UNITED STATES
SECURITIES & EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
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Lubys, Inc.
(Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
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On January 2, 2008, Lubys, Inc. issued the following press release:
Contact: Rick Black, 713-329-6808 | ||
Matthew Sherman / Jeremy Jacobs Joele Frank, Wilkinson Brimmer Katcher 212-355-4449 | ||
Dan Burch / Charlie Koons MacKenzie Partners, Inc. 212-929-5500 |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
LUBYS URGES SHAREHOLDERS TO REJECT THE RAMIUS NOMINEES
The Ramius Nominees Have A Special Financial Arrangement With Ramius And Their
Nominees Have No Relevant Experience Ramius Short-Term Financial Scheme Is Not
In The Best Interest of All Lubys Shareholders
LUBYS ISSUES OPEN LETTER TO SHAREHOLDERS
HOUSTON, TX, January 2, 2008 Lubys, Inc. (NYSE: LUB) today announced that on December 31, 2007, the Company mailed to all shareholders the following letter from Gasper Mir, III, Chairman of the Board of Directors, and Christopher J. Pappas, President and Chief Executive Officer, in connection with Lubys January 15, 2008 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.
LUBYS ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
IS RAPIDLY APPROACHING YOUR VOTE IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT
| If you already voted Lubys WHITE proxy card, no further action is required |
| If you have not yet voted, please vote the enclosed WHITE proxy card today |
| If you voted a gold proxy card, there is still time to change your vote by voting the WHITE proxy card today |
If you have any questions, call Mackenzie Partners, Inc. toll-free: (800) 322-2885 or
call Lubys Investor Relations Department: (713) 329-6880
December 31, 2007
Dear Shareholder:
Lubys January 15, 2008 Annual Meeting of Shareholders is rapidly approaching. If you have not yet voted, we strongly recommend you vote Lubys WHITE proxy card today FOR your Boards experienced directors Dr. Judith B. Craven, Arthur R. Emerson, Frank Markantonis and Gasper Mir, III. We urge you to protect your investment in Lubys by throwing away any gold proxy card you may have received from dissident shareholder and New York City-based hedge fund, Ramius Capital.
WE BELIEVE THE RAMIUS NOMINEES ARE CONFLICTED AND
INCENTIVIZED ONLY TO ACT IN THE INTERESTS OF RAMIUS
AND NOT ALL LUBYS SHAREHOLDERS
The Ramius nominees each have special financial arrangements with Ramius which we believe compromises their independence and commitment to serving the interests of the Company and all Lubys shareholders.
Each of the Ramius nominees signed an agreement with Ramius under which they have received an upfront payment from Ramius and stand to be paid even more money only after Ramius sells all of its Lubys stock.
We believe this compensation arrangement incentivizes the Ramius nominees to pursue a short-term agenda at the expense of Lubys restored capital structure and strategic growth plan.
THE RAMIUS NOMINEES LACK THE NECESSARY SKILLS AND EXPERIENCE
REQUIRED TO SERVE ON YOUR BOARD OF DIRECTORS
While Ramius touts the restaurant industry experience of its nominees, we believe that this experience is neither distinguished nor relevant to Lubys casual dining business model. Fast food and failing concepts are not what your Board needs to help lead Lubys through its next growth phase or to create shareholder value.
Consider the following facts about the Ramius nominees:
| Brion Grube had short stints at Mexican fast-food chain Baja Fresh (CEO for only 19 months) and at Café Express (CEO for only 17 months). At Baja Fresh, Grube presided over a failed expansion strategy, staggering operating losses and negative same-store sales comparables. As a result of Grubes failure to turn around Baja Fresh and restore profitable growth, Baja Fresh was ultimately sold in 2006 for only $31 million, nearly $250 million less than its original purchase price just five years before. At Café Express, a small chain with less than 20 locations, Grube failed to deliver on growth promises and presided over negative same-store sales comparables. |
| Matt Panneks limited restaurant executive experience includes his brief tenure (CEO for only 15 months) at the hamburger chain, Fuddruckers. Ramius fails to explain why Panneks role at Fuddruckers was so brief, and the circumstances surrounding his departure. |
| Stephen Farrar has worked primarily at Wendys, the fast food hamburger and drive-thru chain a business model built on franchising that has very little relevance to Lubys from-scratch cooking and casual dining offering. |
| Bill Fox is a recurring Ramius director for hire and has no restaurant industry experience. In just 18 months, Ramius has nominated Fox to four different public company Boards in disparate industries. Fox is currently a nominee for two Boards, including Lubys, and only one week ago, according to preliminary results, Fox was REJECTED as a Ramius nominee by the shareholders of Datascope Corporation, a publicly-traded medical device maker. Also, Ramius has failed to disclose that Fox was sued for federal securities fraud relating to his role as an executive officer at Revlon and its subsidiary, the Cosmetics Centers, a public company that ultimately filed for bankruptcy. |
Lubys shareholders, ask yourselves: Given the short tenure and lackluster record of the Ramius nominees and their lack of relevant experience, is this the new leadership that you want serving on your Board of Directors? Remember, only one of the Ramius nominees has any public Board experience, and he is a director for hire with no restaurant industry experience whatsoever.
PROTECT YOUR INVESTMENT DO NOT ELECT THE RAMIUS NOMINEES
DOING SO WOULD ENABLE RAMIUS TO PURSUE ITS SHORT-TERM,
SELF-SERVING FINANCIAL RELEVERAGING SCHEME
AT THE EXPENSE OF ALL SHAREHOLDERS
In an effort to seek your vote and advance its short-term agenda, Ramius is attempting to masquerade as a corporate governance and restaurant industry expert. The truth is, based on its track record, Ramius is neither. Ramius is nothing more than a short-term focused hedge fund that offers no business plan for Lubys, and is not concerned with driving sustainable and profitable growth for the benefit of all shareholders.
Ramius targets public companies in hostile proxy fights to advance its own self-serving interests. Ramius wants Lubys to pursue a sale and leaseback of the Companys owned real estate in order to make a short-term profit at the expense of long-term value creation for all shareholders. Despite its best efforts to distance itself from this notion, Ramius central scheme from the outset of its campaign at Lubys has not changed. We urge you to not be misled by Ramius.
Lubys Board, together with the assistance of nationally recognized and independent financial advisors, carefully evaluated the Companys capital structure and analyzed sale and leaseback strategies and unanimously concluded that a sale-leaseback plan is not in the best interests of the Company and all Lubys shareholders:
| By owning rather than leasing our properties, Lubys generates better operating margins and greater cash flow returns, which better position the Company for growth. |
| Ramius financial releveraging scheme makes NO financial sense for Lubys Since 2001, Lubys Board and management team have successfully eliminated $120 million of debt, restored profitability, and positioned the Company for sustainable and profitable growth. Now, in todays uncertain financial markets, Ramius wants to reverse course and pursue an ill-conceived sale-leaseback scheme which would saddle the Company with millions of dollars in lease obligations. Lubys wants to use its cash flow to grow the Company, not to pay rent. |
| and it makes NO business sense for Lubys either. Ramius agenda is wholly inconsistent with Lubys strategic growth plan of building 45 to 50 new restaurants over the next five years; investing in Lubys existing restaurants through upgrading and remodeling; and growing the Companys culinary contract business to provide food service at healthcare facilities. |
Lubys Board and management team stand firmly behind the Companys solid capital structure and believe that our strategic growth plan is the best way to create value for all shareholders.
LUBYS DIRECTORS ARE EXPERIENCED, INDEPENDENT AND
COMMITTED TO ACTING ON BEHALF OF ALL SHAREHOLDERS
Lubys Board consists of a majority of independent directors who are diverse and open-minded business and community leaders. Lubys directors possess valuable and unique skills in restaurant operations; health and food safety; corporate leadership; human resources; accounting; risk management; corporate finance; legal compliance; bilingual marketing and customer strategy all areas that are critical to the continued success of an organization like Lubys, which employs over 8,000 people and serves millions of customers each month.
Each of Lubys four directors standing for re-election has relevant and critical expertise:
| Dr. Judith Craven (Vice Chairman): Extensive health and food safety experience as the head of the Health Department in Houston and a current member of the Board of Directors of Sysco Foods, the global leader in selling, marketing and distributing food products to restaurants, hotels, hospitals and schools. Public health and safety are essential in the restaurant business as well as in the healthcare facilities which Lubys serves through its growing culinary services business. Dr. Craven is also an experienced leader in the Boardroom. In addition to serving on the Board of Sysco, she currently serves on the Boards of Belo, Sun America Fund, and Valic. She has also served as a director at Compaq. |
| Arthur Emerson: Bilingual marketing and advertising experience for restaurants. Mr. Emerson led the introduction of Lubys marketing and advertising campaign to Hispanic customers with Spanish speaking commercials in 2004. He has also been influential in developing Lubys childrens programs marketing and advertising to families and female decision makers, and broadening Lubys customer demographic to include younger families. |
| Frank Markantonis: Extensive restaurant experience (30+ years) in law, risk management, human resources and real estate. At Lubys, Mr. Markantonis has been instrumental in implementing policies and procedures that directly led to multi-million dollar per year savings related to risk management, helped Lubys reduce its insurance costs and expand its coverage, and helped Lubys eliminate debt through the sale of underperforming properties. |
| Gasper Mir, III (Chairman): Public accounting expertise; independent leadership as Chairman of Board; and large organization executive experience. Mr. Mir has served on the Board of Hermann Memorial Healthcare (a multi-billion dollar hospital system in Texas) and has been a partner at KPMG (one of the worlds largest accounting firms) and a top official at the Houston Independent School District (one of the nations largest). Mr. Mir has experience with healthcare facilities that complements Lubys culinary services business. |
Your Board strongly believes that the oversight, experience and proven achievements of Dr. Craven, Mr. Emerson, Mr. Markantonis and Mr. Mir is what Lubys needs in its next phase of growth.
SUPPORT YOUR BOARD VOTE LUBYS WHITE PROXY CARD TODAY
IMPORTANT: Remember that only your latest dated proxy counts in a contested election such as this. For this reason, we strongly urge you to vote only Lubys WHITE proxy card and to throw away Ramius gold proxy card. This is the only way to ensure that your shares are voted FOR Lubys directors. If you have previously voted a gold card, even to withhold your vote from the Ramius nominees, please take the time today to vote your WHITE proxy card.
Lubys shareholders who have any questions or need assistance voting their WHITE proxy card should contact the Companys investor relations department at (713) 329-6808 or investors@lubys.com, or MacKenzie Partners, Inc. which is assisting the Company in this matter, toll-free at (800) 322-2885.
On behalf of your Board of Directors,
Sincerely,
Gasper Mir, III Chairman of the Board |
Christopher J. Pappas President and Chief Executive Officer |
About Lubys
Lubys operates 128 restaurants in Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, the Rio Grande Valley and other locations throughout Texas and other states. Lubys provides its customers with quality home-style food, value pricing, and outstanding customer service. For more information about Lubys, visit the Companys website at http://www.lubys.com.
Additional Information
In connection with the solicitation of proxies, Lubys has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) a definitive proxy statement on November 29, 2007 (the Proxy Statement). The Proxy Statement contains important information about Lubys and the 2008 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. Lubys shareholders are urged to read the Proxy Statement carefully.
On November 29, 2007, Lubys began the process of mailing the Proxy Statement, together with a WHITE proxy card. Shareholders may obtain additional free copies of the Proxy Statement and other documents filed with the SEC by Lubys through the website maintained by the SEC at www.sec.gov. The Proxy Statement and other relevant documents also may be obtained free of charge from Lubys by contacting Investor Relations in writing at Lubys, Inc., 13111 Northwest Freeway, Suite 600, Houston, Texas 77040; or by phone at 713-329-6808; or by email at investors@lubys.com. The Proxy Statement is also available on Lubys website at www.lubys.com/06aboutusFilings.asp. The contents of the websites referenced above are not deemed to be incorporated by reference into the Proxy Statement. In addition, copies of the Proxy Statement may be requested by contacting the Companys proxy solicitor, MacKenzie Partners, Inc., by phone toll-free at 1-800-322-2885.
Lubys and its directors and executive officers and other members of management and employees may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies in connection with the 2008 Annual Meeting of Shareholders. You can find information about Lubys directors and executive officers in the Proxy Statement.
Forward-Looking Statements
This document contains statements that are forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. All statements contained in this document, other than statements of historical fact, are forward-looking statements for purposes of these provisions, including any statements regarding plans for expansion of the Companys business, scheduled openings of new units, the implementation of the Companys strategic growth plan and expectations concerning unit sales and investor returns. Forward-looking statements by their nature involve substantial risks and uncertainties that could significantly affect expected results, and actual future results could differ materially from those described in such statements. Some of the factors that could cause actual future results to differ materially are described under the caption Risk Factors in the Companys annual reports on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, which may be obtained free of charge at the SECs website at www.sec.gov or from Lubys at www.lubys.com.
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