Xerox shareholders Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason strongly criticised the printer and copier maker's plan to sell itself to Japan's Fujifilm Holdings, saying the transaction "dramatically undervalues" Xerox.
Shares of Xerox were up nearly 2 percent at $30.06 (roughly Rs. 1,930) in early trading on Monday.
"We urge you - our fellow shareholders - do not let Fuji steal this company from us," Icahn and Deason said in an open letter.
The top shareholders termed the deal structure as "tortured (and) convoluted".
In an emailed statement, Xerox told Reuters it considered several other options in detail and concluded that the combination with Fuji Xerox is the "best path to create value" for the company.
The two investors said there is still great opportunity for Xerox to create "enormous value for shareholders, and it does not involve selling control to Fuji without a premium".
On January 31, Fujifilm said it was set to take over Xerox in a $6.1 billion (roughly Rs. 39,100 crores) deal and combine it into their existing joint venture, Fuji Xerox.
"To put it simply, the current board of directors has overseen the systematic destruction of Xerox, and, unless we do something, this latest Fuji scheme will be the company's final death knell," Icahn and Deason said in the letter.
Deason and Icahn said in regulatory filings they together own a 15.2 percent stake in Xerox - 6 percent and 9.2 percent respectively - as of February 12.
The two investors in their letter highlighted their concerns about becoming passive minority owners of a Fuji subsidiary if the deal with Xerox proceeds.
Fujifilm was not immediately available for comment.
© Thomson Reuters 2018
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