
Contact:
Richard
A. Bennett, Chief Activism Officer, Lens
(207) 775-4296
rbennett@lens-inc.com
Scott
Sunshine or Carol Crane, TowersGroup
(212) 354-5020
scottsunshine@towerspr.com
or carolcrane@towerspr.com
SHAREHOLDER
ACTIVIST LENS HOLDS SPECIAL MEETING
FOR
METROMEDIA
INTERNATIONAL GROUP SHAREHOLDERS
______________________________________________________
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Portland,
ME, February 2, 2001
– Lens Investment Management, LLC, the shareholder activist investment
specialist, will hold a meeting for shareholders of Metromedia International
Group, Inc. (AMEX: MMG), the global communications company founded and chaired
by John W. Kluge. The shareholder
meeting will take place Wednesday, February 14 at 9 am in New York City’s
Marriott Marquis Hotel, 1535 Broadway, New York City.
Shareholders interested in attending should register by contacting Lens.
Press are invited to attend, and should register by contacting Scott
Sunshine or Carol Crane at TowersGroup, Lens’s public relations counsel. “Management
has failed the MMG shareholder. They
won’t let a bright light shine on the company’s financials or possible
financial relationships among officers and subsidiaries,” said Richard A.
Bennett, Lens’s Chief Activism Officer. “There
are alarming parallels between MMG today and Metromedia, Inc. in 1984, when John
Kluge, its Chairman & CEO, and company executive Stuart Subotnick took the
prior Metromedia private at the well-documented expense of investors.
Mr. Kluge and Mr. Subotnick have a history of operating to achieve their
own financial agenda. They may well be doing it again.” Since last September, Lens’s management has made
repeated attempts to meet with MMG to discuss the steady destruction in
shareholder value and the need to shed non-core assets.
The company has refused Lens’s requests for a meeting with management
or to comply with Lens’s November 2000 formal “books and records” demand
to examine the company’s financial and licensing records to ensure management
is operating in the best interests of shareholders. The
company’s stock has only been bad news for shareholders since trading began on
November 2, 1995. Since then, the
stock has failed to close above $18.50 per share, the price set on that date,
and has steadily declined, hitting an all-time trading low of $1.90 on December
27, 2000. Lens
has cited MMG’s refusal to dispose of its Snapper lawn care division; the
departure last November of James Hatt, President and Chief Executive of MMG’s
Telecommunications Unit; the complexity and opacity of the company’s financial
reporting; the company’s generation of substantial cash flow, not reflected in
the stock price; and management’s refusal to repurchase common stock, despite
substantial cash reserves, as possible indications that MMG is operating outside
of the best interests of its shareholders. In the communications with MMG, Lens has been
retained to assist Elliott Associates, L.P., and Elliott International, L.P.,
institutional investors with a significant position in MMG.
Last December, both Elliott Associates and Elliott International filed
separate stockholder proposals with MMG, respectively calling for the
appointment of an independent, outside board and the right of significant
stockholders to call for a special meeting as a means of protecting their
rights. Metromedia International Group, Inc. is a global
communications and media company operating telephony and television businesses
in Eastern Europe, republics of the former Soviet Union and other emerging
markets. The company also owns the
lawn and garden equipment manufacturer Snapper, which it has called a “non-core”
asset. Elliott Associates is an institutional investor based
in New York, and Elliott International is an institutional investor based in the
Cayman Islands. The investment
activities of Elliott Associates and Elliott International are under common
management. Lens (www.lens-inc.com),
founded in 1991 by Robert A.G. Monks as an investment management firm, was among
the first fund managers to take an active role in corporate governance.
Over the past decade, Lens, which operates no longer as an investment
manager, but rather as a specialist in investor activism, has succeeded in
increasing the value of shareholders’ investment in companies that include
Scott Paper, American Express, Eastman Kodak and Pioneer Group. # # #
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