5/4/2026

Stokes Camp Flexes Muscle at Southern Cross, Chairman Resigns

Australian Financial Review (05/04/26) Buckingham-Jones, Sam

Southern Cross Media (ASX: SXL) Chairman Heith Mackay-Cruise is resigning and handing over to a long-time ally of Kerry Stokes, as the businessman strengthens his grip over the radio and television empire. The billionaire Stokes family merged Network Seven owner Seven West (ASX: SWM) into Southern Cross earlier this year in a deal that did not require approval from the latter’s shareholders. The deal handed Stokes almost $200 million in tax credits, and suggested he was happy to walk away from the business, where he had wielded outsize influence for three decades. But the ouster of Mackay-Cruise, who had been the chairman of Southern Cross before taking the job at the merged company, indicates Stokes is reasserting control. He has been helped by Southern Cross shareholders, including Sandon Capital, which had requested a vote to remove Mackay-Cruise and two other directors. Mackay-Cruise will be replaced by Teresa Dyson, who had been on the Seven West board since 2017 before becoming a director of the merged company. Dyson is a tax adviser and a former partner at Ashurst and Deloitte who sits on the Takeovers Panel and the boards of Humm Group and Shine Justice. The change in chair is just one of a series of moves that suggest a stronger Stokes influence at Southern Cross, which owns the Seven Network, the Triple M and Hit radio networks, and West Australian Bruce McWilliam, a long-time Seven West executive, has bought a $14 million stake in Southern Cross – a little over 5% – and has made it clear he wants to join the board. He has been reaching out to major shareholders to buy more of the company. With Mackay-Cruise stepping down, Southern Cross said it was looking for “independent non-executive directors.” Given his long association with Stokes, this could potentially rule McWilliam out of a board position. Likewise, former NRMA chief executive and former Seven West chief operating officer Rohan Lund was appointed chief executive of Southern Cross, with former Southern Cross chief executive John Kelly missing out. Lund started on Friday and has wasted little time outlining his vision for the company to staff. “We need to hustle for the revenue we deserve. We need to reset our costs quickly so we have the capacity to do what we do best. We need to meet our audience on any device, at any time,” he wrote in an email. He is restructuring the newly merged company into three divisions – audio, publishing and television – according to people briefed on his plans who requested anonymity to speak more freely. The audio division would be led by Kelly and publishing by Seven’s former West Australian chief executive, Maryna Fewster. A television lead is being recruited, and Lund is considering bringing back Angus Ross, who ran Seven West’s television business until he was cut by Mackay-Cruise less than two months ago. Fewster and Ross were widely known to be close to Stokes. Lund and Dyson face steep challenges at Southern Cross. Free-to-air television revenue has been on a downward trajectory for years, although the Seven Network remains a dominant player. Seven and the Nine Network (owned by Nine Entertainment (ASX: NEC), publisher of The Australian Financial Review) command about 81% of metropolitan television revenue, which has fallen year-on-year in 43 of the past 48 months – down 10% a year, on average. Radio revenue is also declining, but far more slowly. The merger of Seven West and Southern Cross was meant to create a group with scale – it has about $1.8 billion in revenue and $215 million in earnings – that would appeal to investors. The opposite happened. Its market capitalization has fallen from around $430 million to just $287 million this year. Sandon’s chief investment officer, Gabriel Radzyminski, who last week lodged formal applications to remove Mackay-Cruise and fellow directors Ido Leffler and Marina Go, said he was pleased the chairman was leaving. “We look forward to engaging with the board and other shareholders about the long-term future of the company,” Radzyminski said. Mackay-Cruise will step down on June 30, while Leffler will stay until the annual meeting this year, the company said. Go, it noted, had the backing of SGH Limited (ASX: SGH), the ASX-listed industrials conglomerate which holds 20% of Southern Cross. He spent six years at Southern Cross, two of those as chairman. In his short tenure at the top of the combined company, he moved aggressively to rein in costs and cut those who he deemed unnecessary – the merger promised savings of $30 million. Days after the deal closed, he sacked Jeff Howard, the former Seven West chief executive who it was agreed would lead the combined group. Mackay-Cruise also removed Ross and Seven’s chief operating officer Trent Dickeson, as well as Seven’s human resources chief, Lucinda Gemmell, and Southern Cross’ chief legal officer, Sarah Tinsley. “I believe [Southern Cross] is well-positioned for the future, and it is the right time for me to move on to other challenges,” he said. In his note, Lund paid tribute to Mackay-Cruise and spoke of his enthusiasm for returning to the media. “There is something very special about working in media. It’s tumultuous and bumpy. It’s thrilling and joyous. I really missed it,” he said.

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5/4/2026

Norwegian Cruise Cuts Profit Forecast as Middle East Conflict Raises Fuel Costs

Reuters (05/04/26) Mistry Anuja

Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH.N) cut its annual profit forecast on Monday, as the cruise operator battles with surging fuel costs linked to the war in Iran as well as tepid demand for its sea voyages, sending its shares down 6% in premarket trading. Global oil prices have jumped above $100 a barrel after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf's vital maritime chokepoint. More than $50 billion worth of crude oil supply had been lost since the start of the Iran war, according to Reuters calculations as of mid-April. Rivals Carnival (CCL.N) and Royal Caribbean (RCL.N) have also highlighted potential hits from rising fuel costs, and several global airlines have warned of jet fuel shortages. Meanwhile, the conflict has forced consumers to re-evaluate travel plans, particularly to Europe, Norwegian said, adding to revenue pressures for the company, which said its current booking range was below optimal due to execution missteps that led to shorter itineraries in the Caribbean. Norwegian now expects fiscal 2026 adjusted profit between $1.45 and $1.79 per share, compared with its prior forecast of $2.38. Its first-quarter revenue of $2.33 billion missed analysts' average estimate of $2.36 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Still, the company expects annual cost savings of about $125 million from its turnaround efforts under new CEO John Chidsey. It also sees full-year adjusted net cruise cost, excluding fuel, to be about flat, compared with a 1% rise in the year earlier. Chidsey, who took the helm in February, outlined a turnaround plan focused on tighter financial discipline and better execution. The changes follow pressure Elliott Investment Management, now Norwegian's largest shareholder, which resulted in the appointment of five new board members in March. "We see the guidance reduction as a potential clearing event, with management execution now doubly important to return NCLH to a positive earnings cadence," Jefferies (NYSE: JEF) analysts said in a note. The company reported quarterly adjusted profit of 23 cents, beating estimates of 14 cents.

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5/4/2026

Gun Makers Reach Cooperation Pact After Months of Tense Proxy Battle

Wall Street Journal (05/04/26) Hart, Connor

Sturm, Ruger (NYSE: RGR) said it has entered a strategic cooperation agreement with Beretta, following a months-long and at times contentious dispute over governance, strategy and board control. The agreement marks a de-escalation between two of the world’s most storied gun makers. Dueling narratives have crisscrossed the Atlantic since Beretta disclosed a 7.7% stake in Ruger on Sept. 22, later increasing its holdings to nearly 10% and triggering a proxy contest and competing claims over engagement, strategy and governance direction. Under the terms of their new agreement, Beretta may increase its investment in Ruger to up to 25% of outstanding shares, including through a potential partial tender offer at a minimum price of $44.80 a share in cash. The price represents about a 20% premium to Ruger’s 60-day volume-weighted average price prior to Beretta's tender offer announcement, Ruger said. The offer hasn't yet commenced and remains subject to regulatory approvals. The agreement also gives Beretta the right to nominate up to two independent directors following Ruger's annual meeting this year. Ruger said it will temporarily expand its board to accommodate the nominees, subject to standard governance review. At the same time, Beretta has agreed to a three-year standstill, during which it won't initiate or support proxy contests or similar activist actions, Ruger said. Beretta will generally vote in line with the board's recommendations on most matters, Ruger added, subject to limited exceptions tied to certain proxy advisory firm recommendations or extraordinary transactions. The agreement follows months of escalating tensions between the companies, including disputes over meeting access, board nominations and strategic direction. The conflict included competing proxy filings and allegations from both sides regarding engagement breakdowns and governance concerns, according to prior company statements and filings. Ruger Chairman John Cosentino said the agreement provides stability and reduces expense and distraction, while also preserving the company's independence. Beretta Chief Executive Pietro Gussalli Beretta added the pact aligns with the group’s strategy to expand its U.S. presence, as well as supports its long-term development plans.

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5/3/2026

GameStop Offers to Buy eBay for $56 Billion

Wall Street Journal (05/03/26) Thomas, Lauren

GameStop (GME) Chief Executive Ryan Cohen made an unsolicited offer to buy eBay (EBAY) for about $56 billion and said he saw a path to make the e-commerce company a much bigger competitor to Amazon.com (AMZN). Cohen told The Wall Street Journal on Sunday that GameStop built a roughly 5% stake in eBay and was offering $125 a share in cash and stock, a roughly 20% premium to its closing price on Friday. “eBay should be worth—and will be worth—a lot more money,” Cohen said in an interview. “I’m thinking about turning eBay into something worth hundreds of billions of dollars.” Cohen said GameStop has a commitment letter from TD Bank (NYSE: TD) to provide up to $20 billion in debt financing to help make a deal possible. GameStop delivered an offer letter to eBay on Sunday and released a copy of it following the Journal’s report on the details of the bid. Cohen wrote in the letter to eBay Chairman Paul Pressler that GameStop started building its eBay position on Feb. 4. It said its offer consists of 50% cash and 50% GameStop shares. If eBay isn’t receptive to the proposal, Cohen said he was prepared to run a proxy fight and take the offer directly to its shareholders. The window for shareholders to nominate director candidates at eBay ahead of an annual meeting scheduled for this June has already closed, according to the company’s proxy materials. Cohen told the Journal that putting his video game retailer and eBay under one roof could create opportunities to cut costs and improve earnings. The two companies have some overlap already, including a focus on selling collectibles such as trading cards. “There is nobody who is more qualified, based on my experience, to run the eBay business,” Cohen said, referencing his time at GameStop and previously Chewy (NYSE: CHWY), the online pet-products marketplace he co-founded. The Journal reported Friday evening that GameStop had been building an undisclosed stake in eBay and was preparing an offer. eBay was valued at around $46 billion ahead of that report. Its shares shot up around 12% in after-hours trading on the news. GameStop is a much smaller company than eBay, valued at around $12 billion. That makes pulling off this sort of deal no easy feat. GameStop has around $9 billion in cash on its balance sheet to put toward a deal. It wasn’t immediately clear how it would come up with the rest of the money needed for a $56 billion acquisition. It is possible Cohen could tap outside investors, such as Middle Eastern sovereign-wealth funds, to back the deal, people familiar with the matter said. Some Wall Street analysts are already skeptical that Cohen could pull off an acquisition. Investors have embraced eBay’s focus on collectibles and other niche categories. “Why disrupt things? The turnaround is working,” Bernstein analysts said about eBay in a note to clients. Cohen built a big stake in GameStop in 2020 and criticized the company for moving too slowly toward e-commerce. He started gaining a cultlike following among retail traders online and proceeded to make a number of other activist bets, including at Bed Bath & Beyond (NYSE: BBBY). GameStop gained even greater fame during the meme-stock craze of 2021, in which individual traders bid up the retailer’s stock. In 2023, the company named Cohen, who was already serving as chairman, as its new CEO. Under Cohen’s watch, GameStop has closed hundreds of stores and exited much of its international business. It has pivoted toward higher-margin items such as trading cards, retro games and consoles that strike a nostalgic chord with shoppers. Cohen said he saw ways to integrate GameStop’s bricks-and-mortar stores with eBay’s online operations to help scale both companies. The stores could become locations to collect and authenticate items from eBay sellers, for example, he said. He also said he believed eBay should be doing more around live commerce, where brands sell directly to shoppers via real-time video streams. “It could be a legit competitor to Amazon,” Cohen said about eBay. eBay has already been taking steps to cut costs, with a strategy that includes embracing artificial-intelligence tools to help streamline its buying and selling processes. In February, the company said it would be culling about 6.5% of its global workforce, or roughly 800 employees. Late last month, eBay reported strong first-quarter results and said that its gross merchandise volume—or the total value of all paid transactions between users on its marketplace—climbed 18% versus the prior-year period. Smaller companies have pulled off much larger deals before. Paramount Skydance (NASDAQ: PSKY) earlier this year emerged victorious in a bidding war for media Warner Bros. Discovery (NASDAQ: WBD). Charter Communications (NASDAQ: CHTR) struck a debt-fueled merger with the much bigger Time Warner Cable in 2015. Cohen also has a potentially massive payday at stake if he can pull it all off. GameStop adjusted Cohen’s compensation package at the beginning of the year to give him extra incentive to boost the company’s market value and profitability. He stands to make as much as $35 billion in stock if certain criteria are met, including if its market value hits $100 billion, the Journal previously reported. Cohen said in the letter to eBay that he would serve as CEO of the combined company after a deal closes. He said he wouldn’t receive a salary and would be compensated solely based on the performance of the combined business. “I’m going to be as focused on eBay and as personally involved as I have been in the GameStop turnaround for the next few years,” Cohen told the Journal. GameStop is being advised by the law firm White & Case and bankers at TD Securities.

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5/1/2026

Shares in Japanese Toilet Maker Toto Soar on AI-Related Pivot

Financial Times (05/01/26) Dempsey, Harry

Japanese toilet maker Toto’s (TYO: 5332) shares surged 18% to a five-year high on Friday after unveiling plans to boost production of semiconductor components and posting record annual profits. Its advanced ceramics business has turned Japan’s largest toilet manufacturer into an AI play that has been driving a near-50% share price rise this year and caught the attention of Palliser Capital. Shares in the company were recently trading around ¥6,425 ($40.86) each, the highest since 2021 and taking gains over the past six months to 65%. Despite being better known for its bidet washlets that have defined the Japanese toilet globally, Toto is also the world’s second-largest producer of electrostatic chucks used in the manufacturing of Nand memory chips. Surging sales of semiconductor components — gaining 34% year-on-year — have lifted the division to account for more than half of Toto’s operating profit, which jumped 11% to ¥53.8 billion in the year to March. The toilet producer expects sales for the unit to grow 2% in the coming year, as it pledged to invest ¥30 billion to strengthen mass production, as well as boost research and development, by the end of the 2028 financial year. Other Japanese companies that produce components essential to the rollout of AI have been benefiting from investor interest and pledging to pour funds into boosting output. Palliser had called on Toto to promote the division’s importance to the market and plough more of its investment into the highly lucrative segment when it took a stake in February. The big rally for Toto comes despite the threat to its regular business of toilets and bathroom fittings from potential adhesive and plastic shortages due to the Middle East energy shock. Toto suspended new orders of prefabricated baths in mid-April. Although it has since gradually resumed taking orders, building contractors in Japan say that they still cannot get hold of bathroom units to complete projects. The toilet producer said that it expects the risks related to geopolitical turmoil to ease from July, as it factored in a ¥7 billion hit. Many analysts, however, were underwhelmed by Toto’s results. “Profit guidance gets a passing grade,” said Citi analyst Masashi Miki. “Although Middle East assumptions carry some downside risks.”

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5/1/2026

Twilio's Stock Is Soaring. Its CEO Explains How AI Helped Turn Things Around.

Business Insider (05/01/26) Chan, Rosalie

When Khozema Shipchandler took the helm as CEO of the cloud communications company Twilio (NYSE: TWLO) in early 2024, activist investors were demanding cost cuts. Its stock had declined sharply since its pandemic high in 2021. The company has worked to turn itself around, and its bets on AI may be paying off. Twilio stock soared by more than 19% in out-of-hours trading — hitting its highest level in four years — after a strong earnings report on Thursday. Twilio builds tools that help companies make calls or send texts from apps. For example, if you've ever made a call from the Uber (NYSE: UBER) or Lyft (NASDAQ: LYFT) app to get in touch with your driver, that's powered by Twilio. Twilio was one of the big beneficiaries during the pandemic cloud boom as its stock more than quadrupled between 2020 and 2021, peaking in early 2021. Its stock has never fully recovered to that high, after slumps in 2023 and 2024 when Twilio was viewed as an acquisition target. Now it's picking back up. On Thursday, Twilio reported that its revenue grew 20% year over year — its fastest growth rate in three years. Along with several changes to how Twilio operates, Shipchandler says its bet on integrating AI and data into its product has helped it grow. "Every single one of these companies needs some way to communicate with these customers. They need context to power their interactions," Shipchandler told Business Insider ahead of earnings. Last year, Twilio also had its first full year of GAAP profitability, with nearly $1 billion in free cash flow. Prior to replacing cofounder Jeff Lawson as CEO, Shipchandler served as the company's CFO, and activists were demanding that Twilio make changes and cut costs as its growth stalled and it burned through cash. "I wouldn't say that we caved into the demands," Shipchandler said. "We certainly listened to the investors, to the extent that there are a number of things worth considering. We had already considered how we would get smarter about the cost profile." In particular, activist investors wanted Twilio to sell Segment, a customer data business it had acquired for $3.2 billion, which was unprofitable. Shipchandler calls this a "short-sighted call." Ultimately, Twilio decided to keep Segment, and he says it became one of the most "consequential decisions we made." Segment has helped Twilio with integrating data into AI models to improve customer engagement. Customers can then use Twilio's communication and data capabilities to build their apps. Twilio also sees a major opportunity in AI agents. IDC has projected that Twilio could be the underlying infrastructure for 80-100 million agents by 2029. Twilio itself uses AI tools such as Gemini and Claude Code internally, and Shipchandler said employees have achieved a 15% productivity boost with AI. It uses AI to help with coding, as well as for customer support and inbound sales. The company has made other changes to its operations besides betting on AI. Shipchandler said that the company is focusing on a few of its top products to get a higher return on investment for customers, rather than spreading itself "too thin." It also shook up its new leadership team, with new product, marketing, and revenue chiefs. Twilio saw an exodus of executives in 2023, along with layoffs, Business Insider previously reported. "Adding in that new blood has created new ideas," Shipchandler said. Twilio, like many software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies, has seen its stock hit hard as investors fear the impact of AI on their businesses. Shipchandler said Twilio sees AI as a catalyst because it's more of an infrastructure company. What's more, he said that people can't vibe code much of what Twilio does because it meets regulatory requirements for telecommunications companies. "While you see all these different pressures in the SaaS world, we see ourselves positioned nicely as the infrastructure that drives a lot of the activity you're seeing," Shipchandler said.

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5/1/2026

Premium Brands’ Investor Flags Share-Price Upside on Target Fixes

Just-food.com (05/01/26) Harvey, Simon

Alta Fox suggests Premium Brands Holdings’ shares are “undervalued,” a fix that could be addressed with an updated EBITDA target. The Canada-headquartered food group with an appetite for acquisitions is due to report its first-quarter fiscal 2026 results on May 7. Texas-based Alta Fox Capital Management, which holds a 1.51% interest in the business, said Premium Brands should broadcast “clearer messaging around 2027” expectations at that event to help add value to the share price. Its shares have fallen 16.6% so far this year to close trading yesterday (April 30) at C$85.25 ($62.81). However, they have climbed 2.8% over the past 12 months and are up 12.5% over the last 12 months. Alta Fox recommended Premium Brands provide a new EBITDA forecast for the 2027 financial year to give “investors a clear view of the company’s pro-forma earnings power following recent acquisitions and divestitures.” And to “commit to a defined” target for free cash flow, capital expenditure and a plan to “improve working capital efficiency.” The investor added in a statement: “As earnings growth translates into a meaningful free cash flow inflection, we believe Premium Brands’ valuation should re-rate significantly from its current decade-low multiples. We estimate more than 75% upside to the current share price.” Expanding on the theme and the suggested fixes to address the undervalued share price, Alta Fox said in an accompanying note that its investor team are “firm supporters of PBH management, who have driven strong TSR [total shareholder returns] over their tenure.” By communicating the recommended targets, Premium Brands would address the “current disconnect between share price and intrinsic value,” the investor said. Alta Fox added as one of its ‘bottom-line’ assumptions: “As PBH provides greater clarity on FY27 earnings power and delivers on its FCF inflection, we believe the market will revert to valuing the business in line with historical EBITDA multiples, which could drive 150%+ upside in a bull case.” Risks to Premium Brands’ growth around the current trading environment, including the potential impact from the Middle East crisis and the ongoing shortage of beef cattle in the United States, were also highlighted. “We believe PBH is recession-resilient but not recession-proof. Should consumers trade-down towards cheaper, unhealthier products, PBH’s growth can temporarily come under pressure,” Alta Fox said. “This has been most pronounced with beef prices, which have continued to move higher in 2026. While the rate of growth moderates significantly in 2026, continued upward pressure on beef prices would serve as a margin headwind.” Nonetheless, the investor suggested there is a buying opportunity in Premium Brands’ shares, and more so if management adopts the EBITDA and free cash flow recommendations. “PBH’s valuation multiple has significantly compressed due to investors’ lack of conviction in EBITDA-to-FCF conversion after years of poor performance. This concern should be rectified in short order.”

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5/1/2026

Peltz's Trian Urges Solventum to Rightsize Costs, Divest Non-Core Businesses

Reuters (05/01/26) Roy, Sriparna; S K, Sneha

Nelson Peltz's Trian Fund Management on Thursday called on Solventum (SOLV.N) to rightsize overhead costs, divest non-core businesses and improve capital allocation in its latest appeal for a performance turnaround at the medical device maker. Over the last 18 months, Trian, which owns nearly 5% of Solventum's stock, has urged it to restore its performance, arguing that the company's spin-out from 3M (MMM.N) has been managed in a way that has maximized executive compensation, not shareholder value. "We have given the company plenty of time to announce what we believe are obvious value-creation initiatives, but our patience has run out," the investment firm said in its letter. Trian suggested that Solventum should reinvest in growth in order to reach and exceed performance levels it delivered inside 3M, as well as simplify its portfolio starting with the immediate separation of the health information systems business. Solventum would be a considerably more valuable company if the board and management team are willing to take appropriate steps to realize its potential, Trian said. Solventum argued that in two years as a standalone company, it has "taken decisive actions, including the $4 billion sale of our purification and filtration business, significant debt reduction, the launch of a $1 billion share repurchase program, and are executing a $500 million Transform for the Future cost savings program." Its board and management team have engaged "constructively and continuously" with Trian, a spokesperson of the company told Reuters in its statement.

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