By Svea Herbst-Bayliss
(Reuters) – Activist investors roared back to double digit returns in 2023 after a year of losses, with a stronger equity market and savvy stock picking fueling their rebound, fund managers and their clients said.
More corporate battles appear to be in store as fresh capital is ready to flow into the sector and newcomers flirt with using tools made famous by veteran corporate agitators like Carl Icahn.
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%.
Some investors’ returns were even better with Mason Morfit’s ValueAct Capital posting a 39% return and Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square Holdings reporting a 27% gain.
Legion Partners Asset Management, which pushed for changes at Twilio among other companies, gained 35%; healthcare oriented Caligan Partners rose 37%. Engaged Capital returned 29%, Sachem Head Capital Management rose 24% and Corvex Select Equity Fund rose 21%, investors in the funds said. Anson Funds Management, a multi-strategy fund which is building out its activism strategy, gained 18%, an investor said.
Representatives for the firms declined to comment.
The average gain for activists trailed last year’s S&P 500 24% gain. But the average loss in 2022 was also not as sharp as the 18% dive for the S&P. Many hedge funds tell investors they will not beat markets on the way up but will protect capital on the way down.
“After a largely disappointing 2022, activists generally fared much better last year,” said Sebastian Alsheimer, a partner in law firm Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati’s shareholder engagement and activism practice. “They were helped by a rising stock market, but also deserve credit for deftly identifying targets.”
Investment bank Lazard data showed 252 new activist investor campaigns globally last year, up 7% from 2022 and setting a new record for activity, as investors pressed more European and Asian companies to implement changes.
Activist investors targeted large household name companies including entertainment giant Walt Disney, cloud computing company Salesforce, and pharmaceutical giant Bayer as well as much smaller companies like Clear Channel Outdoor, Forward Air and Overstock.com, now called Beyond.
As interest rate hikes and other factors slowing growth hurt some companies “activists successfully pushed for cost cuts, management changes and strategic alternatives,” said Jessica McDougall, a partner and chair of corporate governance and shareholder engagement at Longacre Square Partners. “Many boards didn’t realize until too late that it takes more than refreshing directors to offset down performance in today’s climate.”
Looking ahead to this year, investors are ready to push companies harder for change, lawyers, bankers and hedge fund managers said. They noted that sometimes activists accelerate changes the board is already contemplating. Some investors said they were ready to commit fresh capital to activists on the view returns will remain strong with a pick up in deal making.
Last year a record 77 first-time activists initiated campaigns, up from 55 the year before, Lazard data showed.
“We expect significant activity in the smaller market cap space because of the relative underperformance compared to the large cap spectrum last year,” Wilson, Sonsini’s Alsheimer said.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by David Gregorio)