CHARLOTTE
RUSSE HOLDING,
INC.
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(Name
of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)
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KARPREILLY
CAPITAL PARTNERS, L.P.
KARPREILLY
GP I, LLC
ALLAN
W. KARP
CHRISTOPHER
K. REILLY
WILLIAM
P. LOGAN
HEZY
SHAKED
GABRIEL
BITTON
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(Name
of Persons(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the
Registrant)
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(3)
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Per
unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to
Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is
calculated and state how it was
determined):
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Working
to restore financial discipline to the Company and right-sizing its
overhead structure;
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Actively
overseeing and critically evaluating management rather than delegating
responsibility to outside consultants;
and
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Calling
upon our over 75 years of combined retailing experience to recreate the
success achieved by the Company during Allan Karp's 11-year tenure as a
major stockholder and an active Board
member.
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By asking the Company's
President and CEO to retire without, it appears, ever devising a
succession plan and without any regard to the effect this action would
have on other senior executives. What was the result of this
ill-conceived decision? The Company's Chief Financial Officer and General
Merchandising Manager resigned because, according to their public
statement, "we do not
feel comfortable with the level of collaboration with the Board of
Directors". A California administrative law judge went even further
in a ruling against the Company regarding the resignation of one of these
executives:
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In
just over two weeks, from the day prior to the announcement of the CEO's
"requested" retirement to the day after the announcement of the
resignations of the CFO and GMM, Charlotte Russe suffered a 38% decline in its stock
price.
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The
Board's response to the management upheaval it caused? Plan A was to name
one of its own, Leonard H. Mogil, a former Phillips-Van Heusen executive
who retired in 2001, as interim CEO and CFO (despite no prior CEO
experience) and pay him
$678,000 in cash, stock and perquisites for less than four months' work.
While serving as interim CEO and CFO, Mr. Mogil presided over the worst
operating profit performance in the Company's
history.
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What
was the Board's Plan B? Hire, as the Company's top two
executives, individuals with minimal junior fast fashion experience, whose
most recent employers have filed for bankruptcy, and agree to pay them a
combined base salary of $1.5 million, almost $500,000 in signing bonuses
and over 500,000 shares in the form of stock awards. The combined
base salaries of these executives are 36% more than the fiscal 2008 base
salaries of the Company's former CEO and GMM and 20% more than the
weighted average base salaries of the CEOs and GMMs of the Company's peer
group.
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SG&A
expense has grown 84% faster than revenues since Mr. Karp's
departure.
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A
significant increase in marketing expenses, including hiring a "brand
ambassador" and "celebrity
stylist".
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A
$65 million supply agreement with a premium denim brand to offer jeans at
almost 2 1/2 times the average price point for Charlotte Russe
jeans.
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KarpReilly
initially made a private proposal to acquire 100% of the Company at a
"substantial premium to the recent trading range for the Company's stock"
on November 20, 2007. The stock closed at $14.41 that day. The Board
denied KarpReilly's request for due diligence without engaging in a single
conversation with KarpReilly.
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On
November 12, 2008, KarpReilly submitted a non-binding, fully financed, all
cash proposal to the Board to acquire all of the outstanding shares of the
Company at a valuation range of between $9.00 and $9.50 per share and
requested a brief due diligence period. The offer represented a premium
of 31-38% over the $6.89 closing price of the Company's shares on November
11, 2008, the trading day prior to the
announcement.
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The
Board rejected KarpReilly's proposal on November 19, 2008, again without
engaging in a single discussion with KarpReilly. The shares closed at
$4.36 on November 20, 2008. In its recent stockholder letter, the Board's
stated reason for rejecting this proposal was that it "would have deprived all
shareholders of potential value and the benefits of the turnaround plan
that were beginning to
materialize."
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The
directors who were on the Board for the full year in fiscal 2007 and the
full year in fiscal 2008 had their cash compensation more than
triple.
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Most
director fees for 2008 were increased by
50%.
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For
the first time, the directors gave themselves restricted stock awards, in
addition to stock option grants.
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Jennifer
Salopek herself received over $300,000 in cash and stock in fiscal
2008.
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The
total compensation of $1.0 million awarded to the independent Board
members in fiscal 2008 represents a 135% increase over fiscal 2007
compensation levels, yet operating income declined 50% and the stock lost
22%.
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Allan
Karp co-founded KarpReilly, LLC, a private equity firm, in 2006. Mr. Karp
was previously co-CEO of Apax Partners, L.P. and co-founder of SKM, the
private equity firm responsible for the original Charlotte Russe
investment. Other notable investments overseen by Mr. Karp while at SKM
include: Dollar Tree Stores (where Mr. Karp was previously a director),
which grew from less than 250 stores to 1,975 stores over SKM's eight-year
holding period; The Children's Place, which grew from 84 stores to over
1,000 stores over its eight-year holding period; and Hibbett Sporting
Goods, which grew from approximately 70 stores to 375 stores over its
seven-year holding period.
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Hezy
Shaked co-founded and serves as the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
of Tilly's, which primarily sells branded surf and skate apparel,
including well-known brands such as Volcom, Quiksilver, Roxy and
Billabong. Tilly's has 99 locations across seven states. Mr. Shaked has
over 27 years of experience in the retail apparel
industry.
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Gabriel
Bitton serves as President of Buffalo David Bitton, a retailer and
wholesaler of premium jeans and other men's and womenswear selling through
better department stores and approximately 40 retail locations in Canada.
Mr. Bitton co-founded Buffalo in 1985 and has over 32 years of experience
in the apparel industry with expertise in sourcing, brand development,
design and vendor management.
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We will work to restore
financial discipline to the Company. Even as same store sales have
fallen significantly and new store growth has been curtailed, the current
Board has overseen a dramatic increase in SG&A expenses resulting in the Company losing
money in its 2009 fiscal first quarter (including the holiday season) for
the first time since it went public. We will advocate right-sizing
the Company's overhead structure to be consistent with its current levels
of store performance, growth and profitability. These are actions every
responsible and experienced owner-operator of a business must take,
especially in today's economic
climate.
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We will fulfill our Board duty
to oversee management rather than relying on outside consulting
firms. We believe a responsible Board must act to oversee and work
with management. The current Board's dysfunctional relationship with past
management led to Board-instigated departures of key senior executives in
July 2008, immediately prior to the crucial back-to-school and holiday
seasons, during which the Company predictably produced dismal financial
results. Our nominees
have the experience necessary to oversee senior management, truly evaluate
their capabilities and performance, and address any areas for
improvement.
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We believe our nominees will
bring an ownership mentality to the Board. We are collectively the
largest stockholder of Charlotte Russe, and our nominees bring vital,
current retailing experience to the Board. All three KarpReilly nominees
have spent the last 20 years investing their own capital to grow retail
and apparel businesses - Mr. Karp as a consumer-focused private equity
investor and Messrs. Shaked and Bitton as owners and operators of
successful retail/apparel brands. The current Board contains three
consultants (two from the same firm), a retiree with experience in the
movie theater industry, two management directors who previously served as
executives of bankrupt companies (Mervyn's and babystyle) and a retiree
who has been out of the business for much of the past 8 years (excluding
the four months he served as Charlotte Russe's CEO and CFO, for which he
was paid over $678,000 in compensation). As a group, these directors
own less than 0.2% of the Company's outstanding shares, and have purchased
only 2,500 shares on the open market. However, these same Board members
had no problem approving the use of $73.4 million of the Company's cash to
buy back 4,080,000 shares at $18.00 in April 2008. Yet when the
stock dipped to $4.00 per share eight months later, not a single one of
these directors risked a dime of their personal capital to buy stock, even
after rejecting our proposal at a premium because of their belief in their
"turnaround" plan.
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