WALLACE COMPUTER SERVICES INC
DEFA14A, 1996-10-07
MANIFOLD BUSINESS FORMS
Previous: UNITRODE CORP, 4, 1996-10-07
Next: WALLACE COMPUTER SERVICES INC, DEFC14A, 1996-10-07



<PAGE>
                                  SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (RULE 14A-101)
                    INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
 
          Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                              Exchange Act of 1934
 
    Filed by the Registrant /X/
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /
 
    Check the appropriate box:
    / /  Preliminary Proxy Statement
    / /  Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule
         14a-6(e)(2))
    / /  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    /X/  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Rule 14a-11(c) or Rule 14a-12
 
                               WALLACE COMPUTER SERVICES, INC.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
 
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
 
/ /  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-6(i)(2) or
     Item 22(a)(2) of Schedule 14A.
/ /  $500 per each party to the controversy pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
     14a-6(i)(3).
/ /  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.
     (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which the
        filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (5) Total fee paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
/X/  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     (1) Amount Previously Paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (3) Filing Party:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     (4) Date Filed:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<PAGE>


October 3, 1996


To The Members of the Council of Institutional Investors

I would like to thank the Council of Institutional Investors for its invitation
to present our views on various issues relating to the maximization of long-term
shareholder value.

Regrettably, I am unable to address Council members in person because of the
pending litigation initiated by Mr. Guy P. Wyser-Pratte, the takeover stock
speculator who has launched a proxy fight to gain seats on the Wallace Board of
Directors so he can attempt to sell the company.  However, because the Council
and other bodies, such as Institutional Shareholder Services, play an important
role as forums for discussion and action in corporate governance matters, I want
to convey some of the views of our Board of Directors to you in writing.  Again,
due to Mr. Wyser-Pratte's lawsuit, we are limited in what we are able to say at
this time.

THE ISSUE AT HAND

In its invitation, the Council encouraged Wallace to comment on several
corporate governance issues. The issue upon which we feel that we can comment
most directly is whether there are instances where a shareholder rights plan,
commonly referred to as a poison pill, can properly be employed to prevent a
company from being acquired at a price higher than its current market value.

From 1961, when the company first went public, through 1992, Wallace compiled
an outstanding record of performance:  Thirty-one consecutive years of sales
growth and earnings gains in 30 out of 31 years. Beginning in fiscal 1993, the
Wallace Board of Directors approved management's plan to increase shareholder
value, as measured by share price, earnings per share and dividends per share,
by launching a two-pronged strategy of investing heavily in information
technology and emphasizing customer service and added-value.

<PAGE>

We have continued the successful execution of this plan through the current
fiscal year, despite the distractions caused by an unsolicited tender offer from
Moore Corporation Limited and subsequent litigation, increasing sales by 47
percent and earnings per share by 61 percent over the past two fiscal years.

Moore's hostile offer commenced on July 30, 1995 when a letter was slipped under
my door late at night and ended on August 6, 1996, when Moore said it was
abandoning its attempts to acquire the company. The background:

Moore initially informed Wallace that it intended to launch an unsolicited
tender offer at $28 per share (adjusted to reflect the two-for-one stock split
declared earlier this year).  It also commenced litigation to, among other
things, enjoin Wallace from taking action to implement and enforce certain
takeover defenses, including, but not limited to, the redemption of the
company's preferred stock purchase rights.  Moore later amended its tender offer
to increase the cash price offered to an adjusted $30 per share.

On October 17, 1995, the Wallace Board unanimously concluded that the Moore
offer was inadequate and not in the best interest of the company and its
stockholders and that, in light of the company's FUTURE PROSPECTS, the interests
of stockholders would be best served by Wallace remaining an independent entity.
That conclusion was reached by a Board that included six directors (out of a
total of eight) who, even by Mr. Wyser-Pratte's own publicly stated definition,
were "independent" directors.

Ultimately, the courts, shareholder advisory services and most importantly, our
long-term shareholders, supported the Board's determination that Moore's hostile
buyout offer was inadequate in light of the company's future prospects.

On December 4, 1995, following three days of hearings and consideration of
extensive briefs, the United States District Court for the District of Delaware
issued its opinion in the litigation between Moore and Wallace relating to,
among other things, our shareholder rights plan.  The federal court held that
"...Moore's tender offer posed a THREAT to Wallace that shareholders, because
they are uninformed, will cash out before realizing the fruits of the
substantial technological innovations achieved by Wallace."  (emphasis added)
The court further concluded that shareholders, "at the time of Moore's offer,
were unable to appreciate the upward trend in Wallace's earnings." Finally, the
court further found that


                                        2
<PAGE>


the Wallace directors reasonably concluded that the Moore offer was a "low ball"
offer; and that the retention of the shareholder rights plan could "HARDLY BE
DEEMED UNREASONABLE." (emphasis added)

The next day, on December 5, Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc. (ISS), a
service to which many of your members subscribe, published its recommendation to
its clients.  In its recommendation that its clients reject ALL of Moore's
proposals and support the Wallace slate of directors, ISS said, among other
things, "In light of [Wallace's] stellar financial performance and its clearly
defined long-term strategic plan, we believe there is sufficient evidence
supporting management's decision to reject Moore's $60 [pre-split] per share
offer as inadequate and not in the best interests of shareholders."

In commenting on Wallace's corporate governance process, ISS said, "The current
management has proven to be innovative and successful in implementing the
company's strategic plan.  Moreover, because there is no evidence of
incompetence or self-dealing on the part of management, we believe that
shareholders' interests would be best served by allowing the remaining Wallace
directors to continue to represent shareholders' LONG-TERM interests." (emphasis
added.)

At the annual meeting of shareholders on December 8, the three Moore nominees
were elected by a vote of approximately 56 percent of the outstanding shares.
Putting this figure in additional context, it should be noted that more than 45
percent of our stock at that time was owned by takeover stock speculators whose
primary interest was short term profit, not institutional investors interested
in long term growth. Support for Moore was low among institutional investors and
individual shareholders. On December 12, Moore announced that 62.9 percent of
the outstanding stock had been tendered, and on December 20, Moore announced
that it was permitting its tender offer to expire.

The "upward trend in Wallace's earnings," to use the language of the court,
continued throughout fiscal 1996. On September 4, 1996 we reported record sales
and earnings for the fiscal year ended July 31, 1996. Results exceeded analysts
expectations as well as our own forecasts.  Earnings before takeover expenses
rose 43.3 percent to $79.2 million, on a 21 percent increase in sales to $862.3
million.  In view of the company's strong performance, the directors voted to
increase the annual dividend payment to 56 cents per share, an increase of 30
percent over the 43 cents per share previously paid.  This increase marked the
25th consecutive year in which the dividend has been raised.


                                        3
<PAGE>


The three board members nominated by Moore have been independent, contributing
members of the board. They have acted with unanimity with the other Wallace
directors in responding to the groundless claims made by Mr. Wyser-Pratte.  On
September 5, 1996, our Board of Directors sent the following letter to Mr.
Wyser-Pratte:

"This letter relates to your purported notice of nomination of directors and
your preliminary proxy statement which contains certain proposals which you
evidently intend to present to the Wallace shareholders at the 1996 annual
meeting.

"The Board of Directors of Wallace has met and carefully reviewed your purported
notice and annual meeting proposals. After considering the merits of your
actions, the Board has unanimously concluded that neither the election of your
purported nominees nor the adoption of your proposals would be in the best
interests of Wallace or the shareholders , and, accordingly, the Wallace board
will unanimously recommend that the shareholders vote for the Wallace Board's
director nominees and vote against your proposals.

"We are aware that, in connection with your purported notice of nominations, you
attempted to contact the three Wallace directors who were nominated by Moore
Corporation Limited at last year's annual meeting. Your phone calls to them as
well as your preliminary proxy statement suggests that you believe that these
three directors are predisposed to supporting your attempted proxy contest. You
should be under no illusion that you or your purported director nominees have
three allies on the Wallace board. We want to emphasize that we are unanimous in
opposing your actions."

CONCLUSION

The central point in the Wallace/Moore litigation was whether it was appropriate
for the Wallace board to use the shareholder rights plan to resist a takeover
attempt determined by the Board in good faith to be inadequate and against the
best interests of the shareholders. The court concluded that it was:  that the
Wallace board was in possession of information that shareholders did not and
could not have at that moment with respect to the likely future positive results
from the successful future execution of its business plan.

ISS also affirmed the role of Wallace's directors to act on behalf of all
shareholders' long-term interests, which may diverge on occasion from the short-
term oriented actions espoused by  certain shareholders for their own gain.


                                        4
<PAGE>


Based on our experience, I have to conclude that one can not categorically
reject all use of shareholders rights plans as inappropriate;  situations such
as ours will exist from time-to-time, where an offer at a premium to the current
trading price is not in the best interest of shareholders in light of the
company's future prospects.  In fact,  I would assert that our shareholder
rights plan worked exactly as intended -- not as a means of entrenching
management, as Mr. Wyser-Pratte may believe, but as a good faith effort by an
independent board of directors to deal impartially with the legitimate issues
relating to long-term shareholder value. In our opinion this is the reason those
types of plans are called "shareholder rights" plans.

In these cases, it is the responsibility of the board to articulate what are the
factors that led it to conclude that the company's future prospects warrant the
use of the rights plan and cause it to reject the offer, and then to produce the
financial results that it believes should be achieved. In light of this, it is
clear to us that our Board acted responsibly and correctly.

Yours sincerely,




Robert J. Cronin
President and Chief Executive Officer








Federal securities law requires us to put in the following paragraph:
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The participants in the solicitation of proxies by Wallace Computer Services,
Inc. (the "Company") in connection with the 1996 annual meeting may include the
following directors of the Company: Robert J. Cronin, Theodore Dimitriou,
Richard F. Doyle, Curtis A. Hessler, Albert W. Isenman III, William N. Lane III,
William E. Olsen, John C. Pope, and Robert P. Rittereiser.  Employee
participants may include Bruce D'Angelo, Thomas G. Brooker, Michael O. Duffield,
Michael J. Halloran, Donald J. Hoffmann, Michael T. Leatherman, Michael M.
Mulcahy, Wayne E. Richter, Bradley P. Samson and Teresa A. Sorrentino.  All of
the above persons are deemed to own beneficially less than 2% of the outstanding
shares of Common Stock of the Company in the aggregate.  For a description of
certain interests of the foregoing individuals in the solicitation, please see
the Company's Proxy Statement dated November 6, 1995 for the Company's 1995
Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission