1/28/2026

Fivespan Takes 6.2% Stake in Cloud Computing Firm Appian

Reuters (01/28/26) Herbst-Bayliss, Svea

Fivespan Partners said on Tuesday that it owns 6.2% of Appian (APPN.O), a cloud computing and enterprise software company, and plans to discuss business strategy with its management and board as its stock price has slid. The San Francisco-headquartered investment firm reported the stake in a so-called 13-D filing which is required when an investor crosses the 5% ownership threshold and intends to push for changes. McLean, Virginia-headquartered Appian's stock price has tumbled 86% over the last five years to roughly $2 billion, partly due to investor worries that artificial intelligence could eat into its business. The stock price closed at $29.89 on Tuesday. However, a number of investors have called Appian a misunderstood company with extremely loyal customers, including the U.S. government. While 13-D filings were once filed routinely by blue-chip activists like Bill Ackman's Pershing Square Capital Management and Carl Icahn, they have not been as common in recent years as investors realized they can push for changes with smaller ownership stakes. Fivespan, which oversees roughly $1 billion, was founded by several former partners who in 2023 left ValueAct Capital Management. ValueAct prided itself on fostering enduring and collaborative relationships with target companies. Dylan Haggart, one of Fivespan's founders who has spent 10 years at ValueAct, has served on the board of data storage company Seagate Technology (STX.O), for nearly a decade. Fivespan also has investments in The New York Times Company (NYT.N), German molecular diagnostics company Qiagen (QIA.DE), where Fivespan's representative Mark Stevenson joined the supervisory board this week, and advertising company Outfront Media (OUT.N). The pace of activist investing is exepected to accelerate this year, investors, bankers and lawyers have said, as investors see a chance to push companies to sell themselves or break apart as the pace of mergers and acquisitions is picking up.

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1/28/2026

Wells Fargo Cuts Proxy Adviser Ties in Latest Blow to Industry

Wall Street Journal (01/28/26) Pitcher, Jack

Wells Fargo’s (WFC) wealth- and investment-management division severed ties to Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), a person familiar with the matter said, the latest blow to a proxy-advisory industry under siege. The bank will make voting decisions on shareholder proposals without the help of proxy advisers like ISS and instead rely on a new internal system. Those votes will be determined by the bank’s custom policies and voting instructions, Wells Fargo told The Wall Street Journal. The platform, backed by technology provider Broadridge Financial Solutions (BR), intends to “bring increased independence to this important investment service,” the bank said in a statement. ISS and its top competitor, Glass Lewis, have long dominated the business of offering research, advice, and voting infrastructure to investment firms that as holders of various public stocks must cast thousands of proxy votes each year. But their recommendations have often irked chief executives and their boards, especially over issues related to executive pay, climate-change disclosures, and staff diversity. Their complaints have resonated with the Trump administration. In December, an executive order from the president called for securities and antitrust regulators to investigate proxy advisers. Large investment firms are now taking steps to distance themselves amid the turmoil, putting more resources into in-house teams, policies, and platforms for voting shares. JPMorgan Chase’s (JPM) asset-management unit announced a similar move to cut ties with proxy advisers earlier this month, telling employees in a memo that it was the first large investment firm to do so.

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1/28/2026

CoStar Group Responds to Third Point With $1.5 Billion Buyback, Homes.com Strategy

Investing.com (01/28/26)

CoStar Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CSGP) announced Wednesday it has authorized a new $1.5 billion share repurchase program while defending its Homes.com strategy against criticism from investor Third Point LLC. The real estate data provider, with a market capitalization of $28.07 billion, currently trades at $66.22 per share, down 13% over the past year. The real estate marketplace and data provider outlined several initiatives approved by its board, including reducing Homes.com investment by $300 million in 2026 and over $100 million annually thereafter, with plans to achieve breakeven for the platform by the end of 2029. According to InvestingPro data, CoStar maintains a strong financial position with a current ratio of 3.12, indicating its liquid assets comfortably exceed short-term obligations. CoStar also accelerated completion of its existing $500 million share repurchase program initiated in 2025 before authorizing the new $1.5 billion buyback. The company's strong balance sheet supports this initiative, as InvestingPro analysis shows CoStar holds more cash than debt, with a modest debt-to-equity ratio of just 0.13. The company has added three new independent directors to its board, including two designated by Third Point and D.E. Shaw, resulting in 50% of directors being appointed within the last three years. "We're now entering our next margin expansion phase, and we are well positioned to accelerate revenue growth and drive profitability," CoStar stated in its press release. The company projects 2026 revenue of $3.8 billion, an 18% increase over 2025, with adjusted EBITDA expected to rise 83% to $770 million. CoStar defended its Homes.com investment against Third Point’s criticism, noting that subscribers have increased 337% since Q1 2024. The company argued that abandoning the platform "would be a certain way to destroy long-term value for stockholders." The company also approved a redesigned executive compensation program featuring "more rigorous and quantitative goals" and formed a Capital Allocation Committee to review its capital structure and financial targets. CoStar projects reaching $2.3 billion in adjusted EBITDA with a 35% margin by 2030, according to the statement. In other recent news, CoStar Group has been the focus of significant developments. The company recently responded to criticism from Third Point LLC, defending its strategic initiatives and highlighting the strong subscriber growth of 337% for its Homes.com platform since the first quarter of 2024. This comes amid Third Point’s announcement of an activist campaign, aiming to nominate new directors to CoStar’s board due to concerns over its residential real estate strategy and capital allocation. Third Point criticized CoStar’s $5 billion investment in residential initiatives, describing it as poorly executed. Meanwhile, CoStar Group received an upgrade from BTIG, which changed its stock rating from Neutral to Buy, citing the company’s refocused salesforce and expected double-digit organic growth. BTIG also raised its revenue estimates for the fourth quarter and 2026. Additionally, Goldman Sachs reiterated its Buy rating with a price target of $84, expressing confidence in the competitive differentiation of CoStar's Homes.com platform. The investment bank noted the platform's advanced features, including voice search and AI capabilities, as potential drivers for exceeding medium-term EBITDA targets.

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1/28/2026

RWE CEO Sees Energy Sector Entering New Era as Geopolitics Shift

Reuters (01/28/26) Steitz, Christoph

RWE (RWEG.DE), Germany's biggest power producer, expects governments to prioritize long-term resilience and security in energy supply, its CEO said on Wednesday, as a direct consequence of geopolitical tensions. "We are certainly entering a new era in energy supply," Markus Krebber told reporters at a Handelsblatt energy summit, saying the economic focus was increasingly shifting to "a long-term energy supply strategy absent of new dependencies." Germany, Europe's biggest economy, is among Western nations seeking new alliances as trusted relationships, most notably with the United States, have suffered as a result of trade tensions triggered by U.S. President Donald Trump's policies. At the same time Germany faces some of the highest energy costs globally, hurting its industry and curbing growth as Berlin severs energy ties with former main supplier Russia. With no major fossil fuel reserves of its own, Germany has sought to diversify its supply, driving up prices. Krebber also seemed to pour cold water on hopes for more share buybacks by RWE, something investor Elliott (ECAL.UL) has called for, saying the group had "outstanding" investment opportunities in new power plants in Germany, offshore wind in Britain and solar and batteries in the United States. RWE announced a 1.5 billion euro ($1.8 billion) share buyback in late 2024 which Krebber said runs until May 2026, with the company's share price gaining nearly 50% to more than 50 euros since the program was announced. "We have always said that whether or not we do a share buyback depends on the share price and what investment opportunities we have," Krebber said. "It will come as no surprise to you when I say that a share buyback at 28 euros is, of course, a different matter to a share buyback at 52 euros."

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1/27/2026

Elliott Repeats Call to Resist Toyota Bid to Buy Out Key Unit, Touts Standalone Plan

Bloomberg (01/27/26) Takahashi, Nicholas

Elliott Investment Management repeated its call for investors to reject the Toyota group’s bid to buy out a key unit, arguing this month’s sweetened offer still “substantially undervalues” the company and that it can achieve greater value on its own. The privatization of Toyota Industries Corp. (TYO: 6201) would be a setback for corporate governance and minority shareholder rights in Japan, the U.S. fund said Tuesday in a 52-page presentation that outlines its opposition. Elliott is stepping up its opposition to the deal as the monthlong tender period for investors to accept the offer nears its half-way point. The fund reiterated it won’t tender its shares into the offer and “strongly encouraged” other investors to also reject the offer. The Toyota group earlier this month increased its bid by 15% to ¥18,800 for each share of Toyota Industries it doesn’t own. However, Elliott says the company is worth at least ¥26,000 a share, but could be closer to ¥40,000 by 2028 if it focused on unwinding cross-shareholdings, consolidating, improving capital allocation and implementing governance reforms. Earlier this month, Elliott raised its stake in Toyota Industries to 6.7% from its previous position of 5%, making it the company’s second-biggest shareholder. The tender period began Jan. 15 and runs through Feb. 12. If successful, the company will fall under the control of an unlisted real estate company called Toyota Fudosan Co., which is chaired by Akio Toyoda, who also leads the board of Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM) and is the grandson of the carmaker’s founder. When the Toyota group announced its take-private bid in June, its offer translated into a transaction valued at around ¥4.7 trillion ($30.4 billion), an 11% discount to the target’s market capitalization. Some investors called for more transparency in a deal that would strengthen the founding family’s influence over Japan’s largest business group, and rank among the largest acquisitions on record anywhere.

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1/27/2026

Loeb's Third Point Plans to Engage CoStar, Sources Say

Reuters (01/27/26) Herbst-Bayliss, Svea

With its first activist campaign in three years, hedge fund Third Point will try to force CoStar Group (CSGP.O), the owner of Apartments.com and Homes.com, to change board directors and restructure operations, according to a document and two people familiar with the matter. Founded by Daniel Loeb, Third Point is preparing to nominate several directors to CoStar's eight-person board, said the sources, who are not permitted to discuss the plans publicly. Loeb has said privately that the majority of CoStar's directors need to be replaced to help cut costs - including the CEO's compensation - and focus on boosting the share price, the sources said. Third Point wants the real estate data company to focus on its core commercial business and shut down or sell its residential operation, the people added. CoStar, which has a market capitalization of $28 billion, offers proprietary information and analytics to real estate developers and tenants. Several years ago, it expanded into residential real estate to compete with market leader Zillow Group. Loeb's plans for a board fight are emerging just hours after a standstill agreement - signed last year and designed to keep the hedge fund from airing its complaints publicly - expired at midnight. For years, Loeb shocked and delighted Wall Street with harsh assessments of corporate America while pushing companies including Walt Disney (DIS.N), Intel (INTC.O), and Campbell's (CPB.O) to perform better. Now he is taking aim at CoStar CEO Andy Florance and his decision to spend billions of dollars to expand into online classifieds in the residential real estate industry. Earlier this month, CoStar said it expected to reduce its net investment in Homes.com by about $100 million a year until 2030. The company also unveiled a new $1.5 billion share repurchase plan, but did not provide additional details like when it will occur. A representative for CoStar was not immediately available for comment. Loeb has privately compared Florance to a young child who wins a prize for finishing last, calling the CEO's bonuses the "costliest participation award" he has ever seen, the sources said. By trying to make Homes.com compete with Zillow without offering a significantly different product, Florance and the board are responsible for a 27% drop in the stock price over the course of five years while the broader S&P 500 stock index surged 94%, Loeb has said privately, according to the sources. Now, Loeb wants new CoStar directors who can impose some discipline on the CEO, reverse years of heavy spending and restore investor trust, the sources said. Third Point is sure that CoStar's core business, CoStar Suite, has room to improve its revenue if it raised prices and targeted investors and international customers, the sources said. Third Point ranks among CoStar's 15 largest investors and has been engaging with the company for some time. Last year it reached a settlement with CoStar, paving the way for John Berisford, a former president of S&P Global Ratings, to join the board. At the same time, hedge fund DE Shaw also reached a settlement which allowed former Disney Chief Financial Officer Christine McCarthy to become a director. Etsy's ex-finance chief Rachel Glaser also joined the board. The Third Point and DE Shaw directors joined a newly created four-person capital allocation committee, raising hopes among shareholders that the board and management might consider alternatives for the residential real estate business. But Loeb has been frustrated by a lack of progress and a slide in CoStar's share price, which fell 14% over the past year to close at $65.81 on Monday. For Third Point, which oversees $24 billion in assets, the planned CoStar campaign marks a return to activism as more investors employ aggressive tactics and urge companies to sell all or parts of themselves.

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1/26/2026

Auto Parts Supplier LKQ Explores Strategic Options, Including Sale

Reuters (01/26/26) Parmar, Abhinav

Auto parts supplier LKQ (LKQ.O) said on Monday its board is reviewing strategic alternatives, including a potential sale of the company, to enhance shareholder value. LKQ has been facing pressure from investor Ananym Capital since October to sell parts of its business, stressing that there are interested buyers, and the proceeds could be used to buy back shares. "We have initiated a formal review of strategic alternatives to identify the best path forward to unlock value that is not reflected in our current valuation," said board Chairman John Mendel. LKQ shares were up about 1% in morning trading. It said there was no certainty the review would lead to a transaction or any other strategic outcome, and that no deadline or fixed timetable has been set for ?completing the process. The company also said it was still involved in its previously announced process to explore a potential sale of its specialty segment Keystone Automotive Operations. It offers replacement parts for cars and trucks, including bumpers, hoods and remanufactured wheels. Ananym had urged the auto-parts supplier in October to sell its European business, pressing the point that keeping the European and ?North American businesses ?together makes little sense, according to a letter to LKQ's board that was seen by Reuters. The investor had noted in the letter that the total return on stock in LKQ lagged its proxy peers by 33% over the last 12 months, by 113% over the last five years, and by 253% over the last decade. LKQ in August announced the sale of its self-service segment to private-equity firm Pacific Avenue Capital Partners in a $410 million deal to simplify its portfolio.

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