Shareholder Activist

  

Categories: Board of Directors

Carl Icahn is the most famous one. He buys big stakes (10%? 15%?) of companies that have performed poorly for a long time. He identifies 3-4 things that the company can do to immediately to goose its stock price (like...how about selling that fleet of jets you keep for your execs...or how about selling off the money-losing Somalia division...or how about just getting a new CEO who isn't, in fact, a drunk?) The activist buys shares. And remember: it's the common shares that elect the board, and since usually less than half of a company's total number of shares ever vote in elections, owning 15% is often enough to make huge changes in a company's management, especially when the stock has performed poorly for a long time.

So the big shareholder gets active. He rattles the cage of the company and hopes to generate value for his own shareholders. The system works for companies that have had bad results for a long time; not so much for companies that have done extremely well.

Like...try complaining that Jeff Bezos has done a bad job running Amazon and listen to the laughter you'll get from the major institutions that have owned the stock for the last decade or two.

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Finance: What is Activist Investing?11 Views

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Finance allah shmoop what is activist investing Welshman gigi foot

00:08

massagers has been around forever great grandpappy elmo spanish for

00:14

the mo sold them to the u s army after

00:16

long marches through the r den in the first world

00:19

war Teo you know end all wars The soldiers then

00:23

bought them when they got home and consumers followed suit

00:26

with company was so successful that it didn't need to

00:30

be all that efficiently run It went public in nineteen

00:33

sixty five and was a good stock for a while

00:36

Then in the early nineteen nineties the company didn't adapt

00:40

to the new world of internet distribution and robot manufacturer

00:44

so the stock languished It remained the same price in

00:48

nineteen ninety five that it was some two plus decades

00:51

later Well during that same period the overall stock market

00:54

went up almost five hundred percent and shmoop gigi's primary

00:58

competitors P eta terrible went up eight hundred percent stealing

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loads of market share from schmidt ge whose product was

01:06

now ah define a ble inferior Well since this company

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was public and largely now owned by the public the

01:14

public had the right to have a say in how

01:16

the company was managed Endless angry letters were sent to

01:20

the ceo elmo the fourth jr a direct descendant of

01:24

happy elmo the founder Those letters were ignored more letters

01:29

followed to the board and they were ignored as well

01:32

Then finally a set of activist investors decided it was

01:36

time to step in Ironically on comfortably massage feet courtesy

01:41

of shmoop gigi well the activist investors simply coalesced all

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of the common stock shares they could find you know

01:48

identifying who owned him and said hey can you vote

01:50

with us And when the next board election came where

01:53

three of the eleven director seats were to be voted

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on while the activist investors elected their own slate or

02:00

group of directors who would begin to force the company

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to behave more like a shareholder friendly profit seeking company

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instead of ah make work project for the progeny of

02:11

pappy elmo to simply take a salary and make tens

02:14

of thousands of sore feet relatively happy In fact the

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activism here was pretty common in situations like this fat

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companies who didn't streamline and adapt but who still had

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pretty good brand names were out there And while there's

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a whole qadri of lawyers who do little other than

02:31

chase companies earning twenty cents a share when they should

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be earning a dollar a share for share holders like

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that's who they work for shareholders Activist investing has become

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so common that it is almost an industry or investment

02:45

category or strategy unto itself now and that's A good

02:48

thing because some of those fat cos well you know 00:02:51.66 --> [endTime] they could stand to lose a pound or two

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