Investment advisory firm Yacktman Asset Management said it would support the addition of Trian Fund Management LP`s Nelson Peltz to Procter & Gamble Co`s board and criticized the company for engaging in "a costly and distracting proxy fight" with the activist investor.

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Peltz, whose fund is P&G`s fifth-largest shareholder, has been locked in a prolonged battle with the maker of Gillette razors and Tide detergents and has been pushing for a seat on the company`s board.

Yacktman said it owned $1.3 billion worth of P&G shares and cited Peltz`s sizeable stake in P&G and his experience with other consumer products companies for its support.

"Current outside board members have no meaningful economic investment in the company`s success or failure," Yacktman said in a letter to P&G`s board on Thursday.

P&G spokeswoman Eliza Rothstein, in response to Yacktman`s letter, said the company "did not ask for this proxy contest" and is committed to preventing anything from derailing the progress it is making in terms of its strategy and financial results.

P&G has argued that Peltz`s plan to boost shareholder value by organizing the company into three largely autonomous business units would result in higher costs, lower profits and another restructuring that could lead to a breakup of the company.

"One voice on a board cannot upend a successful strategy," Yacktman said in a letter to the company`s board, referring to P&G`s argument that Peltz could derail the progress it has made.

Trian was not immediately available for comment.

P&G`s shareholders will vote on Oct. 10 on whether to add Peltz to the board.

The company`s shares, which have risen 6.5 percent since Peltz announced his stake in the company in February, were slightly lower in midday trading.

(This article has not been edited by Zeebiz editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)