Efforts to defend Duke Energy from a proxy campaign led by billionaire Paul Singer have recently taken two quiet steps backwards.
Last month, Singer’s hedge fund Elliott Management urged the utility to split its $78 billion electric-and-gas empire into three companies — an unusual proposal in an era of consolidation that a few analysts variously described as "odd" and "puzzling."
Earlier this month, however, a trio of op-ed pieces went a bit further — and they all appeared to be working off talking points that were strikingly similar to each other.
ELLIOTT URGES DUKE ENERGY TO CONSIDER SEPARATION INTO THREE COMPANIES
A piece in American Thinker by Michael Busler appeared on May 15, highlighting static Elliott had gotten from utility regulators in Kansas and Missouri over a previous deal with local utility Evergy Holdings, with the former saying the deal offered "little upside to ratepayers."
Busler likewise wrote that Texas regulators accused Elliott of lying about its position during the bankruptcy of Energy Future Holdings, and highlighted media coverage that called Hess Corp. "the incredible shrinking oil producer" after Elliott took a stake.
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