The Borneo Post

In another push, Elliott calls on Hyundai to boost returns, review assets

-

SEOUL: US hedge fund Elliott renewed pressure on South Korea’s Hyundai Motor Group, urging it to return US$ 10.6 billion of capital to shareholde­rs and consider selling non- core assets, including costly land it bought in Seoul for new headquarte­rs.

The call came after Hyundai Motor posted a sharp drop in thirdquart­er earnings in late October, hitting its shares and dashing hopes of better shareholde­r returns.

In May, Hyundai Motor Group, backed by founding family members, shelved an ownership restructur­ing plan that would have given the son of its aging chairman more control of the conglomera­te, following opposition from Elliott.

In September, Elliott, run by billionair­e Paul Singer, made a fresh proposal for Hyundai’s ownership structure and suggested adding new independen­t directors to its respective boards.

In an open letter on Tuesday, Elliott called on Hyundai to return up to 8 trillion won ( US$ 7.1 billion), or 31 per cent of its market value, and for its parts affiliate Hyundai Mobis to return 4 trillion won, or 22 per cent of its market capitalisa­tion, to shareholde­rs, preferably by share buybacks.

Elliott said Hyundai Motor Group, despite having “excess capital,” lagged behind peers such as General Motors and Toyota Motor in shareholde­r returns, citing a report by consultanc­y Conway MacKenzie.

Elliott asked Hyundai to review its non- core assets, “with an eye toward divesting assets that are either underutili­zed or contribute low returns.”

It said the assets included land Hyundai bought in 2014 for 10.55 trillion won, more than triple the appraisal value, to build headquarte­rs in the affluent district of Gangnam in Seoul.

“Given the cost of delay and the lack of progress made thus far, Elliott also reserved the right to put forward the various recommenda­tions as shareholde­r resolution­s in the next general meetings,” it said.

Elliott, which challenged Samsung Electronic­s in 2016, called on Hyundai to join the South Korean electronic­s giant in diversifyi­ng its board, improving shareholde­r returns and addressing a complex shareholdi­ng structure.

“Hyundai Motor Group is now the only major corporate group in Korea with an unreformed legacy shareholde­r structure and no plan to address it,” Elliott said in a statement on Tuesday, saying the group’s “reform efforts have stalled.”

Hyundai Motor could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

In April, Elliott said it owned more than US$ 1 billion worth of shares in three Hyundai group companies – Hyundai Motor Co, Kia Motors Corp and auto-parts maker Hyundai Mobis Co Ltd.

Elliott said on Tuesday it held more than 2.5 per cent of common stock in Hyundai Mobis, 3 per cent in Hyundai Motor and 2.1 per cent in Kia Motors. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia