Calls on Sleep Number to Collaborate with its
Largest Shareholder to Add New Directors to the Board, Appoint an
Executive Chairman and Ensure a Wholly Independent CEO Search
Process to Identify the Company’s Next Leader
Encourages Shareholders to Make Their Concerns
with Sleep Number’s Unacceptable Performance and Self-Preservation
Tactics Known by Communicating Them to the Company
Intends to Nominate Exceptionally Qualified
Directors Should the Board Remain Unwilling to Work with Stadium on
Changes Necessary to Unlock the Tremendous Value Trapped in Sleep
Number’s Shares
Stadium Capital Management, LLC today sent the below letter to
shareholders of Sleep Number Corporation (NASDAQ: SNBR).
***
November 25, 2024
Fellow Sleep Number Shareholders:
Stadium Capital Management, LLC (together with certain of its
affiliates, “Stadium Capital” or “we”) is the largest shareholder
of Sleep Number Corporation (“Sleep Number” or the “Company”),
owning approximately 11.7% of the Company’s outstanding shares. We
hold our position because we remain convinced that there is
enormous upside in the value of the Company if certain fundamental
changes occur.
Our successful and nearly three-decade investment strategy is
typically based on close, friendly collaboration with our
concentrated portfolio of companies, anchored in deep research and
a long-term investment horizon. We strongly prefer to keep
engagement private and are nothing if not patient, but after a
decade of diligent work on Sleep Number and over 15 meetings with
the Company’s management and Board of Directors (the “Board”), our
frustration with current leadership, who has overseen massive
shareholder value destruction, reached a tipping point last year.
As a result, we were compelled to take the rare step of publicly
expressing our concerns regarding Sleep Number’s leadership and
governance last year.1 This ultimately led to the appointment of
two highly qualified new directors to the Board pursuant to a
Cooperation Agreement between Stadium Capital and the Company (the
“Cooperation Agreement”).
On October 30, 2024, a mere four days before our one-year
Cooperation Agreement expired, the Board announced several
management and governance changes, including the retirement of the
CEO, President and Chair of the Board, Shelly Ibach, and a gradual
de-classification and shrinking of the Board. While on the surface
these changes represent forward progress, it is clear to us that
they are the bare minimum, insufficient and wholly inadequate given
the gravity and urgency of the situation Sleep Number finds itself
in today – thanks to this Board. In our view, these changes reflect
the current Board’s efforts to cling to the status quo and maintain
control.
Now, Sleep Number’s shareholders are being asked to entrust this
Board to hire the Company’s next CEO, which is, without any doubt,
the most critical decision facing the Company over the next decade.
Given that these are the same directors who have overseen massive
value destruction and failed to hold Ms. Ibach accountable for far
too long, shareholders cannot trust the Board as currently
constructed to get this decision right, a decision that will define
the future of Sleep Number.
Before deciding to make our concerns public, we worked
tirelessly and in good faith to persuade the Board to collaborate
privately with us to improve its flawed CEO search process. As with
most of our suggestions, the Board summarily rejected our
proposals. While shareholders cannot trust the current Board to
hire Sleep Number’s next CEO, we also believe that shareholders
cannot trust this Board, which is still populated with many
long-tenured directors who presided over a truly colossal
destruction of shareholder value, to oversee the crucial capital
allocation decisions facing the Company. A meaningfully
reconstituted Board will be better positioned to identify a great
CEO, create the best incentives for that CEO and instill long
overdue accountability into Sleep Number’s corporate culture, all
of which would help unlock the tremendous value that exists within
this Company. It is well past time to put an end to this relentless
and extraordinary value destruction, and fix Sleep Number’s
leadership and governance.
We have spoken to many Sleep Number shareholders following the
filing of our Schedule 13D on November 4, 2024 and the feedback we
received was unanimous – more and urgent
change is desperately needed. We are urging our
fellow shareholders to express their views directly to the Board,
whether publicly or privately, so the Board can grasp just how
widespread shareholder dissatisfaction remains. For those
shareholders with whom we have not already spoken, please know that
our line is open and we welcome the opportunity to hear your
thoughts as well.
Significant Value Destruction Underscores
the Urgent Need for Shareholder-Driven Change
The immense shareholder value destruction that has occurred at
Sleep Number makes blatantly obvious the need for real change at
the Company. Sleep Number has been a serial underperformer, both in
absolute and relative terms, over any relevant measurable period
during Ms. Ibach’s tenure. The table below includes total
shareholder returns for various time periods compared to Sleep
Number’s closest peer, Tempur Sealy International, Inc. (“Tempur
Sealy”). The performance disconnect between two direct competitors
is staggering and indisputable.2
Total Return Data (as of
11/22/2024)
Ibach
1-year
3-year
5-year
10-year
Tenure
Sleep Number Corporation
23%
-85%
-74%
-52%
-52%
Tempur Sealy International, Inc.
40%
29%
172%
311%
430%
Relative Underperformance
-17%
-114%
-246%
-364%
-482%
This comparison to Sleep Number’s closest peer is starkly
informative because Tempur Sealy went through a shareholder-driven
leadership change in 2015. Consider the performance results between
Tempur Sealy and Sleep Number before and after this change:3
Total Return Data
Pre-Change
Post-Change
Sleep Number Corporation.
24%
-61%
Tempur Sealy International, Inc.
29%
311%
Relative Underperformance
-5%
-372%
During Ms. Ibach’s tenure, the Board has unequivocally failed in
its two primary responsibilities: (i) ensuring the Company hires,
incentivizes and holds accountable the right CEO, and (ii)
allocating capital.4 It is time for real change.
We believe that corporate governance improvements and
shareholder-driven reform can make a big difference.
Recent Governance Changes are
Insufficient
It is clear to us (and the many shareholders we have spoken
with) that the recent changes announced by the Company are
insufficient. Sleep Number is on a path to de-classify the Board,
separate the Chair and CEO roles and slowly shrink the Board.
Normally, we would applaud these moves, as it would signal that a
board has committed to better governance by making itself more
independent from management and more accountable to
shareholders.
In this case, however, these corporate governance “improvements”
should be viewed as wholly inadequate self-preservation measures.
The below provides some relevant context:
What the Board Says:5
The Reality:
“These changes reflect the Board’s ongoing
commitment to progressive and effective corporate governance and
accountability to shareholders.”
After almost a year of inaction, Sleep
Number waited until two business days before the expiration of the
Cooperation Agreement to announce these changes. We have suggested
that the Board implement these standard, common sense governance
practices for over a year, and many of these changes should have
been implemented at the Company’s 2024 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders.
The Company advised us that this year’s
class of directors will yet again be nominated for three-year
terms, meaning that the declassification
process will not actually begin until 2026.
“While we value the contributions of each
of our talented directors, we believe that strategically reducing
the size of the Board at the appropriate time will enhance our
governance.”
The Board has not committed to an
accelerated departure date for Stephen Gulis or Brenda Lauderback.
The Board’s claim that time is needed to transition committee chair
roles is an absurd excuse. These over-tenured, under-performing
directors who have served on the Board since 2005 and 2004,
respectively, should never have been nominated for re-election in
2024 in the first place.
Sleep Number’s directors are cumulatively
paid almost 50% more than those of Tempur Sealy despite the Company
having 3% the market capitalization and revenue that is 40% lower.
On top of this, Sleep Number’s former Chairman, who departed the
Board in May 2023, continued to receive director fees through the
first three quarters of 2024.6
In our view, this extended transition has
not only been costly to shareholders, but it is also insulting to
all Sleep Number employees who have suffered pay cuts and/or lost
their jobs as part of urgent cost-cutting initiatives. The
long-tenured directors on the Board – the people as responsible for
this harm as anyone – have not been held accountable.
“The Board has unanimously determined its
intent to appoint Michael Harrison as independent Chair following
the 2025 Annual Meeting.”
The Board’s choice of a new Chair is
totally unacceptable and suggests that, collectively, the current
directors do not understand the importance of moving on from the
disastrous Ibach era. Sleep Number has several more highly
qualified, shorter-tenured directors with fewer ties to the failed
Ibach era who are clearly more appropriate for the role.
The Current CEO Search Process is
Flawed
We have spoken with a large and diverse group of market and
industry participants to gather perspectives regarding Sleep Number
and its CEO search. The overwhelming consensus is that, to be
successful, a search process must be fully and unequivocally
independent from the outgoing CEO.
In recent conversations with the Board, we learned several
deeply concerning facts. First, Ms. Ibach was involved in drafting
the specifications for her successor and will interview the
candidates. Second, the executive search team leading the process
has close ties to the Ibach era, having led past searches for
directors and senior leadership roles. Finally, and perhaps most
disturbingly, social media activity indicates that the executive
search partner leading this search appears to have a close
relationship with Ms. Ibach. Given these dynamics, it is impossible
to believe this process is truly independent of Ms. Ibach.
We would note that the current process might indeed be
appropriate in a situation where a successful CEO is retiring. At
Sleep Number, however, the Board is replacing a CEO whose failed
leadership of the Company resulted in significant underperformance
and massive value destruction during her lengthy tenure. Successful
succession planning in this case requires an acknowledgement of
past failings and a clean break from the past. While this is
completely obvious to all market participants with whom we engaged,
somehow, the Board does not seem to understand this.
This Board Cannot be Trusted to Hire Sleep
Number’s Next CEO
How big a failure was the Ibach era? Operationally, from 2012 to
2024, Sleep Number’s unit market share did not increase despite
increasing the store count by almost 60%, increasing the
advertising budget by more than 50% and deploying hundreds of
millions of dollars into R&D and technology acquisition.
Margins consistently fell short of expectations. The Company began
the Ibach era with over $175 million in excess cash, generated over
$800 million in free cash flow and paid zero dividends during Ms.
Ibach’s tenure.7 Sleep Number’s market capitalization is currently
less than $300 million and its stock is down an astonishing 91%
from its peak.8
The Chair of the Management Development and Compensation
Committee (Ms. Lauderback) – the committee chartered with
succession planning and thus leading the CEO search – has been on
the Board for over 20 years. The incoming Board Chair (Mr.
Harrison), who also sits on the search committee, has been on the
Board for the entirety of, and thus enabled, Ms. Ibach’s nearly
13-year tenure as CEO. One other search committee member (Deborah
Kilpatrick) has been on the Board for over six years and regularly
lavishes public praise on Ms. Ibach. Another director up for
re-election this year (Barbara Matas) has stridently expressed her
great admiration for Ms. Ibach, insisting on a call this past
spring to us that Ms. Ibach “is going to be our CEO” and that
shareholders had better accept that. In the face of overwhelming
and completely damning evidence, the Board simply refuses to see
the obvious – Sleep Number urgently needs a clean break from the
failed Ibach era.
On November 12, 2024, we made a proposal to the Company that was
intended to be a non-disruptive and collaborative solution to the
current situation.9 We offered to support the Board at the
Company’s upcoming annual meeting if the Board committed to a truly
independent CEO search process that excluded Ms. Ibach and either
changed the search committee structure or formally involved a
Stadium Capital principal in the process. The Board rejected this
non-escalatory, constructive proposal on the grounds that changing
the committee purportedly would disrupt the ongoing process. Given
Sleep Number’s poor governance and the fact that, as the Company’s
largest shareholder, we had expressed that the Board does not have
our support absent these kinds of changes, we thought this proposal
would improve the process, expand the pool of interested and
qualified candidates, and potentially satisfy other shareholders
who were apparently considering raising their own concerns
publicly. The Board’s grave miscalculation in rejecting our recent
proposal confirmed for us that shareholders, the true owners of the
Company, need more and substantive change, now.
THE path forward
Sleep Number should collaborate with its
largest shareholder to refresh the Board and ensure the CEO search
process is completely independent.
We are already aware of at least two highly qualified potential
CEO candidates who were reluctant to get involved because of Sleep
Number’s ineffective and dysfunctional Board. That is extremely
concerning to us, as it should be to all owners. We are calling on
the Board to collaborate with us immediately to refresh the Board
and improve the CEO search process. Time is of the essence. Our
suggested path forward is as follows:
- Announce the immediate retirement of Mr. Gulis and Ms.
Lauderback from the Board.
- Replace incoming Chairman Harrison and Ms. Matas with a Stadium
Capital principal and another highly qualified independent
director.
- Reconstitute the CEO search committee by fully excluding Ms.
Ibach from the process, shifting the composition towards
shorter-tenured directors with public company CEO experience and
including a Stadium Capital principal.
- Appoint an Executive Chairman to help run the Company during
Ms. Ibach’s transition period. If one of the current qualified and
relatively short-tenured Sleep Number directors is willing to fill
this role, they would have our support. If there is no internal
candidate, we can provide a ready, willing and highly capable
external candidate.
It is nonsensical for shareholders and offensive to Sleep
Number’s employees for the Board to continue wasting shareholder
money to pay advisors to “defend” the Board against an outcome that
owners prefer during this critical period of cost-cutting. To
reiterate, if our fellow shareholders agree with our views, we
encourage you to express that to the Board in short order. If the
Board listens to its business owners’ views, we see a quick path to
creating an excellent Board that will be capable of hiring an
outstanding CEO for Sleep Number and all its stakeholders.
Should our requests and concerns continue to fall on deaf ears,
we will be compelled to nominate several exceptionally qualified
directors for election at Sleep Number’s 2025 Annual Meeting of
Shareholders. We believe that a large portion of the Company’s
shareholders would support our efforts. While a protracted public
battle may potentially delay the CEO transition, we are confident
that the eventual result of our successful campaign would be a high
integrity search process, the hiring of the best possible CEO and
an improved Board. With these elements in place at Sleep Number, we
believe shareholders will be positioned to realize enormous upside
over the next several years, and all stakeholders will benefit from
a healthier culture based on accountability. We know what is
possible at Sleep Number, which is why we are committed to taking
the necessary actions for the Company to make good on its immense
potential.
Sincerely,
The Investment Committee of Stadium Capital Management LLC
***
1
https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230913488935/en/Stadium-Capital-Management-Issues-Letter-to-Sleep-Number%E2%80%99s-Board-of-Directors-Regarding-the-Urgent-Need-for-Shareholder-Driven-Change
2 Source of share price performance data used throughout is Capital
IQ. 3The pre-change period is from June 1, 2012 (the start of Ms.
Ibach’s tenure) to February 16, 2015, the day H Partners Management
initiated a campaign that led to shareholder-driven board and CEO
change at Tempur Sealy. The post-change period is from February 16,
2015 to November 22, 2024. 4 Many of these mistakes are highlighted
in our 2023 letter to the Board. 5
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/827187/000082718724000087/a2024-q3ex991skyway.htm
6 Company Securities and Exchange Commission filings. 7 Company
Securities and Exchange Commission filings. 8 As of November 22,
2024. 9 Feel free to reach out to us if you would like a copy of
this letter.
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241125024731/en/
Longacre Square Partners Greg Marose / Charlotte Kiaie,
646-386-0091 gmarose@longacresquare.com /
ckiaie@longacresquare.com
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