UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934
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PHH CORPORATION
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
PENNANT CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC
PENNANT OFFSHORE PARTNERS, LTD.
PENNANT ONSHORE PARTNERS, LP
PENNANT ONSHORE QUALIFIED, LP
PENNANT SPINNAKER FUND LP
PENNANT WINDWARD FUND, LP
PENNANT WINDWARD FUND, LTD.
ALAN FOURNIER
ALLAN Z. LOREN
GREGORY J. PARSEGHIAN
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
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Investor Presentation
PHH Corporation
May 20, 2009
Pennant Capital 26 Main Street, Suite 203
Management, LLC Chatham, NJ 07928
Phone 973-701-1100
Fax 973-701-9005
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IMPORTANT INFORMATION
This presentation was prepared in connection with the solicitation of proxies
for the 2009 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual Meeting") of PHH
Corporation ("PHH"). Pennant Capital Management, LLC ("Pennant") and the other
participants in its solicitation filed a revised preliminary proxy statement
with the SEC on May 4, 2009 and intend to file a definitive proxy statement.
When completed, the definitive proxy statement will be distributed to
stockholders of PHH. INVESTORS AND SECURITY HOLDERS OF PHH ARE URGED TO READ THE
DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT AND OTHER RELEVANT MATERIALS CAREFULLY AND IN THEIR
ENTIRETY AS THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT
INFORMATION.
Pennant, Pennant Spinnaker Fund LP, Pennant Offshore Partners, Ltd., Pennant
Onshore Partners, LP, Pennant Onshore Qualified, LP, Pennant Windward Fund, LP,
Pennant Windward Fund, Ltd., Alan Fournier, Allan Z. Loren and Gregory J.
Parseghian are participants in the solicitation of proxies from PHH stockholders
for the Annual Meeting. Information regarding such participants and a
description of their direct and indirect interests in such solicitation, by
securities holdings or otherwise, is contained in the revised preliminary proxy
statement filed by them with the SEC on May 4, 2009.
* * * *
Except for (i) historical market data, (ii) background information concerning
Pennant, Allan Z. Loren and Gregory J. Parseghian, and (iii) as is otherwise
clear from the context, and whether or not explicitly described as such, all
statements in this presentation are the views, opinions and beliefs of Pennant.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Background
II. Timeline
III. Urgency of this Vote
IV. Our Objective
V. Why Are We Taking This Action?
VI. PHH Board Failures
VII. Biographies of Independent Nominees
VIII. Stock Performance
Appendix I
I. BACKGROUND
|X| Pennant Capital Management LLC ("Pennant") manages over $2.6 billion in
investor capital.
- Pennant is not, and does not aspire to be, an "activist stockholder."
|X| Funds managed by Pennant collectively own 9.97% of the outstanding common
stock of PHH Corporation ("PHH"), making us PHH's largest shareholder.
|X| Pennant's history with PHH:
- Shareholder since April 2006.
- Opposed sale of PHH to General Electric Capital Corp. and Blackstone
in 2007 because of its poor timing and inadequate price.
o Wrote to the PHH board of directors (the "Board") in April, June
and August 2007 to explain clearly and in detail why we believed
the GE / Blackstone transaction was not in the best interests of
PHH's stockholders. Publicly filed these letters with amendments
to our Schedule 13D.
- For the past year, we have actively encouraged the PHH Board and
senior management to take specific steps to more effectively create
shareholder value.
1
II. TIMELINE
|X| April 2, 2008 - Pennant meets with CEO Terry Edwards and other members of
management for wide-ranging discussion of business and conveys view on
perceived deficiencies in management compensation arrangements.
|X| May 9, 2008 - Following 1Q 2008 earnings call, Pennant expresses concern to
Terry Edwards about public communications by him and other members of
management.
|X| May 12, 2008 - Pennant reiterates concern in letter to Terry Edwards (see
Appendix I) and encourages management to present a more open and balanced
discussion of underlying earnings results and normalized profit potential.
|X| June 4, 2008 - Pennant speaks with Terry Edwards and another management
member at industry conference following PHH presentation. Terry states that
there is no such thing as "normal" in mortgage industry anymore in response
to question about PHH's normalized earnings power.
|X| August 19, 2008 - Pennant meets with Chairman "Buzzy" Krongard and mentions
Greg Parseghian as mortgage industry expert whom Pennant believes would
bring PHH tremendous experience at a critical time for PHH. Buzzy indicates
interest in Greg's background and in meeting with him as a potential Board
member.
|X| November 10, 2008 - PHH holds 3Q 2008 earnings call and introduces for the
first time, with few details, the possibility of acquiring a bank. States
that "becoming a depository has been part of our strategic plan for years."
|X| November 19, 2008 - Pennant meets for first time with CFO Sandra Bell, who
advises she is undertaking a strategic review of PHH's businesses. Pennant
is impressed with Sandra but concerned that, as a new and junior member of
management, she has limited ability to drive change at PHH.
2
II. TIMELINE (cont'd)
|X| November 21, 2008 - Messrs. Krongard and Parseghian meet.
|X| November 24, 2008 -
o Pennant speaks with Mr. Krongard to discuss Pennant's concerns
about PHH and the plans and capability of management to deal with
those concerns.
o Pennant proposes to Mr. Krongard that PHH form a special
committee of non-management directors, including Greg Parseghian,
to underscore importance and urgency of Sandra Bell's strategic
business review.
o Mr. Krongard dismisses suggestion of special committee and
advises Pennant that, although he was impressed with Mr.
Parseghian, other members of Board had expressed concern about
Mr. Parseghian's past association with Freddie Mac and that two
other Board candidates were being considered ahead of Mr.
Parseghian.
|X| November 25, 2008 - Pennant Schedule 13D filing details November 24
proposals, expresses hope that the Board will seriously consider these
proposals, but states that if the Board does not adopt them Pennant "will
actively consider all available steps ...."
o At market close on November 26, 2008, PHH stock price jumps 14.8%
from close on November 25, 2008, as compared to 4.5% increase in
Russell 2000 Financial Services Index.
|X| March 11, 2009 - Pennant sends formal notice to PHH, just prior to deadline
under bylaws, that it intends to nominate the Independent Nominees for
election to the Board at the 2009 annual meeting of stockholders.
III. URGENCY OF THIS VOTE
|X| Market Valuation: Within the last 6 months, PHH's stock has traded as low
as 20% of tangible book value. Even today, after a recent run-up, PHH's
stock continues to trade at a discount. Recent run-up coincides with, among
other things, improvements in refinancing expectations, Pennant's
announcement of Board nominees and generally strong performance for
financially-related stocks.
- Without meaningful improvements in communications, incentive
compensation structure and sustained mortgage profitability, PHH's
stock could potentially revisit such low valuations if the current
refinancing boom dissipates.
|X| Refinancing Risk. PHH has a large unsecured credit facility - with nearly
$1 billion drawn at March 31, 2009 - that matures in January 2011.
- Given recent declines in PHH Fleet's profitability and the lack of
sustained mortgage profitability in recent years, lenders may question
PHH's prospects for long-term sustained profitability, which may
affect PHH's ability to refinance the credit facility on commercially
acceptable terms.
- PHH had been profitable in years preceding most recent amendment and
extension of credit agreement in January 2006.
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IV. OUR OBJECTIVE
|X| Our objective is to replace Board Chairman Krongard and CEO Edwards with
our two Independent Nominees - Allan Loren and Greg Parseghian.
- Messrs. Krongard and Edwards bear significant responsibility for a
number of self-inflicted problems facing PHH, and we have lost
confidence in them.
- Mr. Krongard has told us that the PHH Board is "tired." Now is the
time to rejuvenate the company by adding new, dynamic
leadership to the PHH Board.
- Greg Parseghian will bring to the PHH Board substantial mortgage
industry experience and Allan Loren will bring to the Board the
talents of an independent director with a proven track record of
creating stockholder value and implementing change as chief executive
officer of a well-known public company.
- We are not seeking control: ---
o Our goal is for the new Board to seriously consider our
constructive criticisms and to address them in a thoughtful and
deliberate manner.
o We believe that Messrs. Loren and Parseghian have the right
experience and drive to spearhead that important effort.
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V. WHY ARE WE TAKING THIS ACTION?
|X| We remain optimistic about PHH's businesses and see substantial value.
- PHH is the only private label mortgage outsourcer of size in the U.S.,
and the recent downturn will result in great opportunity for PHH.
- PHH Fleet is the 2nd largest player in the fleet management industry
in the U.S. and Canada combined. It can once again be a stable cash
flow business.
- We estimate normalized earnings power of at least $4 per share and
believe that fair value is in excess of $40 per share.
|X| We are dissatisfied with Company performance:
Reported Segment Profit
($ in millions)
--------------------- ----------------- --------------------- ------------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
2005 2006 2007 2008 1Q 2009
--------------------- ----------------- --------------------- ------------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Mortgage Production $(17) $(152) $(225) $(93) $113
--------------------- ----------------- --------------------- ------------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Mortgage Servicing $140 $44 $75 $(430) $(118)
--------------------- ----------------- --------------------- ------------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Fleet Management $80 $102 $116 $62 $7
--------------------- ----------------- --------------------- ------------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
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V. WHY ARE WE TAKING THIS ACTION? (cont'd)
|X| Under the leadership of Messrs. Krongard and Edwards, the company:
- Attempted a sale to GE / Blackstone for insufficient value and at an
inopportune time.
- Has failed to understand PHH's normalized earnings potential.
- Has structured management incentives based on significant factors
outside employees' control.
- May not have focused sufficiently on the profitability of individual
clients.
- Was too slow to pass through escalating Fleet funding costs to
clients.
- Has failed to communicate effectively, leaving stockholders, ratings
agencies, providers of capital and potential customers with
comparisons to failed and failing mortgage lenders.
- Has recently failed to capitalize on outsourcing opportunities,
signing no new private label clients in 4Q 2008 and only one new
private label client in 1Q 2009.
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VI. PHH BOARD FAILURES
|X| Attempted sale to GE / Blackstone for insufficient value.
- Sale structure resulted in significant tax leakage.
- Sale proposed during financial restatements and cyclical downturn.
- Priced at less than a 12% premium to prior day's and average 6 months'
prior trading.
- Sale implied mortgage business valuation of less than 5x mortgage EPS
using management's projections of 2009 earnings and less than 3.5x our
estimate of normalized mortgage EPS.
|X| Have failed to understand PHH's normalized earnings potential.
- Unable to describe normal earnings power of the company.
- Even stated that in this economy there may be no such thing as
normalized earnings power.
- The failure to understand and articulate normalized earnings power
affects or interferes with establishing effective employee incentives,
making capital allocation decisions, dealing with ratings agencies,
extending debt maturities and communicating with stockholders.
|X| Established management incentives based on significant factors outside
employees' control.
- Performance targets are based on specified pre-tax income targets
typically set annually in March.
- Achievement of targets depends on external factors such as future
interest rates and market driven gain-on-sale margins, which cannot be
controlled by employees and cannot be known by management when targets
are set.
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VI. PHH BOARD FAILURES (cont'd)
|X| Focus on profitability.
- Questionable whether PHH has historically focused sufficiently on
profitability of individual clients.
o In November 2008, management conveyed to Pennant its suspicion
that some clients were insufficiently profitable across the
business cycle.
o Without understanding profitability, how can PHH pursue
profitable growth and evaluate existing clients and cost cutting
efforts?
- Too slow to reduce mortgage origination costs.
- Failed to target profitability as goal for mortgage production segment
- set target of breakeven.
|X| Too slow to pass through escalating Fleet funding costs to clients.
- Rising interest costs were identified by PHH as early as November
2007, but not until 4Q 2008 were meaningful attempts made to pass
through interest rate increases to clients.
- As a result, full recovery to Fleet's normalized earnings power has
been meaningfully delayed.
|X| Has recently failed to capitalize on outsourcing opportunities.
- Despite asserting that the company has great opportunities to sign new
outsourcing clients, success has been limited since September 2008,
with no new private label client signings in 4Q 2008 and only one new
private label client signing in 1Q 2009.
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VI. PHH BOARD FAILURES (cont'd)
|X| Public communications failures.
- No investor conference calls between March 2006 and February 2008.
- 3Q 2008 earnings conference call was poorly handled.
o Surprise introduction of bank acquisition strategy without
sufficient clarity.
o PHH stock dropped 36.7% by the close of the day after the
conference call, as compared to a drop of 5.1% for the Russell
2000 Financial Services Index for that period.
- Inability to articulate earnings power of the company.
- Often referred to industry problems without highlighting that the
company is an outsource service provider, not a balance sheet lender.
o Failed to highlight that PHH is not comparable to many troubled
financial companies.
o In April 2009 press release, claimed credit for being more sound
than competitors Countrywide, IndyMac and Washington Mutual,
which either failed or were acquired under distressed
circumstances.
- In today's environment, how can management recruit and retain
outsourcing clients and ensure access to liquidity if they cannot
properly communicate PHH's attributes and earnings power?
10
VII. BIOGRAPHIES OF INDEPENDENT NOMINEES
Greg Parseghian
|X| 2007 - 2008: Director of Research for Brahman Capital, a hedge fund
managing in excess of $1 billion of its clients' capital.
|X| June 2003 - December 2003: Chief Executive Officer of Freddie Mac.
|X| 1996 - 2003: Chief Investment Officer of Freddie Mac. Led a team of more
than 200 professionals responsible for management of that firm's $600
billion retained mortgage portfolio, its $120 billion non-mortgage
contingency and liquidity portfolio, its issuance of debt and
mortgage-backed securities and its asset/liability risk management.
|X| 1982 - 1995: Executive positions at First Boston Corp., BlackRock Financial
Management and Salomon Brothers.
|X| Currently serves on the board of directors of the Armenian Church Endowment
Fund and The Langley School, both of which are non-profit organizations,
and Everquest Financial, Ltd., a specialty finance holding company.
|X| Mr. Parseghian holds a B.S. in Economics and a Masters in Business
Administration in Finance from The Wharton School, University of
Pennsylvania.
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VII. BIOGRAPHIES OF INDEPENDENT NOMINEES
Allan Loren
|X| 2000 - 2004: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Dun & Bradstreet.
Created and implemented D&B's "Blueprint for Growth" strategy. During his
five years leading the company, Mr. Loren grew D&B's earnings per share
from $1.71 to $2.98, increased free cash flow from $164 million to $239
million per year, and produced a total stockholder return of 378%.
|X| 1994 - 2000: Executive Vice President and Chief Information Officer of
American Express.
|X| 1991 - 1994: President and Chief Executive Officer of Galileo
International.
|X| 1988 - 1990: President of Apple Computer USA and Chief Information Officer
of Apple Computer from 1987 to 1988.
|X| 1971 - 1987: Chief Administrative Officer (1979 - 1987) and Chief
Information Officer (1971 - 1979) of Cigna.
|X| Currently serves on the board of directors of Fair Isaac Corporation and on
the board of trustees of Queens College, City University of New York. Mr.
Loren previously served on the boards of directors of Hershey Foods,
Reynolds & Reynolds, U.S. Cellular, and Venator Group (currently known as
Foot Locker, Inc.). He also served as Distinguished Executive in Residence
at Rutgers University Business School.
|X| Mr. Loren graduated with a B.S. in Mathematics from Queens College, City
University of New York in 1960 and undertook graduate studies in
mathematics and statistics at American University from 1961 to 1964. Mr.
Loren also attended Stanford University's Executive Management Program in
1979.
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VIII. STOCK PERFORMANCE
|X| In November 2008, at the time of the 3Q 2008 earnings call, the stock
traded as low as approximately 20% of tangible net book value.
|X| In the 3 months prior to Pennant's March 9, 2009 Schedule 13D amendment
announcing this proxy contest, PHH traded at no more than 49% of PHH's
reported tangible net book value.
|X| From March 9, 2009 through May 4, 2009, PHH shares have appreciated 83.9%,
versus 43.8% for the Russell 2000 Financial Services Index. Is this run-up
attributable to the leadership and credibility of PHH's incumbent Board, or
to other circumstances such as:
o A recently improved industry forecast for mortgage refinancings?
o An improvement in the market generally?
o Pennant's announcement of a proxy contest to replace Messrs. Krongard
and Edwards with the Independent Nominees?
- The time to address the failures of Messrs. Krongard and Edwards
is now!
VOTE THE GOLD CARD TO REPLACE MESSRS. KRONGARD AND EDWARDS
WITH OUR INDEPENDENT NOMINEES - ALLAN LOREN AND GREG PARSEGHIAN
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Appendix I - Text of May 12, 2008 Letter from Pennant to Terry Edwards
Terence Edwards, President and Chief Executive Officer
PHH Corp.
3000 Leadenhall Road
Mount Laurel, NJ 08054
Chatham, May 12, 2008
Dear Terry,
Following our phone conversation on Friday May 9, 2008, we would like to
reiterate our concerns regarding the communication of PHH's results and
encourage a more open and balanced discussion of the Company's underlying
earnings results and normalized profit potential. We also hope that you use the
opportunity inherent in the CFO search to hire an executive who is an effective
communicator with investors, preferably with public company experience, and who
has a track record of driving long-term shareholder value.
In the first quarter of 2008, mortgage results were affected by a number of
unusual positive as well as negative impacts. We noticed that the positives,
such as the break-up fee and the fair value accounting adjustments, were clearly
highlighted and quantified on the first page of the earnings release,
effectively encouraging investors to look at results without these benefits. In
contrast, the substantial unusual negatives in the quarter, i.e. the warehouse
losses associated with the widening spreads and the unusually large risk
management and hedging losses in both production and servicing, were only
quantified deep into the release. Even in the Q&A you hesitated to acknowledge
the unsustainable nature of these negatives in order to "not set the bar too
high". You missed an opportunity to highlight the unusual nature of the market
dislocations caused by the extraordinary developments at Thornburg and others.
Similarly, you failed to mention that absent the warehouse losses, the gain on
sale margins in 2008 to date have been the best in several years. This makes it
difficult for most investors to appreciate the strong underlying performance in
the quarter, a fact that was confirmed by conversations we had with other
shareholders who, while reasonably familiar with your company, were nevertheless
confused by the presentation of the results. Equally important, we have observed
for some time that the Company shies away from, or downplays, estimates of
normal margins in the production and servicing businesses.
We understand that your communications style is rooted in modesty,
conservatism and recognition of the fact that many drivers of profitability are
out of your control. While in most circumstances, these are of course
commendable traits, in this case we strongly believe that they are misplaced....
This isn't just a case of a shareholder "blaming the messenger". You showed
great vision and restraint by staying out of the more exotic mortgages prior to
2007 and you are now extremely well positioned to prosper in the new
environment. Yet your earnings release and call paint the picture of just
another deeply troubled mortgage company. This is detrimental to the
availability and cost of funding, for both debt as well as equity-like capital
such as your recent convertible note sale. It also makes it more difficult for
the rating agencies to understand the earnings power of your business.
Furthermore, painting a picture of weakness undoubtedly makes it harder to
convince potential outsourcing clients to partner with you and it hurts staff
morale.
We strongly encourage you to offer a clearer, more open and more balanced
discussion of the underlying business performance and future potential going
forward. The earnings release should prominently highlight and quantify not only
one-time benefits but also unusual
14
headwinds. While we don't expect you to forecast the future effects of changes
in spreads and changes in the yield curve, there should be a discussion of
underlying margins and how that compares against your long-term expectations. In
investor presentations, you should explain and try to quantify your structural
advantages relative to the industry, such as the lower costs and the higher
credit quality associated with your non-commissioned call center operation. As
discussed on Friday, we believe that the recent opening of the position of the
Chief Financial Officer represents an opportunity to hire someone who a)
communicates effectively with the capital markets regardless of the inherent
complexities and b) has a clear vision of creating shareholder value, such as
through an eventual spin-off of the mortgage or fleet business. Finally, I want
to emphasize that part of the role of an effective Chief Executive Officer is to
be an advocate for the company he or she leads. Every conference call represents
an opportunity to market our Company to customers and potential customers,
employees, owners, creditors and rating agencies.
Lui and I were encouraged by your reaction in our discussion on Friday and
we look forward to seeing the ideas implemented. We thank you for your
consideration and look forward to continuing to work with you. Please feel free
to reach out to us should you wish to discuss the matter any further.
With warm regards,
Alan P. Fournier,
Managing Member
Pennant Capital Management LLC
15
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