The Malta Business Weekly

The hedge fund not afraid of a fight

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Amid a spate of high-profile fights in the business world, one New York hedge fund has thrown a lot of punches.

Elliott Management, which oversees about $30bn worth of assets, has earned a reputation over 40 years as a no-holds-barred activist investor, with an unusually large appetite for public face-offs.

The firm famously pursued Argentine debt for more than a decade, seizing one of the country's naval ships while it was docked in Ghana and prompting the country to default. In the UK, it also intervened in coach operator National Express and fought supermarke­t Tesco for damages stemming from a 2014 accounting scandal.

In recent weeks the firm has been making headlines again.

A dispute with the head of aluminium parts maker Arconic led to the ousting of Arconic chief executive Klaus Kleinfeld.

In addition, Elliott has called for overhaul at Australian mining giant BHP Billiton, put pressure on Samsung to restructur­e, and pushed for the hostile takeover of Dulux paint owner AkzoNobel.

"They're renowned for being very involved and active," says Josh Black, editor-in-chief of Activist Insight, which tracks shareholde­r activism. "Just by virtue of their size… they're able to cope with more public situations at any one time."

Founded in 1977 by Paul Singer, Elliott launched with $1.3m.

Singer, a New Jersey native who trained at Harvard Law School, described it at the time as a "tiny, little friends-and-family" firm.

Assets under management have risen sharply since, to about $19bn in 2012 and $30bn today. Its investor include very wealthy private individual­s, sovereign wealth funds, foundation­s and pension funds.

The hedge fund, which has had a base in London since 1994 as Elliott Advisors, has said it's only lost money twice - in 1998 and 2008.

The firm's success has vaulted Singer into the ranks of the mega rich, with a net worth that Forbes estimates at $2.7bn. The 72-yearold Wall Street titan has also reportedly jammed with rocker Meat Loaf.

A supporter of gay rights and Jewish charities, Singer has also attracted attention for his politics.

He's put millions into Republican causes, backing the failed presidenti­al campaigns of Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio and Rudy Giuliani.

Last year, he said Donald Trump's anti-trade policies would lead to a global depression, but he opposed new financial rules introduced under former President Barack Obama and is likely to support some of the changes contemplat­ed by the new regime.

His firm's investment strategies range widely, from buying distressed debt, to intervenin­g during mergers. It often targets companies where it believes the stock is undervalue­d, pushing for leadership changes, spin-offs, or share buybacks, which boost share values for existing stockholde­rs.

Critics compare the firm to a vulture capitalist, with a focus on short-term wins in its own interest. In 2014, French regulators fined Elliott for insider trading.

Politician­s worried about jobs in their districts are among those pushing back on some of the firm's recent efforts.

Singer has rejected those characteri­sations.

"I believe in a balance of power," he said at a conference last year. "There's a whole industry of people to protect corporatio­ns, an industry devoted to saying that long-termism is a valuable, moral thing and short-termism is bad.

"There are activist strategies that are destructiv­e and harmful... but we think the things that we have done have added to stakeholde­r value."

More shareholde­rs are starting to agree, spurring a rise in activist petitions in recent years, says Josh Black of Activist Insight, which identified 260 companies subjected to activist demands in the first three months of this year.

While that is down compared with the same period last year - when Black says rocky markets may have created more opportunit­ies - the firms involved have tended to be bigger and increasing­ly located outside the US, according to Activist Insight.

Elliott itself has made demands on dozens of companies in recent years, turning its attention beyond the technology firms that were once its primary focus. The firm has also branched out its partnershi­ps, working with a private equity firm in at least one instance and taking a large stake in Bentham Ventures, a firm focused on shareholde­r lawsuits. "That's all quite new," Black says. Singer, who predicted the 2008 financial crash and warned of risks in the global market last year, doesn't limit his calls for new leadership to business either.

At the Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado last summer, when asked whom he planned to vote for in the presidenti­al election, he dismissed Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton in favour of someone closer to home.

Half-joking, he said: "I was actually thinking of writing in myself."

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