Investors set sights on Europe
AFTER buying big American brands like Apple, Pepsi and Yahoo!, activist shareholders – investors in search of big dividends – are now setting their sights on European companies like Nestle.
“No company is really immune from activism except perhaps for the very largest companies,” Gregory Taxin, managing director of Spotlight Advisory, a consulting firm for activists, said.
The favoured targets of activists, corporate attorney David Katz said, are companies that have a lot of cash that has not been returned to shareholders.
Announcing plans last week to buy $3.5-billion (R45.7-billion) of Nestle shares, US billionaire Daniel Loeb revealed the European ambitions of these investors with bulging wallets who say they want to restore power to shareholders.
In addition to cost-cutting, Loeb is asking Nestle to sell its historic stake in L’Oreal to boost the share price and dividends.
“L’Oreal has been a fantastic investment,” Loeb’s spokeswoman Elissa Doyle said.
In the wake of Loeb’s move, Nestle announced the acquisition of $21-billion (R274-billion) of its own shares, which should boost the stock price.
But Katz said: “I do not know if this will be enough to remove the pressure.”
Loeb is not the first US activist to go after a foreign giant.
His compatriot Nelson Peltz, through his investment fund Trian Partners, holds a stake in the French yogurt-maker Danone.
And Paul Singer has invested, via his Elliott Management fund, in South Korea’s Samsung, the Australian-British mining group BHP Billiton and the Bank of East Asia.
All want the same thing: quick returns on investment by requiring cost-cutting, asset sales or share buyback programmes.
When they do not succeed, these activists usually engage in high profile media campaigns, and often win.
More than 2 900 activist campaigns have been recorded in the United States since 2010, including 645 last year alone, according to FTI Consulting. Most sectors of the economy are affected.
But “the US market remains crowded and generally overvalued, [so] activist investors will continue to focus their sights on foreign jurisdictions, including not only Europe, but Australia and Asia as well,” Andrew Freedman, co-head of the Shareholder Activism group at the Olshan Frome Wolosky law firm, said.
“The type of corporate self-reflection occurring in the US is happening to a much lesser degree in Europe, leaving more opportunities at European companies for activist investors to catalyse value creation.”
The continent also is in the midst of political stabilisation with the start of negotiations on Brexit, while in the United States there remain questions about the major reforms – tax cuts and infrastructure investment – promised by Donald Trump.
To succeed in Europe, however, activists will have to deal with strong trade unions and government interventions, which is rarely the case in the United States.
“Activist investors do not invest in a company to immediately go hostile or start a proxy contest,” Freedman said.
“Their hope is for real, behind-the-scenes dialogue with receptive management.”