Serving Two Masters? Poberezny Up For Election, May 20th, for
Garmin Director
Both Garmin and EAA President Tom
Poberezny have confirmed reports of the EAA leader's nomination for
a Director's slot on the board of Garmin Ltd. Rumors surfaced
earlier this week as a result of inquiries to ANN from members of
the avionics and EAA community who were concerned about the
potential for a conflict of interest.
Garmin told ANN, Tuesday, that "Tom Poberezny is a candidate for
election as a director at our May 20 shareholder's meeting."
Poberezny's election would make him part of an elite 6 person Board
that guides the consumer electronics and avionics superpower --
which reportedly has made other members of the avionics community
somewhat nervous.
A proxy statement from the Cayman Islands' based electronics
company describes the upcoming May meeting as a, "special
court-ordered meeting (the 'Special Meeting') of the shareholders
of Garmin Ltd., a Cayman Islands company ('Garmin Cayman'), will be
held at 9:00 a.m., local time, on May 20, 2010 at the Ritz Charles,
located at 9000 West 137th Street, Overland Park, Kansas, 66221,
USA. Following the Special Meeting, the Annual General Meeting (the
'Annual Meeting') of the shareholders of Garmin Cayman will be held
on the same date and at the same location at 9:30 a.m. local time,
or as soon thereafter as the Special Meeting concludes.
The highpoint of the Special
Meeting will be to "consider and vote upon a proposal for a
redomestication (the 'Redomestication') that would change the place
of incorporation of the ultimate parent holding company of the
Garmin group from the Cayman Islands to Switzerland through a
scheme of arrangement (the 'Scheme of Arrangement') filed with the
Grand Court of the Cayman Islands."
That done, two Director slots are up for election... one a
re-election (Gene M. Betts, who has been a director of Garmin since
March 2001) and the other, Poberezny's. Poberezny is being
nominated as a Class I director to hold office for a three-year
term expiring at the annual general meeting in 2013. Garmin's Proxy
Statement notes that, "The Board of Directors has concluded that
Mr. Poberezny should be nominated to serve as a director of Garmin
Cayman because:
(1) his significant experience and relationships in the field of
general aviation provide the Board of Directors and Garmin Cayman
with valuable experience and contacts in one of Garmin Cayman's
principal business segments;
(2) his 20 years of experience as President of the EAA, an
organization with approximately 160,000 members and 200 employees,
has provided him with significant hands-on experience as a chief
executive;
(3) he meets the requirements to be an independent director as
defined in the listing standards for the NASDAQ Global Select
Market; and
(4) he satisfies the general criteria described below under
'Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee.'"

Poberezny spoke to ANN late Thursday during a scheduled meeting
of approximately a dozen "industry leaders" including Aspen's John
Uczekaj and Honeywell's Rob Wilson. Poberezny assured ANN that
he had discussed the Garmin position with a number of industry
players and noted that "concerns varied" among those he spoke to...
but that he had made it clear that he would recuse himself form any
EAA discussion-making that involved Garmin. Poberezny told us that
most of the concerns differed between "those who know me and those
who do not," but be believed that he has put most concerns at rest.
He reported that Garmin came to him late last year with the offer
and that he accepted their invitation and looked forward to the
meeting on May 20th.
Tom claims that most of those he spoke to, "...know me and
believe me to be fair," and that he expected that EAA and he would
'ultimately benefit' from the Garmin affiliation. Poberezny
spoke of "Broadening my perspective... the only organization I have
real experience with (at this level) is with EAA," while adding
that the experience and networking involved in this position were
sure to offer him and EAA some "unique opportunities." Still,
Poberezny admits that, "boundaries will need to be monitored" and
that his staff will be briefed on maintaining the proper "distance"
between EAA interests and Garmin's. Poberezny added that his
upcoming effort to find and place a successor has had no bearing on
the decision to take the Board slot at Garmin.
ANN's research and consultation with a leading business expert
suggests that Tom's efforts will be well-rewarded. As we understand
it, upon election, Tom will receive $59,000 plus T&E
expenses in cash. He will also receive options equal to four times
the base retainer ($50,000) divided by the FMV (Fair Market Value)
of the stock. Based on current conditions, he would receive
options on 5,329 shares of Garmin stock (app.
$200,000/$37.53 at today's stock price).

This compensation occurs annually. The options are reportedly
the 'wild card' since the stock has to appreciate for the option to
be worth anything (and in this economy, please note that
this can be quite the crap shoot...--E-I-C). For instance; if
the stock were to double, then Poberezny could receive $200,000 of
gain for an annual compensation of $259,000. Mind you, if the stock
'tanks' then his options are worthless, and his compensation for
being a Director is simply the cash portion of $59,000.
Industry reaction to the Garmin gig seems a bit more mixed than
Poberezny has reported... with a number of avionics interests
cautiously admitting that they were "...nervous about possible
favoritism, especially in regards to AirVenture/Oshkosh."
One avionics industry personality, speaking to ANN on
background, seemed as worried about the "appearance of a
conflict of interest as the actual possibility of a conflict.
Garmin has become the 600 pound gorilla out here and we're not sure
what they think they can gain with putting Poberezny on the
board. Obviously, we hope this does not result in an unfair
advantage, but Garmin doesn't do anything that doesn't add to
their stature. They're a big company used to getting what they
pay for."

The perception issue is a touchy one, and the fact that former
AOPA President Phil Boyer has confirmed that AOPA's Board structure
would not have allowed their leadership to join Garmin's board only
adds to the confusion about Poberezny's decision to join Garmin
while still such a pivotal part of the EAA Leadership. Boyer
has some experience with this issue,
as he joined the Board of Aspen
Avionics after he officially retired from AOPA
and left the responsibilities for leading that organization to his
successor.
ANN is awaiting additional industry reaction and will report
more as the details are developed.