Disgruntled shareholders call for changes at Dominion Diamond Corp. - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 03:00 PM | Calgary | -4.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Disgruntled shareholders call for changes at Dominion Diamond Corp.

A disgruntled group of shareholders is calling for changes at the Dominion Diamond Corporation, the biggest home-grown player in the Northwest Territories diamond industry.

Investors will meet with directors in January to outline plan for company's future

Some Dominion Diamond Corporation shareholders are upset at the way the company is being run and are demanding changes. (Dominion Diamond Corporation )

A disgruntled group of shareholders is calling for changes at the Dominion Diamond Corporation,the biggest home-grown player in the Northwest Territories diamond industry.

Some shareholders say the company hasn't done enough to prop up the price of its shares.

The company's stock has dropped by about 40 per cent this year.

"Part of thereasonDominion Diamond's stock price is sinking is the perception that the company does not have anaggressivegrowth strategy," said mining analyst John Kaiser.

"It has theEkatiandDiavikprojects,their best times are over, they're in a depletion cycle. And of course[Dominion has]been hit by a weakness in diamond prices."

'Misguided policies and missed opportunities'

Shareholders are also upset by a $9.8 million payout to former CEO Robert Gannicott last summer. Gannicott, who remains chairman of the board of directors,received stock benefits as a part of that package, according to regulatory filings.

Shareholderssay the drop in the companies shares is the result of "misguided policies and missed opportunities."

They'll meet with company brassin Vancouver Jan. 5to present Dominion with aplan for the company's path forward.

The man on the hot seat in that meeting will be Brendan Bell, the former N.W.T. cabinet minister whowas appointed CEO of Dominion last July.

In anews release, Dominion confirmed it has hired a financing company to look at ways to improve its share price but says no sales of assets are imminent.

And on Dec. 24, the company announced two directors,Fiona Perrott-Humphreyand Ollie Oliveira, have resigned from the board "for personal reasons."