TAMPA, Fla. โ€” SES has outlined plans for a more streamlined board of directors, but one of the satellite operatorโ€™s biggest shareholders says the changes donโ€™t go far enough amid mounting competition in the space industry.

The Luxembourg-based company said it has decided to reduce its board from 11 to nine members while proposing two new directors with extensive U.S. national security and defense leadership experience:

  • Ellen Lord, former Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment of the United States Department of Defense.
  • John Shaw, former Deputy Commander of the U.S. Space Force and first Commander of the USSF Space Operations Command and Combined Forces Space Component Command.

These appointments will help SES โ€œeffectively navigate this rapidly changing landscape,โ€ the company said, and will be put to a vote at its next annual shareholder meeting April 3.

SES also kicked off a search for a director with capital markets experience after hedge fund Appaloosa called for an overhaul of its share capital and board structure.

Appaloosa holds more than 7% of SESโ€™ economic interests and has a similar stake in Intelsat, which SES is acquiring in a $3.1 billion deal.

While SES said it would put Appaloosaโ€™s proposal for a structured program to distribute capital to shareholders to a vote โ€” despite recommending its rejection โ€” the operator dismissed other proposals from the hedge fund, such as reducing state control.

โ€œThe initial steps the SES Board is taking to modernize its structure are long-overdue and only came following shareholder pressure,โ€ Appaloosa said in a statement.

โ€œHowever, much more can, and must, be done โ€” with a greater sense of urgency than is evident from the Boardโ€™s incrementalism.โ€

Appaloosa urged other shareholders to vote in favor of its plan to return excess cash flow to shareholders annually.

SES said it already strikes a healthy balance between returning capital to shareholders and maintaining flexibility for growth investments, warning that Appaloosaโ€™s proposal could jeopardize its investment-grade credit rating.

Luxembourg has been an anchor shareholder since the companyโ€™s inception, SES noted, and the governmentโ€™s special Class B shares cannot be taken away by a vote of other shareholders.

โ€œIn any event, SES considers the Luxembourg Government to be a valuable shareholder and stakeholder in the Company and the Luxembourg Government has on numerous occasions confirmed its strong support for the Company,โ€ SES said.

SES added that the government is unable to appoint more than a third of its total number of board directors, preventing it from dictating or inhibiting the companyโ€™s growth strategy.

Appaloosa had also called on SES to remove its entire board and replace it with a smaller number of directors, which SES said would be chaotic and unnecessary.

Jason Rainbow writes about satellite telecom, finance and commercial markets for SpaceNews. He has spent more than a decade covering the global space industry as a business journalist. Previously, he was Group Editor-in-Chief for Finance Information Group,...