An investor in Research In Motion wants a shareholder vote on whether the company's two leaders can retain shared roles as chairmen of the board and chief executives, in the latest headwind to hit the BlackBerry maker ahead of next week's results.
The call to limit the roles held by co-founder Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie adds to RIM's woes as it struggles to present itself as a legitimate third option in a smartphone race increasingly dominated by tech giants Apple and Google. The setup "makes it more difficult for the board of directors in general to ask management difficult questions," Northwest and Ethical Investments' Bob Walker told Reuters. The proposal from Northwest and Ethical, which holds more than half a million RIM shares, calls on the company to split the roles and amend its bylaws to ensure the chair is an independent board member, RIM said in a regulatory filing on Friday.
Balsillie resigned as chairman in March 2007 and stepped down from the board in February 2009 following a stock options accounting scandal but returned, along with Lazaridis, as co-chairman in December 2010. RIM said on Friday it will launch its PlayBook tablet computer - its attempt to compete with the iPad - outside North America within the next 30 days.
The PlayBook launched to some troubling reviews in the United States and Canada in April, amid complaints that the company had rushed the gadget to market. RIM, based in Waterloo, Ontario, said the PlayBook will soon hit shelves in Britain, France, Germany, Australia, the United Arab Emirates and India, among other countries.
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