Brash shareholder activist Evelyn Y. Davis dies at 89

Published 2:46 am Tuesday, November 6, 2018

EVELYN Y. DAVIS uses a gavel to ring the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange in New York on April 1, 2009.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The brash shareholder activist Evelyn Y. Davis, who owned stock in more than 80 public companies and rarely failed to make her presence known at corporate-investor meetings, has died. She was 89.

For decades, Davis was notorious among executives at blue-chip companies for raising a ruckus at annual meetings, sometimes turning the typically staid affairs into yelling matches.

Simultaneously confrontational and flirty, she would demand that a CEO resign, while letting on that she found the executive to be attractive.

Davis relished attention, good or bad.

“There’s no other woman like me!” she would say. “There’s no other shareholder like me!”



Davis died Sunday in Washington.

Evelyn Yvonne De Jong was born to a wealthy family in Amsterdam in 1929, two months before the stock market crash pitched the globe into the Great Depression.

When World War II swept over Europe, Davis and some members of her immediate family, which had Jewish roots, were interned at a concentration camp in Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia, a detail confirmed by the International Tracing Service, a respected archive of Holocaust-era documents.

Davis moved to the Baltimore area after the war with her neurologist father, finished her education, and began investing in the 1950s.

In a biography filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission when she sat on a panel about shareholder rights, she described herself as “a four times Divorcee with NO children.”

Stocks, she liked to say, were her children.

And it seemed she would do anything to advocate and raise attention for what she believed to be the safest path for her investments. She wore a bathing suit to the General Motors meeting in 1970, donned hot pants for another company’s meeting and put on a bandolier for a third.

At United Aircraft, she nominated baseball star Hank Aaron to the board. It was 1974, just after Aaron beat Babe Ruth’s home run record.