Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lululemon Takes Steps To Enable Founder Chip Wilson To Sell Remaining Stake

The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2015 12:14 PM
    NEW YORK — Lululemon founder Dennis (Chip) Wilson could sell his family's remaining stake in the yoga gear retailer a year after pushing for board changes.
     
    The company filed papers that would allow Wilson to sell about 20.1 million shares, which constitutes his remaining 14 per cent stake in the company, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Thursday.
     
    The move comes months after he made a truce with the company he created by also selling 20.1 million shares as part of a deal to avoid a messy battle.
     
    He resigned as chairman in December 2013 and in June 2014 announced that he was voting against the re-election of two returning directors, including his replacement, chairman Michael Casey, and private equity executive RoAnn Costin.
     
    At the time, Wilson argued that he didn't think the two members aligned with the company's "core values of product and innovation."
     
    Wilson started Lululemon in 1998 in Vancouver after taking a yoga class and helped turn it into an international brand, with more than 250 stores.
     
    The stock sale comes on the heels of a positive quarterly report for the company.
     
    The Vancouver-based company more than doubled its fiscal first-quarter profit on a boost in clothing sales. Lululemon also raised its outlook for full-year profit and revenue.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    U.S. Coast Guard Tracks Crippled Nova Scotia Tall Ship After Rescuing Crew

    U.S. Coast Guard Tracks Crippled Nova Scotia Tall Ship After Rescuing Crew
    BOSTON — The U.S. Coast Guard was tracking a crippled Nova Scotia tall ship off Massachusetts on Tuesday, a day after nine people were rescued from the schooner replica when its engine failed in towering waves and stiff winds.

    U.S. Coast Guard Tracks Crippled Nova Scotia Tall Ship After Rescuing Crew

    Airfield Lights Remained On After Crash In Halifax: Airport Authority

    Airfield Lights Remained On After Crash In Halifax: Airport Authority
    HALIFAX — The airport authority in Halifax is trying to determine why two generators failed to provide power to its terminal building Sunday morning after an Air Canada flight crashed, while another generator that keeps the airfield lights on didn't fail.

    Airfield Lights Remained On After Crash In Halifax: Airport Authority

    Who Gets The Biggest Share Of The Benefits From Tory 'Family Tax Cut?'

    Who Gets The Biggest Share Of The Benefits From Tory 'Family Tax Cut?'
    OTTAWA — It appears families with older children or those who don't pay for daycare stand to get a bigger share of the benefits from the Conservative government's proposed family tax-and-benefit package than families with young kids who pay for child care.

    Who Gets The Biggest Share Of The Benefits From Tory 'Family Tax Cut?'

    Saskatchewan To Restrict Use Of Indoor Tanning Beds To Adults In Time For Summer

    Saskatchewan To Restrict Use Of Indoor Tanning Beds To Adults In Time For Summer
    REGINA — Saskatchewan is planning to ban young people under 18 from using indoor tanning beds in an effort to help protect youth from skin cancer.

    Saskatchewan To Restrict Use Of Indoor Tanning Beds To Adults In Time For Summer

    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python
    CAMPBELLTON, N.B. — Police in New Brunswick have charged a man with criminal negligence causing death after two young brothers were asphyxiated by a python.

    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has spent seven years and $182 million trying to modernize aging computer systems in the social services ministries, but the province's auditor general says only one-third of that goal has been achieved.

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System