Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks (2024)

|

New York

Trade unions rarely look to corporate raiders for inspiration. Yet the Strategic Organising Centre (SOC), a coalition of North American workers groups, is mounting the sort of campaign normally associated with hedge funds. The group’s target is Starbucks, a coffee-shop chain with a market capitalisation of $107bn. Whereas traditional activist investors take a chunk of a company and pressure its management to change strategy, hoping to gain from a bump in the share price, the SOC owns a mere $16,000-worth of Starbucks shares, and ultimately wants to improve the lot of the firm’s workers.

Its pitch is that the interests of shareholders and workers are, in fact, aligned. Starbucks is wasting money and alienating customers with its approach to “human-capital management”, the group argues. Productivity would be higher, and spending on consultants lower, should Starbucks follow its workplace advice. Therefore it wants three of its candidates appointed to Starbucks’s 11-person board. The hot-drinks behemoth is less convinced. The board is already stocked with “world-class business leaders”, says a representative, who adds that in the last fiscal year a fifth of profits went towards wage increases, training and new equipment.

Five years after the Business Roundtable, a 200-strong group of chief executives at some of America’s biggest companies, embraced stakeholder capitalism, the mood is now rather different. Most bosses would prefer to leave politics to the politicians and avoid the boycotts and bad publicity that come with wading into culture wars. They are content to focus on shareholder returns, rather than trying to improve society at large. But although chief executives have mostly abandoned their flirtation with stakeholder capitalism, they are still living with its consequences.

This year’s proxy season, which gets under way in the spring, will probably surpass even 2023’s for proposals of non-binding resolutions. That year marked a record for environmental, social and governance (ESG) motions. At the large and small American companies that comprise the Russell 3000 index, 513 of the 836 proposals put to shareholders focused on such questions, according to the Conference Board, a think-tank. The increase reflected a legal shift. In 2021 the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), a regulator, said that it would no longer allow companies to exclude measures as irrelevant if they focused on a “significant social policy”.

Conservatives are also mobilising. Last year’s proxy season included 92 anti-ESG proposals, up from 54 the year before. On February 28th at the annual meeting of Apple, a tech giant, shareholders were asked to consider five such proposals, including one asking the firm to report on the risks of failing to consider “viewpoints” in its equal-opportunities policies. The supporting statement says there is evidence that conservatives may be discriminated against in Silicon Valley. Another two, submitted by conservative pressure groups, asked the company to report on how it arbitrates between government and consumer interests, in particular in its dealings with China. For their part, liberals offered only one resolution: asking Apple to change how it reports on racial pay gaps. The company recommended that shareholders reject every one, which they did.

Politics by other means

Will other campaigns find more success? In 2023theaverage environmental proposal receivedthesupport of just a fifth of shareholders, down from a thirdtheyear before. Shareholders are being more disciplined, says Lindsey Stewart of Morningstar, a research outfit, only backing climate-change resolutions that are focused on the emissions over which companies have direct control or that they will have to disclose to satisfy regulators, rather than those in their supply chains. Financiers have realised that it is not their job to set energy or industrial policy, he explains. Meanwhile, anti-ESG proposals fare even worse: on average they receive the support of only 5% of shareholders.

Although such campaigns are rarely successful, they do matter. ExxonMobil, an oil supermajor, is taking the unusual step of suing its own shareholders who have put forward green proposals. Arjuna Capital, a hedge fund, and Follow This, a campaign group, used a stake of less than $4,000 to advance a non-binding proposal to accelerate greenhouse-gas reductions with targets and timelines. The proposal has been withdrawn, but Exxon is still pursuing the case. It says the underlying issue with the SEC’s approach is still unresolved: clarity is needed about proxy-voting rules that“are increasingly being infringed by activists masquerading as shareholders”. Many companies quietly agree.

And as the Starbucks case suggests, crusades are becoming increasingly ambitious. More shareholder-activist campaigns began in 2023 than ever before, according to Lazard, an investment bank. Smaller groups, including the SOC, have been helped by rules known as “universal proxy”, which were introduced in 2022 by the SEC and mean that both a company’s and its dissident shareholders’ nominees to the board of directors must be on the same ballot. Instead of shareholders choosing one slate or the other, they can now mix and match with outsiders and insiders. The SOC has spent about $3m on its fight. The result will indicate whether unions can enlist Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis, which advise institutional investors, to their cause.

Other small shareholders are pursuing similar strategies. In Europe Bluebell Capital, a tiny hedge fund, has begun a battle with BP, another oil supermajor. The fund argues that BP should quit the offshore-wind business, which it says is destroying value for shareholders. It would prefer BP to increase oil and gas production, as well as to return money to shareholders, who could then invest in better green options, says Giuseppe Bivona, a partner at Bluebell, defending the fund’s environmental credentials. “Contrary to probable superficial appearances, we believe BP is pursuing an ‘anti-woke’ strategy,” the fund’s letter to shareholders argues.

Dissident investors do not need to win board seats to achieve some sort of victory. After presenting its latest set of results to shareholders, BP increased the pace of buybacks to placate investors who are cool on its green-energy strategy. Meanwhile, the SOC hopes that Starbucks’ defence against its campaign might include concessions. Traditional activist investors urge companies to break up, divest assets or return cash to shareholders. Even without campaigns being launched, boardrooms have come to do these things so as to avoid attracting the attention of corporate raiders in the first place. A new generation of corporate raiders, taking advantage of cuddly capitalism, will hope their campaigns have a similar impact.

For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics,finance and markets, sign up toMoney Talks, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline "Stakeholders at the gate"

March 2nd 2024

  • Stockmarkets are booming. But the good times are unlikely to last
  • Are passive funds to blame for market mania?
  • Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks
  • How Trump and Biden have failed to cut ties with China
  • Uranium prices are soaring. Investors should be careful
  • What do you do with 191bn frozen euros owned by Russia?
Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks (1)

From the March 2nd 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks (2024)

FAQs

What are the disadvantages of activist investing? ›

4. Con: Can be short-term focused - Activist investors are often looking for quick returns, which can lead them to push for changes that are focused on short-term gains rather than long-term sustainability. This can be harmful to the company and its shareholders in the long run.

Is hedge fund activism good or bad? ›

There are immediate and steady job losses after an activist hedge fund targets a company. Controlling for changes in company size, after one year, the number of job losses amount on average to 4.5%, which continues to grow to 7% by year five.

Are activist investors good or bad for capital markets? ›

Many perceive activists as being smarter than the average investor. They have extensive experience, important industry contacts, and access to solid research. However, activists aren't always right. Their timing can be off, and they can and do sometimes lose money.

What is the activist approach in investing? ›

The activist investor identifies a target and then obtains a sizeable stake in the company's equity, which often signals to the market that changes are soon to come. Hence, after the news gets around that an activist firm has become a shareholder, the company's share price can rise in anticipation of a turnaround.

How successful are activist investors? ›

Activist investors, who push corporations to change leadership, streamline operations or put themselves up for sale, boasted an average 20.2% return last year, Hedge Fund Research data showed. In 2022 activists lost an average 16%.

What is the negative impact of shareholder activism? ›

(2022) note that shareholder activism can have negative consequences. Challenging managerial practices may destabilize the company (O'Rourke, 2003) or distract management from long-term projects (Brav et al., 2008b).

Why do rich people invest in hedge funds? ›

Hedge funds originated as a vehicle to help diversify investment portfolios, manage risk and produce reliable returns over time. While hedge funds' investor base has evolved though the years – from individuals to institutions such as pensions, universities and foundations – their core goals have remained the same.

Do rich people use hedge funds? ›

Therefore, an investor in a hedge fund is commonly regarded as an accredited investor. This means that they meet a required minimum level of income or assets. Typical investors are institutional investors, such as pension funds and insurance companies, and wealthy individuals.

What is the biggest hedge fund scandal? ›

Madoff investment scandal
Bernard L. Madoff
Criminal chargeSecurities fraud, investment advisor trust fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, false statements, perjury, making false filings with the SEC, theft from an employee benefit plan
Penalty150 years in federal prison and $170 billion in restitution
6 more rows

What is the return of activist investors? ›

Activist hedge funds are clawing back their returns after a tough 2022, but they're still trailing the stock market. These so-called activist shareholders have seen their investments climb about 14% through July, according to HFR, a hedge-fund data tracker.

How do you defend against activist investors? ›

No duty to discuss or negotiate, but usually advisable to meet with the activist and discuss the activist's criticisms and proposals; company participants in any such meeting should prepare carefully with the company's activist response team and there should be at least two company participants in any such meeting; no ...

How do activist investors make money? ›

Activist investors, sometimes called shareholder activists, usually try to make money by investing in underperforming companies, trying to improve their performance and then selling their shares for profit.

Who are the successful activist investors? ›

Carl Icahn, Bill Ackman, Nelson Peltz, and Daniel Loeb are some of the notable names called in the same breath with the biggest activist campaigns. The corporate raiders have been on a roll in recent years, with most engineering campaigns on stock valuations tanking at the height of the pandemic.

Does activist investing work? ›

Multiple studies have shown that activism succeeds in raising share prices, at least temporarily. A major recent study by Lucian Bebchuk, Alon Brav, and Wei Jiang of activist investments from 1994 through 2007 also found five-year improvements in the operating performance of targeted companies.

Do activist investors create value? ›

First, activist investors can indeed increase value by influencing the firm's corporate policies, i.e., the treatment effect of activism.

What are the 3 disadvantages of active investment? ›

Active Investing Disadvantages

All those fees over decades of investing can kill returns. Active risk: Active managers are free to buy any investment they believe meets their criteria. Management risk: Fund managers are human, so they can make costly investing mistakes.

What are the disadvantages of investing? ›

10 Disadvantages of Long-Term Investments
  • Liquidity Constraints. According to our methodology, people investing in long-term investments tend to face several liquidity constraints. ...
  • Opportunity Cost. ...
  • Limited Flexibility. ...
  • Emotional Stress. ...
  • Limited Diversification.
Nov 29, 2023

What are 5 cons of investing? ›

While there are some great reasons to invest in the stock market, there are also some downsides to consider before you get started.
  • Risk of Loss. There's no guarantee you'll earn a positive return in the stock market. ...
  • The Allure of Big Returns Can Be Tempting. ...
  • Gains Are Taxed. ...
  • It Can Be Hard to Cut Your Losses.
Aug 30, 2023

What are the disadvantages of growth investing? ›

Investment in growth stocks can be risky. Because they typically do not offer dividends, the only opportunity an investor has to earn money on their investment is when they eventually sell their shares. If the company does not do well, investors take a loss on the stock when it's time to sell.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Golda Nolan II

Last Updated:

Views: 6521

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (58 voted)

Reviews: 81% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Golda Nolan II

Birthday: 1998-05-14

Address: Suite 369 9754 Roberts Pines, West Benitaburgh, NM 69180-7958

Phone: +522993866487

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Shopping, Quilting, Cooking, Homebrewing, Leather crafting, Pet

Introduction: My name is Golda Nolan II, I am a thoughtful, clever, cute, jolly, brave, powerful, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.