Colgate-Palmolive (CL). Figure 1 shows the ROIC earned by the two companies since 1998.

Figure 1: Colgate-Palmolive’s ROIC Strongly Outperforms P&G