Market Exclusive

TIFFANY & CO. (NYSE:TIF) Files An 8-K Other Events

TIFFANY & CO. (NYSE:TIF) Files An 8-K Other EventsItem 8.01. Other Events.

As previously disclosed by Registrant, Registrant and its wholly owned subsidiaries, Tiffany and Company and Tiffany (NJ) Inc. (Registrant and such subsidiaries, together, the “Tiffany Parties”) took action in the courts of the Netherlands seeking to annul the arbitration award issued on December 21, 2013 (the “Arbitration Award”) in favor of the Swatch Group Ltd. (“Swatch”) and its wholly owned subsidiary Tiffany Watch Co. (together with Swatch, the “Swatch Parties”). The Arbitration Award was issued by a three-member arbitral panel convened in the Netherlands to the Arbitration Rules of the Netherlands Arbitration Institute, and reflected the panel’s ruling with respect to certain claims and counterclaims among the Swatch Parties and the Tiffany Parties under the agreements entered into by and among the Swatch Parties and the Tiffany Parties that came into effect in December 2007 (the “Agreements”).
Generally, arbitration awards are final; however, Dutch law does provide for limited grounds on which arbitral awards may be set aside. On March 31, 2014, the Tiffany Parties petitioned to annul the Arbitration Award on these statutory grounds in the District Court of Amsterdam. A three-judge panel presided over the annulment hearing on January 19, 2015, and, on March 4, 2015, issued a decision in favor of the Tiffany Parties. Under this decision, the Arbitration Award was set aside. However, the Swatch Parties took action in the Dutch courts to appeal the District Court’s decision, and a three-judge panel of the Appellate Court of Amsterdam presided over an appellate hearing in respect of the annulment, and the related claim by the Tiffany Parties for return of the Arbitration Damages (as defined below) and related costs, on June 29, 2016.
The Appellate Court issued its decision on April 25, 2017, finding in favor of the Swatch Parties and ordering the Tiffany Parties to reimburse the Swatch Parties EUR 6,340.00 in legal costs. However, the Tiffany Parties have a right to appeal the decision of the Appellate Court to the Supreme Court of the Netherlands, and the Arbitration Award may ultimately be set aside by the Supreme Court. If the Tiffany Parties take action to appeal the decision of the Appellate Court, Registrant’s management expects that the annulment action will not be ultimately resolved until, at the earliest, Registrant’s fiscal year ending January 31, 2019.
If the Arbitration Award is finally annulled, management anticipates that the claims and counterclaims that formed the basis of the arbitration, and potentially additional claims and counterclaims, will be litigated in court proceedings between and among the Swatch Parties and the Tiffany Parties. The identity and location of the courts that would hear such actions have not been determined at this time.
In any litigation regarding the claims and counterclaims that formed the basis of the arbitration, issues of liability and damages will be pled and determined without regard to the findings of the arbitral panel. As such, it is possible that a court could find that the Swatch Parties were in material breach of their obligations under the Agreements, that the Tiffany Parties were in material breach of their obligations under the Agreements or that
neither the Swatch Parties nor the Tiffany Parties were in material breach. If the Swatch Parties’ claims of liability were accepted by the court, the damages award cannot be reasonably estimated at this time, but could exceed the damages paid by the Tiffany Parties under the Arbitration Award and could have a material adverse effect on Registrant’s consolidated financial statements or liquidity.
In the arbitration, the Swatch Parties sought damages based on alternate theories ranging from CHF 73,000,000 to CHF 3,800,000,000, and the Tiffany Parties’ counterclaims sought damages based on alternate theories ranging from CHF 120,000,000 to approximately CHF 540,000,000. to the Arbitration Award, the Tiffany Parties paid the Swatch Parties damages of CHF 402,737,000 (the “Arbitration Damages”), as well as interest from June 30, 2012 to the date of payment, two-thirds of the cost of the arbitration, and two-thirds of the Swatch Parties’ legal fees, expenses and costs. These amounts were paid in full in January 2014.
About TIFFANY & CO. (NYSE:TIF)
Tiffany & Co. is a holding company that operates through its subsidiary companies. The Company’s principal subsidiary, Tiffany and Company (Tiffany), is a jeweler and specialty retailer. Through its subsidiaries, the Company designs and manufactures products and operates TIFFANY & CO. retail stores. The Company’s segments include Americas, Asia-Pacific, Japan, Europe and Other. The Americas segment includes sale in Company-operated TIFFANY & CO. stores in the United States, Canada and Latin America. The Asia-Pacific segment includes over 80 Company-operated TIFFANY & CO. stores in China, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Australia, Singapore, Macau, Malaysia and Thailand. The Japan segment includes approximately 60 Company-operated TIFFANY & CO. stores. The retail sales in Europe are transacted in over 40 Company-operated TIFFANY & CO. stores. The Other segment includes retail sales and wholesale distribution; wholesale sales of diamonds, and licensing agreements. TIFFANY & CO. (NYSE:TIF) Recent Trading Information
TIFFANY & CO. (NYSE:TIF) closed its last trading session up +0.90 at 92.59 with 969,693 shares trading hands.
Exit mobile version