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Man, has it been a hectic end-of-year for Bill Ackman and Valeant

Linette Lopez   

Man, has it been a hectic end-of-year for Bill Ackman and Valeant
Finance2 min read

Activist investor Bill Ackman, chief executive of Pershing Square walks on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange November 10, 2015. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Thomson Reuters

Activist investor Bill Ackman, chief executive of Pershing Square walks on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

On Wall Street, the end of the year is a race to balance portfolios and finish crucial business.

This has especially been the case for Valeant Pharmaceuticals and its billionaire investor, Bill Ackman.

Over the last week they've covered a lot of ground, including getting through a few well-paid departures and a substantial stock stale by Ackman's fund, Pershing Square.

First, the goodbyes.

The company is saying farewell to three key executives, Anne Whitaker, head of Branded Rx; Dr. Ari Kellen, the head of Basuch & Lomb; and CFO Rob Rosiello are all leaving the company.

They are, however, not leaving without some parting gifts, according to Wells Fargo analyst, David Maris:

We are surprised that Valeant's CEO provided Rosiello and Kellen with consulting agreements on an ongoing basis, as despite these outgoing executives being very highly compensated while at Valeant, the company has lost nearly $80 billion in market value.

Shortly after Valeant's new CEO came onboard, these same executives also received special retention awards, enhanced severance benefits equal to 2x each's annual base salary and target bonus, and continued employment despite Valeant's missed earnings and poor business performance. Additionally, the new CEO and board awarded former CEO Michael Pearson a $9 million severance and a consulting contract. We are unaware on what Pearson is being paid to consult.

Former Valeant CEO Michael Pearson's consulting contract also includes a non-disparagement agreement.

Valeant's stock crashed over 90% starting last October after accusations of accounting malfeasance from a short seller combined with government scrutiny over drug pricing to drag the company down. Since then, several government agencies have opened numerous investigations into the company.

A day after Valeant announced the departure of these executives, Ackman's fund Pershing Square sold $3.47 million worth of Valeant shares. The WSJ reports that this was done in order to help generate a loss for tax purposes.

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