"What you can rely on is that we will remain as shareholders, will continue to be vigilant and to monitor the performance of the company and will be holding the board to account in respect of their governance practices."
The chairman of the New Zealand Shareholders Association, John Hawkins, holding proxies for 5 percent of the Abano register, called on Hutson and Reeves to "engage constructively with the company as the company has repeatedly requested them to or they should sell their shares."
"Continuing disruption will only result in loss to all shareholders", who had found Hutson's and Reeves's arguments "totally underwhelming," said Hawkins to applause from the 90 or so shareholders who attended the meeting in person.
Another shareholder described Hutson and Reeves as "two predators of the worst kind" who were seeking to cheat shareholders out of value. "Shame on you," he said to the pair, who sat stoney-faced in the front of the meeting.
Hutson faced questioning on the structure of the Archer bid, which would have seen him and Reeves acquiring Abano's 50 percent share in a jointly owned audiology business for "a nominal sum", and declined to say what that sum would have been had the bid succeeded.
Doyens of the institutional investor community also weighed in on the Abano board's side.
Milford Asset Management principal Brian Gaynor said he found Hutson's criticisms of Abano's Australian growth strategy "strange" when they mirrored the strategies pursued when Hutson was growing the business in New Zealand.
Fisher Funds chief investment officer Mark Brighouse, accompanied by the firm's principal, Carmel Fisher, was scathing of Hutson's and Reeves's attempts to dress up their response to an unsuccessful takeover bid as shareholder activism.
While the meeting had been a "delightful" opportunity for the company and its shareholders to catch up, "I think it's time we all got back to work," he said, also to applause.
The shares last traded unchanged at $6.90.