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Tom Sandell Letter To Ethan Allen

By Aswath Damodaran. Originally published at ValueWalk.

August 14, 2015

Mr. Farooq Kathwari

Chairman, CEO and President

Ethan Allen Interiors Inc. (NYSE:ETH) Interiors Inc.

Ethan Allen Drive

Danbury, CT 06811

Dear Farooq:

As you know, we are significant shareholders of Ethan Allen Interiors Inc. (“Ethan Allen” or the “Company”) and currently own approximately 1.6 million shares, or 5.5%, of the Company. We appreciate the dialogue that my colleague Richard Mansouri and I have had with you and the Company’s CFO Corey Whitely over the last few months. It should be clear to you that our firm strongly believes in the significant value associated with the assets that constitute Ethan Allen, not least of which is the Company’s iconic brand name, which connotes home furnishings of un-paralleled quality. Unfortunately, what should also be clear to you is that the Company’s stock price is significantly below Ethan Allen’s true intrinsic value, which we believe is approximately $41 per share, or over 30% higher than its current price.

It is also unfortunate that, while you have led Ethan Allen for close to 30 years and have built a unique business of substance, shareholders have suffered extended and material underperformance due in large part to what we believe to be the Company’s sub-optimal fiscal policies and inefficient allocation of shareholder capital over the last several years. Indeed, Ethan Allen serves as an abject example of the ill effects that can befall shareholders invested in a company that does not earn an appropriate return on its capital. The following chart shows in stark detail the underperformance that shareholders have been subjected to:

As you can see, Ethan Allen has underperformed its peers over each time period, with 10-year underperformance versus its peers a staggering 119%. Moreover, Ethan Allen’s current stock price is actually below where it was in August of 2005, indicating that shareholders have witnessed negative absolute price performance over 10 years in addition to suffering a wide gap in relative performance. Perhaps because of this staggering underperformance, the Company chose to take what we believe was the outrageous step of advancing the date of its 2015 Annual Meeting. Specifically, we find buried in the Company’s recently-filed 10-K that Ethan Allen intends to hold its 2015 Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the “Annual Meeting”) on October 15, more than one month in advance of the previously expected November 17 date as set forth in the Company’s last proxy statement. We have little doubt that the Company was seeking to catch shareholders unaware, as the nomination window for submitting shareholder proposals and nominations for directors is tied to the date of its Annual Meeting.

Clearly, the capital tied up in the Company’s vast portfolio of real estate assets has been a drag on shareholder returns. You in fact provide damning commentary when you stated in a press release dated April 14, 2015: “Since going public, the company has invested in capital expenditures of $747.9 million including investments in retail and manufacturing properties and acquisitions.” We note that the market value of Ethan Allen today is not meaningfully higher than the aggregate $747.9 million that you have expended over the last 22 years since going public in 1993. Had the Company earned an appropriate rate of return on this invested capital over the years, the market value of the Company would be far greater than what it is today. Sadly, the Company has still shown no indication that it intends to tap into the exceedingly robust market for both retail and industrial real estate properties in order to unlock this capital that has been trapped on its balance sheet.

We believe that Ethan’s Allen’s sizable stable of properties, which includes: 53 wholly-owned retail design centers; 17 retail design centers subject to ground leases; its corporate headquarters building and 18.0 acre campus; its 200 room Hotel and Conference Center; and its eight wholly-owned manufacturing facilities, as well as various ancillary properties, is worth approximately $450 million, or about $16 per share, little of which we believe is reflected in Ethan Allen’s current stock price. To put this in perspective, the value of the Company’s real estate is over 50% of Ethan Allen’s entire market value. Furthermore, we believe based upon input from numerous finance and real estate experts that there are many interested parties and several ways to help the Company unlock this value, ranging from a series of sale-leaseback transactions to the creation of a tax-efficient REIT through an OpCo-PropCo structure.

Along with the trapped capital associated with the Company’s extensive real estate holdings is the Company’s highly-inefficient balance sheet. As of June 30, 2015, Ethan Allen actually had negative net debt. That the Company continues to operate with net leverage below zero while Ethan Allen’s stock trades at a price below where it was 10 years ago reflects an astonishingly unsophisticated fiscal policy that we believe is at odds with the fundamental precepts of modern corporate finance, a policy which is even more troubling when one considers that prevailing interest rates remain close to historical lows. And while we have no doubt you will seek to trumpet the Company’s history of returning capital to shareholders (“Since going public” appears to be your favored yardstick for measuring Company history, even though that spans a period of 22 years), recent action by Ethan Allen paints an entirely different picture. To illustrate, we note that in Fiscal 2012 the Company purchased a mere 79,000 shares, or less than 0.3% of total shares outstanding, and in Fiscal 2013 and 2014, the Company did not repurchase any shares at all. Only very, very recently did the Company step up its repurchase activity (542,000 shares repurchased in 4Q Fiscal 2015) and only after a dramatic fall in stock price following Ethan Allen’s 3Q Fiscal 2015 earnings disappointment.

We are not suggesting that you alone are responsible for what we believe to be the Company’s misguided fiscal policies and underperformance; the entire Board of Directors must shoulder this blame. In this regard, we note that while you are the longest-standing Director, having been appointed to the Board 27 years ago, there are three other Directors who have been on the Board for more than 10 years, namely: Frank Wisner (14 years); Kristin Gamble (23 years) and Clinton Clark (26 years). So many long-tenured directors can lead to a dangerous level of complacency which we believe has been manifest at Ethan Allen.

Fortunately, the Company has within its control the ability to take steps to greatly enhance shareholder value. There are multiple alternatives available to the Company, though they can be generalized as two discrete paths that we believe Ethan Allen should consider, namely: (1) a recapitalization and monetization of its extensive real estate holdings and (2) a sale

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