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HPE signs agreement with Elliott to add KLA chairman to its board

Hewlett Packard Enterprise agreed to work with activist investor Elliott Investment Management, and appointed a veteran tech executive as a member of its board in an effort to increase shareholder value after its Juniper Networks purchase.

Robert Calderoni is the chairman of KLA's chip tools division. He has joined HPE’s board. Calderoni will also lead a newly formed strategy committee under an agreement signed with Elliott, which includes information sharing.

Elliott, which owns a stake in HPE of over $1.5 billion, has also the right to nominate an employee to the board. The agreement lasts for at least one year and prevents Elliott from holding proxy contests.

Elliott has a history of promoting change at many companies, including Southwest Airlines and Phillips 66.

Elliott has continued to push forward with global campaigns this year, despite the market volatility which led many of its peers to settle. In a high-profile proxy battle in May, it won two seats in the oil refiner Phillips 66.

In morning trading, HPE shares, which make servers used in data centres for AI workloads were not much changed. The stock is down 5% this year, falling behind AI server competitors such as Dell Technologies. It also trails the benchmark S&P 500 Index.

The demand for AI servers has exploded as startups and big tech companies race to launch generative AI services like ChatGPT, which require massive amounts of computing power. The high cost of advanced chips from companies like Nvidia or Advanced Micro Devices has weighed on the business.

HPE announced that its strategy committee would also include independent directors Gary Reiner Raymond Lane and Charles Noski. Calderoni, as well as any Elliott employee directors, would also be nominated for election to the HPE 2026 annual shareholders meeting. Reporting by Jaspreet in Bengaluru, editing by Pooja desai

(source: Reuters)