NewImageNuance, the company that makes some of the voice recognition technology behind Apple's Siri, has adopted a 'poison pill' measure to deter any possible takeover attempts. Activist investor Carl Icahn, who recently bought more than $1 billion worth of Apple stock, also owns 16% of Nuance.

Icahn is famous for putting pressure on companies that he invests in, and some believe he could press Apple to purchase Nuance.

He has been publicly calling for Apple to dramatically increase its share repurchase program since he invested in the company.

Shareholder rights plans -- often called a 'poison pill' -- are a defensive tactic used by corporations to ward off unwanted takeovers. In Nuance's case, the company will allow shareholders to purchase additional shares of stock, thus diluting the whole stock pool, if any one investor holds more than 20 percent of the company. Icahn currently holds 16 percent of Nuance.

Nuance Communications, Inc. today announced that its Board of Directors has adopted a stockholder rights plan. Under the Rights Plan, stockholders of record at the close of business on August 29, 2013 will receive one right for each share of Nuance common stock held on that date. Initially, these rights will not be exercisable and will trade with the shares of Nuance common stock. If the rights become exercisable, each right will entitle stockholders to buy one one-thousandth of a share of a new series of participating preferred stock at an exercise price of $87.00 per right. The Rights Plan expires on August 19, 2014.

The Rights Plan is intended to enable all Nuance stockholders to realize the long-term value of their investment in Nuance. It is also designed to reduce the likelihood that any person or group would gain control of Nuance through open market accumulation or other coercive takeover tactics without paying an appropriate control premium. The Rights Plan was not adopted in response to any current effort to acquire control of Nuance.

The rights will be exercisable only if a person or group acquires 20% or more of Nuance’s common stock in a transaction not approved by Nuance’s Board of Directors.

Top Rated Comments

Technarchy Avatar
161 months ago
Force collective share buyback through cooperation with other major shareholders. Once Apple starts buying back shares, it's non voting stock -- his percentage of voting weight therefore automatically increases. Considering how much cash reserve Apple has, shareholders could hypothetically push Apple to dump most of it on stock buyback. Icahn would win big profits-wise, and also increase his voting stake in the company significantly.

After that, Icahn has more money to buy more shares. Then Icahn could do what he always does -- put himself on the board, milk the company for a quick buck, then break down and sell the company in parts.

Sounds like a lovely human being...
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
darkplanets Avatar
161 months ago
He owns 1% of Apple. How could he put any effective pressure on the company?

Force collective share buyback through cooperation with other major shareholders. Once Apple starts buying back shares, it's non voting stock -- his percentage of voting weight therefore automatically increases. Considering how much cash reserve Apple has, shareholders could hypothetically push Apple to dump most of it on stock buyback. Icahn would win big profits-wise, and also increase his voting stake in the company significantly.

After that, Icahn has more money to buy more shares. Then Icahn could do what he always does -- put himself on the board, milk the company for a quick buck, then break down and sell the company in parts.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Braniff747SP Avatar
161 months ago
Sounds like a lovely human being...


He was instrumental in the demise of TWA, so he definitely isn't on my favorites list.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Makosuke Avatar
161 months ago
Guys like Icahn force the ownership to focus on the stockholders. In some cases he buys a majority share and the stockholders become HIM, but the other stockholders make out nicely.
The points you make about executive excess and the value of "corporate maggots" are valid, but it's worth noting that "what's best for the stockholders" is often a very short-term and narrow view, because stockholders are fickle and easily swayed by short-term fluctuations in stock price that have no real meaning in terms of actual corporate health or the value of the corporation for society as a whole.

Phrased differently, if you're a shareholder, you want to see your shares increase in value steadily and constantly, or see a steady stream of dividends. If there's a bump, you as a shareholder might, in your own short-term best interest, attempt to get the company to do something to increase its stock value. Viewed in the long term, however, that short-term gain might be disastrous, while the dip might be part of a large-scale plan that will take years to play out.

Case in point: Way back when, in the early Steve Jobs return era around Y2K, Apple stock skyrocketed to around $30 in modern share terms (prior to a couple of splits, so it was $120 at the time if memory serves). A bit later, it crashed for no particularly good reason to about a quarter of that and stayed there for over two years.

If you're a shareholder with a lot of control over the company, you might freak out after two years of this "mismanagement" and fire the CEO (Steve Jobs) and the guys under him, because between 2001 and 2003 the stock you payed $120 a share for is STILL only worth a quarter of that, so they obviously must be incompetent.

In reality, that period was the start of the iPod era and a long term plan that turned the company into the largest and most profitable company in the world, and (if you sold at the 2012 peak) would have given you a 2,500% return on investment (or, if you had bought in at the bottom, a ~10,000% increase). A period during which the shareholders were almost completely ignored, and there were almost no executive changes.

This isn't to say that shareholders are always wrong--there are PLENTY of overpaid, overconfident, incompetent CEOs in the world--but what is best for them is not always what's best for the company. Or, ironically, even what's best for them if they're long term investors.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Gasu E. Avatar
161 months ago
Sounds like a lovely human being...

I'm not sure guys like Icahn are such a bad thing. Large company executives often run the company as much for their own benefit as for the benefit of the stockholders. You guys all know this-- one of the symptoms is the excessive amount so many CEOs pay themselves. The only way to mitigate this is stockholder pressure. Unfortunately in many cases outside ownership is too diffuse to have any real power. Guys like Icahn force the ownership to focus on the stockholders. In some cases he buys a majority share and the stockholders become HIM, but the other stockholders make out nicely.

Someone mentioned LBOs, but Icahn has made hundreds of investments and only a few have been LBOs. Generally these were sick companies that held on too long or were badly mismanaged. Sometimes the best thing to do with a big company is to return the value to the stockholders, fire the execs and sell the assets to someone who can use them more productively, actually creating more jobs in the process.

Icahn is not altruistic and is not a nice man. Sometime the execs choose to pay him to leave, rather than fix the problems caused by their own incompetence and give up their own perks. He gladly takes this money! But the problem should be laid on the execs, not Icahn.

Guys like Icahn are rightfully considered to be the maggots or vultures of capitalism. Like maggots, they are ugly. But they also recycle dead flesh into useful elements that can be recycled into new growth.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
ValSalva Avatar
161 months ago
Though Icahn has been infamously know for such reputation, I think he. bought Apple stock solely for profiteering.

Well yes. Everything Icahn does is for profit. It's just how he makes his profit that can sometimes be destructive. He can't destroy Apple because it's too big even for him. But if he could destroy Apple for a profit he would in a heartbeat.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)

Popular Stories

Apple Wallet ID Illinois

Apple Plans to Expand iPhone Driver's Licenses to These 7 U.S. States

Wednesday December 24, 2025 8:40 am PST by
In select U.S. states, residents can add their driver's license or state ID to the Apple Wallet app on the iPhone and Apple Watch, and then use it to display proof of identity or age at select airports and businesses, and in select apps. The feature is currently available in 13 U.S. states and Puerto Rico, and it is expected to launch in at least seven more in the future. To set up the...
iPhone Top Left Hole Punch Face ID Feature Purple

iPhone 18 Pro Launching Next Year With These 12 New Features

Tuesday December 23, 2025 8:36 am PST by
While the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max are not expected to launch for another nine months, there are already plenty of rumors about the devices. Below, we have recapped 12 features rumored for the iPhone 18 Pro models. The same overall design is expected, with 6.3-inch and 6.9-inch display sizes, and a "plateau" housing three rear cameras Under-screen Face ID Front camera in...
iOS 26

iOS 26.2 Adds These 8 New Features to Your iPhone

Monday December 22, 2025 8:47 am PST by
Earlier this month, Apple released iOS 26.2, following more than a month of beta testing. It is a big update, with many new features and changes for iPhones. iOS 26.2 adds a Liquid Glass slider for the Lock Screen's clock, offline lyrics in Apple Music, and more. Below, we have highlighted a total of eight new features. Liquid Glass Slider on Lock Screen A new slider in the Lock...
maxresdefault

Where's the New Apple TV?

Monday December 22, 2025 11:30 am PST by
Apple hasn't updated the Apple TV 4K since 2022, and 2025 was supposed to be the year that we got a refresh. There were rumors suggesting Apple would release the new Apple TV before the end of 2025, but it looks like that's not going to happen now. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said several times across 2024 and 2025 that Apple would...
maxresdefault

10 Mac Apps Worth Trying in 2026

Wednesday December 24, 2025 9:27 am PST by
2026 is almost upon us, and a new year is a good time to try out some new apps. We've rounded up 10 excellent Mac apps that are worth checking out. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos. Alt-Tab (Free) - Alt-Tab brings a Windows-style alt + tab thumbnail preview option to the Mac. You can see a full window preview of open apps and app windows. One Thing (Free) -...
Foldable iPhone 2023 Feature Iridescent Search

Samsung Developing 'Wide Fold' With iPhone Fold-Like Design Ahead of Apple's 2026 Launch

Tuesday December 23, 2025 11:55 am PST by
Samsung is working on a new foldable smartphone that's wider and shorter than the models that it's released before, according to Korean news site ETNews. The "Wide Fold" will compete with Apple's iPhone Fold that's set to launch in September 2026. Samsung's existing Galaxy Z Fold7 display is 6.5 inches when closed, and 8 inches when open, with a 21:9 aspect ratio when folded and a 20:18...
iOS 26

iOS 26.3 Brings AirPods-Like Pairing to Third-Party Devices in EU Under DMA

Monday December 22, 2025 3:20 pm PST by
The European Commission today praised the interoperability changes that Apple is introducing in iOS 26.3, once again crediting the Digital Markets Act (DMA) with bringing "new opportunities" to European users and developers. The Digital Markets Act requires Apple to provide third-party accessories with the same capabilities and access to device features that Apple's own products get. In iOS...
iphone fold 3d print

Have a 3D Printer? You Can Make Your Own iPhone Fold Dummy

Tuesday December 23, 2025 1:31 pm PST by
Apple is working on a foldable iPhone that's set to come out in September 2026, and rumors suggest that it will have a display that's around 5.4 inches when closed and 7.6 inches when open. Exact measurements vary based on rumors, but one 3D designer has created a mockup based on what we've heard so far. On MakerWorld, a user named Subsy has uploaded a 1:1 iPhone Fold replica (via Macworld), ...
iPhone SE Cosmopolitan Clean

Apple Discontinued These 25 Products This Year

Wednesday December 24, 2025 7:24 am PST by
With the end of 2025 near, the time has come to look back at the devices and accessories that Apple discontinued throughout the year. Most of the products that were discontinued this year were simply replaced by a new model with an updated chip. However, the iPhone SE line was entirely discontinued when the iPhone 16e launched, and the iPhone Plus line is being phased out. Below, we have...