Business Services Industry

Bel Fuse Inc. Sends Letter to Toko, Inc., Noting Continued Poor Financial Performance and Urging Board of Directors to Divest Semiconductor Unit, Implement Restructuring Plan

Business Wire, June 16, 2008

JERSEY CITY, N.J. -- Bel Fuse Inc. (NASDAQ:BELFA) & (NASDAQ:BELFB) announced today that it sent the following letter to the Board of Directors of Toko, Inc. (TSE:6801; head office, Tokyo):

June 9, 2008

Mr. Shigeru Kawatsuhara
President and Representative Director
Toko, Inc.
1-17, Higashi-Yukigaya 2-chome
Ohta-ku, Tokyo
145-8585, Japan

Dear Mr. Kawatsuhara,

As you know, my company's subsidiary Bel Ventures,Inc. is a major shareholder owning approximately 2% of the outstanding shares of Toko, Inc. On behalf of Bel Ventures, normally I would plan attend the upcoming shareholders meeting if it fit with my schedule.

However, since I have other appointments on June 27 and will not be able to attend, I am writing this letter to clearly and directly express Bel Ventures' thoughts and wishes to you and the other board members of Toko. If you would, kindly please share this letter with those other board members.

As a large shareholder, Bel Ventures Inc. is deeply concerned and extremely dissatisfied with the present strategy, management, and performance of Toko Inc. In particular, we are dissatisfied with the following:

1. Toko continues to have extremely poor financial performance. Over the past seven years, Toko has recorded over 20 Bln Yen of net losses in the aggregate, and less than 1 Bln Yen of net income. On a net basis, therefore, approximately 19 Bln of shareholder value has been lost. This huge amount of aggregate loss is approximately equal to Toko's current total market capitalization. Hence, if Toko continues to perform in the same way, in seven years the company's shareholder value could well be driven down to zero.

2. The company continues to make massive investments of cash in business units that are clearly under-performing, not profitable, and not growing - such as the semiconductor unit. As you know, despite the aforementioned hideous financial performance, Toko has continued to make large capital expenditures - an aggregate amount of about 13.3 Bln Yen of capital expenditures over the past three years. In addition, 4.1 Bln Yen of capital expenditure is planned for the next fiscal year. Thus, not only is Toko recording huge negative operating cash flow as described above, but it is also losing further value by making investments in certain units - such as semiconductors - which for many years have been proven to be unprofitable under Toko's management.

3. Toko has not divested its semiconductor division, the largest unit of which is well known to be the largest source of unprofitability and cash drain. It is not at all surprising that this business unit has failed, because as a capital-intensive business, semiconductors does not fit with the company's strategy, core competencies, and balance sheet size. I am sure you will recall that 18 months ago and even before that, Bel Fuse strongly recommended that this division should divested. In our press release issued on December 20, 2006, we stated:

"Bel believes that Toko's semiconductor division should be divested in a process directed by independent board members, as it continues to be a major drag on the company's profitability. Bel CEO Dan Bernstein said, "This part of Toko's strategy has completely failed. The foundry business is one which requires continuous large investments, scale, and competitive technology. For many years, Toko has mis-allocated huge resources to this non-core business without ever achieving scale, profitability, or competitiveness. This has clearly been sapping resources and managerial focus from the products where Toko is competitive. In terms of preventing further erosion of long-term corporate value, divestment is the only sensible decision at this point."

In the present semiconductor market, it is likely that Toko could obtain better value from a sale of this division than was the case 18 months ago. Accordingly, once again - in fact, all the more - I would strongly urge Toko's board to immediately sell this division to a buyer that has the knowhow and capital to manage it effectively.

4. The fact that the Toko board has still not shown any detailed and credible plan for restructuring of the company, recovering profit and growth, and halting the current seven-year trend of consistent losses and the deterioration of shareholder value. If this slide continues, eventually Toko will have to cease doing business, its customers will lose their supplier, and its employees will lose their jobs.

5. The incredible fact that despite all of the above, it appears that Toko is so insensitive to shareholders' concerns and desirous to protect the positions of its executives, that at the upcoming shareholders meeting on June 27, it intends to submit its takeover defense plan to shareholders for re-approval. With respect to this defense plan, it is my understanding that:

a) The defense plan has a design that is one of the more stringent and protective of management in Japan, allowing wide flexibility to stop TOBs or other offers for the company for reasons that could be struck down in Japanese court; and that it is in order to lower this risk that shareholder approval is being sought;

 

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