Stock Markets April 8, 2026

Swatch Urges Shareholders to Reject GreenWood's Board Nominee Ahead of AGM

Swiss watchmaker backs its own bearer-share candidate and reiterates opposition to activist investor’s push

By Jordan Park
Swatch Urges Shareholders to Reject GreenWood's Board Nominee Ahead of AGM

Swatch has urged shareholders to vote against GreenWood Investors’ founder Steven Wood in the run-up to the company’s annual general meeting, arguing Wood is unsuited to act as a bearer shareholder representative. The company also reaffirmed its support for Andreas Rickenbacher as a candidate for the board and proposed him for the bearer-share slot at the May 12 meeting.

Key Points

  • Swatch has formally asked shareholders to vote against Steven Wood, the founder of GreenWood Investors, for a bearer shareholder representative seat - impacts corporate governance and investor relations.
  • Only 4% of GreenWood Builders Fund IV’s Swatch holdings are bearer shares while 96% are registered shares, a point Swatch cites in questioning the activist’s claim - affects legal/ownership mechanics and proxy contests.
  • Swatch has nominated Andreas Rickenbacher for the bearer-share slot and reaffirmed his board candidacy ahead of the May 12 annual meeting; his roles span public service and several corporate boards - relevant to board composition and industry oversight.

Swatch on Wednesday renewed its objection to an activist investor’s attempt to gain a boardseat, asking shareholders to vote against GreenWood Investors’ bid for representation at the watchmaker’s upcoming annual general meeting.

In a formal statement, the Swiss group said GreenWood’s proposed candidate - Steven Wood, who is the founder of the American investment firm - should not represent Swatch shareholders. The company said Wood lacked ties to, and experience within, the Swiss industry.

Swatch highlighted the formal mechanics of the challenge in arguing against GreenWood’s claim to a bearer shareholder representative spot. The company said only 4% of GreenWood Builders Fund IV’s holdings in Swatch were held in bearer form, while the remaining 96% were registered shares.

GreenWood did not reply to a request for comment.

The push for a bearer-share representative is not new. Swatch noted that Wood last year failed to secure the bearer shareholder representative role amid opposition from the Swatch founding family, the Hayeks, who control around 45% of the company’s voting rights. Ahead of that annual meeting, Swatch recommended a vote against Wood and 79.2% of shareholders voted to oppose his election.

Despite that result, GreenWood has continued to press for change at Swatch. The activist investor has called for a greater emphasis on the group’s luxury brands and in November published six proposals to alter the company’s corporate governance framework.

Separately, Swatch reiterated its own slate of board plans for the May 12 annual general meeting, reaffirming its proposal to elect Andreas Rickenbacher to the board. The company has additionally put forward Rickenbacher as its candidate for the bearer shareholder representative position in the invitation to shareholders for the meeting.

Swatch outlined Rickenbacher’s public-sector and corporate roles. He previously worked in the Cantonal Government of Bern and currently serves as:

  • Chairman of the board of the accident insurance company Suva,
  • Vice-chairman of the board of Directors of the electricity group BKW, and
  • A member of the board of directors of Aebi Schmidt.

The election contest, and the differing nominations for the bearer-share slot, leaves the company and its shareholders to decide the immediate governance direction at the annual meeting on May 12.


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Risks

  • Uncertain shareholder outcome at the May 12 annual meeting - the vote will determine control over the bearer-share representative slot and affect governance direction (impacts corporate governance and equity investors).
  • The activist GreenWood has persisted with governance proposals, including six proposed amendments in November, indicating continued pressure on Swatch’s strategic focus - this creates potential ongoing shareholder activism risk (impacts investor relations and market perception).
  • Concentrated voting power held by the Hayek family - their roughly 45% voting stake has previously influenced election results, which may limit the ability of minority shareholders and activists to effect change (impacts governance and shareholder influence).

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