After 16 months of poor results and declining stock price, the Starbucks board replaced their CEO. Since his start in March 2023, the CEO oversaw a 22% stock decline but also a 32% decline from its peak of $115 to $78 over the last 16 months. Lots of other poor results from his tenure including new store sales and same store sales and average sales. A real bad situation for which the board acted to turn it around with a new CEO and new strategy for which no doubt he is chartered to field a new executive team to accomplish. Seeing an aggressive board take action lifted Starbucks stock up 22%. Shareholders voted they were on the wrong path.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/petercohan/2024/08/13/why-starbucks-stock-could-more-than-double-under-new-ceo/
Juxtapose Viasat against that where our board is complacent in the face an 80% decline in stock value from $90 to $16 over the past five years. It's been even worse down to $11 yet the board has neglected to act. Add to those results the incongruous nice executive compensation packages noted in other posts. Now more than a few institutional investors are fed up and took advantage of the recent dead cat bounce to unload their positions of 11million shares. Those four institutional investors are in the top eight holders of Viasat. They. Want. Out.
Is the board finally compelled to act? Do they really believe the plans proffered by the executive team are the best use of shareholder value? Is our stable of executives from the old battles suitable for fighting the new battles posed by StarLink and Kuiper? If not now and if not over the past five years, what is sufficient erosion in shareholder value and confidence to trigger a change in leadership team and directions? We can keep talking about how great it was to figure out ionospheric scintillation but our competitors have too and there is a different battle out there being lost.