Investors challenge two-for-one vote regime at France's Orange

The logo of French telecom operator Orange is seen during the company's 2013 annual results presentation in Paris March 6, 2014. REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen

PARIS (Reuters) - An investment management company is seeking to prevent French telecommunications company Orange shifting to a system where long-term investors get two votes per share rather than one, a move that has failed in other high-profile cases. The firm, PhiTrust Active Investors, said it would put a resolution to Orange's May 27 annual shareholder meeting aimed at preventing the telecoms group conforming with a law designed by the government to encourage longer-term commitment to firms by investors. PhiTrust said its opening shot had the backing of 8 investors representing 1 percent of Orange's capital. To succeed, such a resolution would have to muster support on the day of two-thirds of votes cast at the annual meeting. Failure to do so would introduce double-voting rights by default. The French government is the top shareholder in Orange with a stake of in the region of 25 percent - a holding which based on other such cases should be enough to prevent the rebels from winning. Nobody was immediately available at Orange to comment. In another high-profile case, the government has upped its stake in Renault to almost 20 percent from around 15 to make sure it can thwart the opt-out vote from the so-called Florange law at the upcoming April 30 shareholder meeting [ID:nL5N0XD4WL]. A similar attempt by investors who fear tighter state control failed earlier this month at water utility Veolia. Veolia shareholders who wanted to keep a one share one vote governance structure lost a vote on April 22 despite the fact that a significant 50.2 percent of shareholders voted in favour of the resolution that would have kept the principle of one share one vote. [ID:nL5N0XJ2KV] (Reporting By Brian Love; Editing by Andrew Callus)