The decision to end his fight against the deal came after a second proxy-advisory firm, Glass Lewis & Co., recommended shareholders back the transaction. The first proxy-advisory firm, Institutional Shareholder Services, announced support of the deal on Aug. 10.
In addition, the decision also stemmed from significant shareholder overlap between Cigna and Express Scripts, according to Mr. Icahn.
“We have informed the [Securities and Exchange Commission] that we no longer intend to solicit proxies to vote against the transaction,” the statement reads.
Even before two proxy advisors recommended that shareholders support the deal, Mr. Icahn faced a difficult fight because he waited so long to publicly criticize the deal. Cigna last week called Mr. Icahn’s opposition to the takeover “misguided and shortsighted.”
Shareholders of both companies are slated to vote on the takeover Aug. 24.
More articles on payers:
8 recent payer-provider disputes, resolutions
Humana divests $2.4B long-term insurance business
Risk adjustment payments to be based on 2018 premiums, CMS proposes
