5/8/2026

Six Flags Revenue Rises on Attendance, Spending Growth

Wall Street Journal (05/08/26) Miller, Nicholas G.; Kellaher, Colin

Six Flags (NYSE: FUN) reported higher first-quarter revenue as attendance and customer spending each increased. The company also said Brian Witherow is stepping down as chief financial officer. Revenue rose 12% to $225.6 million, beating Wall Street’s forecast of $207.5 million, according to FactSet. Attendance increased 4% to 2.9 million visits and per capita spending grew 6% to $69.26. The company posted a wider loss of $268.6 million, compared with a loss of $219.7 million the year prior. The company said the higher customer spending was driven by changes in pricing and product structure, a shift in ticket sales to higher priced products and more spending on food and drinks in its parks. Six Flags has invested in improving its food and beverages and updated its pass and membership offerings, which the company said have received an encouraging early response. Separately, the company said its top finance executive, Brian Witherow, is departing along with two other executives, as the amusement-park operator continues to overhaul its C-suite amid pressure from investors. Witherow, who has been chief financial officer since the 2024 merger of Six Flags and Cedar Fair, is stepping down on Friday, the company said, adding that it has already identified several potential successors. Prior to the merger, Witherow had been Cedar Fair’s finance chief since 2012. Six Flags said Dave Hoffman, its chief accounting officer, will serve as interim finance lead during the transition. Six Flags is also parting ways with Christian Dieckmann, its chief commercial officer, and Brian Nurse, its chief legal and compliance officer. The latest executive changes come after Six Flags last month brought in technology investor and veteran entertainment executive Richard Haddrill as executive chairman and late last year named industry veteran John Reilly as its new chief executive. Investors have been pushing for changes at Six Flags. Hedge fund Jana Partners has urged the company to engage with potential buyers, while Land & Buildings Investment Management has called on Six Flags to spin out or sell its real estate in an effort to boost its share price. Six Flags also said it is separating the duties of chief commercial officer into two roles. The company said Amy Martin Ziegenfuss, who has been serving as marketing chief for Carnival Cruise Line (NYSE: CCL), will join as chief marketing officer on June 3, while Chris Meyering, its vice president of revenue management, will become senior vice president of commercial. Six Flags said Christopher Bennett, a partner at the international law firm Dentons, will join as chief legal and compliance officer on June 3.

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5/8/2026

Nissan Unit Should Expand Dividends 80-fold, Investor Says

Nikkei Asia (05/08/26) Izumi, Koki

Strategic Capital will submit a shareholder proposal calling on Nissan Shatai (TYO: 7222) to greatly increase dividend payouts, the Japanese investor said Thursday. The proposal, to be included at the Nissan Motor (TYO: 7201) subsidiary's annual meeting in June, will petition the vehicle maker to allocate all retained earnings toward dividends. Nissan Shatai's annual dividend was set at 13 yen (8 cents) per share for the previous fiscal year ended March, the same as fiscal 2024. If all retained earnings and similar holdings are used for dividends, the payout would reach up to 1,044 yen, or 80 times the current level. "Nissan Shatai depends on Nissan Motor for over 90% of its revenue," said Strategic CEO Tsuyoshi Maruki. "Because it can't compete on price, the profitability is weak." The company makes sport utility vehicles and commercial vehicles for Nissan Motor. The stock valuation for Nissan Shatai has been sluggish due to the parent company's poor earnings. Strategic has said that Nissan Shatai "disregards" minority shareholders. "Maximum returns should be made to reward minority shareholders," said Maruki. Strategic owned about 3.4% of Nissan Shatai at the end of September. In 2024, it submitted a proposal to establish a committee to protect minority shareholders, which was rejected. Strategic also holds shares in Nissan Motor, and last year proposed requiring the automaker to consider selling shares in affiliated companies. It does not plan to submit any proposals this year.

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5/8/2026

Mattel Shareholder Wants Company to Sell

Wall Street Journal (05/08/26) Cloonan, Kelly

A Mattel (NASDAQ: MAT) shareholder is calling for a sale of the toy company, arguing it would be better off if owned by a private equity firm, competitor or large media company. Southeastern Asset Management, which has a stake of more than 4% in Mattel, said Thursday it believes the company is now positioned to explore strategic alternatives after stabilizing its business. However, the investment management firm said it worries that Mattel Chief Executive Ynon Kreiz’s compensation package incentivizes waiting for the company’s stock price to surpass $30 before acting on a sale. “We see a value per share today approaching $30, but we do not want to wait longer for that to be realized,” Southeastern said in a letter to Kreiz. “We would prefer you lead the effort to explore strategic alternatives given your industry knowledge and relationships.” Southeastern said it believes there are at least three groups of buyers that would be better owners to realize Mattel's long-term value. A sale to a private equity firm would allow Mattel to support a larger amount of leverage as it would not have to worry about quarterly results and guidance, while combining with another toy company could create a stronger industry player, Southeastern said. A large media company could also be a possible buyer, given Mattel has valuable intellectual property. Mattel said it maintains ongoing communication with its shareholders and values their perspectives, including its conversations with Southeastern this year. “The board regularly reviews the company's strategy, performance, and opportunities to enhance long-term value, and will continue to consider the views expressed in Southeastern's letter,” Mattel said in a statement. Mattel added that it is focused on its strategy to grow its intellectual property-driven play and family entertainment business. Mattel's shares are down 24% this year and about 14% in the past 12 months, both through the market close. Shares ticked up nearly 2% in after-hours trading to $15.28. Southeastern said the categories of buyers it proposed are not mutually exclusive. “A toy company might not want to make movies or a media company might not want to make toys, all while certain private equity buyers might only want certain parts of Mattel,” Southeastern said. “There are creative solutions to maximize value for shareholders if Mattel actively explores the landscape.”

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5/8/2026

Oasis Management Builds its Capita Stake to 15% Before AGM

Financial Times (05/08/26) Armstrong, Ashley; Barnes, Oliver

Hong-Kong-based Oasis Management has built its position in Capita (LON: CPI) to become the UK outsourcer’s largest investor, garnering more voting rights just two weeks before the London-listed company’s annual shareholder meeting. Oasis took an initial 5% position in Capita in September last year and has steadily increased its exposure to 15% via swaps. The hedge fund on Friday instructed a switch of its position into shares to increase its influence over the company’s direction, according to a person familiar with the situation. The timing of the move comes ahead of Capita’s full-year results and investor meeting on May 18. Capita’s shares have dropped by a quarter in the year to date, valuing the once FTSE 100 business at just £365.51 million. Oasis has significant positions in at least six other UK mid-cap companies, including construction businesses Kier Group (LON: KIE) and Costain (LON: COST), ticketing group Trainline (LON: TRN), oil services group Hunting (LON: HTG), outsourcer Mitie (LON: MTO), and sandwich supplier Greencore (LON: GNC). It has previously run successful campaigns against Mr Kipling maker Premier Foods (LON: PFD) and The Restaurant Group, which owns the Wagamama chain. Oasis netted about £40 million profit from its position in TRG after private equity giant Apollo made an unexpected bid for the restaurant operator in 2023. Oasis has not made a decision on its voting intentions ahead of Capita’s meeting, but it is unlikely to call for the removal of either chief executive Adolfo Hernandez or chair David Lowden, according to a person familiar with its position. Instead, Oasis is expected to agitate for the outsourcer to accelerate plans to streamline the business in an effort to revive its share price and boost shareholder returns, as the company has not paid a dividend or awarded share buybacks for eight years. The hedge fund is expected to attend Capita’s capital markets day next month, where the business will give “refreshed forward-looking financial targets and approach to capital allocation." In March, Capita announced the sale of its contact-center business and said it would focus on its public services and pension solution divisions. In the same month, it warned that it would face another decrease in operating margins as its revenues fell by 4.5% to £2.3 billion in 2025. It also swung to an annual loss before tax of £170.9 million compared with £116.6 million the previous year. It has free cash flow of £82 million and net debt of £461.6 million. “We maintain an active and constructive dialogue with all of our shareholders,” Capita said on Friday. “Our absolute priority is the delivery of our ongoing and successful group transformation, as evidenced by our announcement in March of the sale of our private sector contact-center business. The business has already delivered significant cost transformation and is working at pace focusing on the group’s priority markets.” The company, one of Britain’s biggest outsourcers, has suffered a turbulent time over the past decade as it has encountered several issues, including a cyber attack in 2023 that resulted in 6.6 million people’s personal details being stolen. More recently, it lost the contract to administer the Royal Mail’s pension scheme after the UK government said it had lost confidence in Capita because of repeated delays.

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5/7/2026

BILL Cuts About 30% Jobs to Boost Profitability, Shares Jump

Reuters (05/07/26) Biswas, Pritam

Payments firm BILL (BILL.N) said on Thursday it was cutting its workforce by up to 30% in an effort to increase profitability, sending its shares up over 8% in extended trading. The company said it estimates it will incur charges of about $30 million to $60 million in connection with the restructuring, with a majority of these charges to be incurred in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2026. San Jose, California-based BILL caught headlines in September when Starboard Value disclosed in a regulatory filing that it had amassed an 8.5% stake in the company. A week later, Reuters reported, citing sources, that Starboard nominated four candidates for BILL's board of directors, signaling its readiness for a proxy fight to force changes. The company was exploring a sale under pressure from investors such as Elliott Investment Management, which had built a large stake in the company. However, the payments firm's stock got a huge boost in February on reports that private equity firm Hellman & Friedman is in talks to buy the company. Shares of the company, which has a market capitalization of about $3.73 billion according to LSEG data, have lost nearly 31% so far in 2026. BILL provides cloud-based software that helps small and midsize businesses automate complex financial operations, such as managing accounts payable and receivable. It expects to complete the restructuring by the end of the first quarter of fiscal year 2027. It also announced a $1 billion share repurchase authorization. In its third-quarter earnings, announced alongside the job cuts, revenue grew 13% to $406.6 million and the company reported a quarterly profit compared with a year-ago loss.

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5/7/2026

NYC Comptroller Doubles Down on Exxon Proxy Fight — Calls for Rejection of Texas Redomicile

Pensions & Investments (05/07/26)

The battle between ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) and pension funds rose to a new level this week after New York City Comptroller Mark Levine called for shareholders to not only vote for changes to the energy giant’s new retail voting program but also to reject the company’s planned move to Texas — turning a dispute over a single proxy proposal into a broader fight over investor rights. Levine’s letter to shareholders, filed May 5, is a continuation of a back-and-forth that began after New York City submitted a shareholder proposal calling for changes to ExxonMobil’s new retail voting platform. The online system, launched by Exxon last year, gives individual shareholders another way to vote on proxy questions and includes the option for investors to vote in lockstep with management on all issues, in perpetuity. The platform does not offer a similar option to select and lock-in voting preferences provided by third-party services. ExxonMobil pushed back harshly against the NYC proposal, calling it “unworkable and illegal” in its April 8 proxy statement. In the latest filing, Levine doubled down on his original proposal and called on investors to reject Exxon’s proposal to redomicile from New Jersey to Texas, which has changed its laws around corporate governance in recent years to be more management friendly, including implementing an ownership threshold of 3% or $100 million to submit shareholder proposals. “I believe Exxon’s proposed move to Texas, as well as the current implementation of its retail voting program, are not in the long-term interests of shareholders and will only serve to entrench company leadership and ultimately disenfranchise shareholders,” Levine wrote in the letter. The filing was on behalf of the $58.2 billion New York City Police Pension Fund, which had $166.1 million of ExxonMobil stock exposure as of March 31. Exxon, which has a May 27 shareholder meeting, aggressively rejected New York City’s original proposal in its proxy statement. “It is clear to us in submitting the proposal on behalf of the New York City Police Pension Fund, the New York City Comptroller’s Office has not done the work to confirm the viability of their proposal,” Exxon said in recommending a vote against the proposal. The company has a history of pushing back strongly against shareholder proposals, including suing some of its own investors in 2024 to block a climate-related proposal. Shareholder advocacy groups have drawn links between the Exxon’s voting platform and Texas move and a broader shift among some lawmakers and regulatory bodies against shareholders. Americans for Financial Reform has described Texas’ legal changes as part of a “race to the bottom” among state governments to attract companies to redomicile. Corey Frayer, director of investor protection for the Consumer Federation of America, said Exxon’s retail voter program is a move to “push the envelope on basic shareholder rights” under the current Securities and Exchange Commission, which has been giving more deference to company management. “If it were really about voter choice and democracy, handing your vote over to management wouldn’t be the only option on the table,” Frayer said in an interview. To be sure, Exxon has said it will not adopt any of the Texas policies that “could be viewed as weakening shareholder rights,” specifically mentioning a 3% ownership threshold to bring shareholder derivative lawsuit. However, the company could be more explicit about barring itself from adopting those changes in the future, according to Yumi Narita, executive director of corporate governance in the comptroller’s office. Levine’s letter pointed to transport company ArcBest (NASDAQ: ARCB) as an example of a firm that was more explicit about shareholder protection in its proposed move to Texas. ArcBest’s proposed certificate of formation in Texas includes clauses that opt out of specific parts of the state’s business law in a way that Exxon’s equivalent document does not. “To us, there is a sort of silencing of investors through a redomiciling to Texas and also stuffing the ballot box with establishing this retail voting platform. That is the way in which they’re linked — that one serves the purpose of the other,” Narita said in an interview. New York City is not the only pension system pushing back against the retail voting program. The $507.7 million City of Hollywood Police Officers’ Retirement System and the $614.2 million City of Boca Raton Police and Firefighters’ Retirement System both filed civil suits against Exxon last year. Bleichmar Fonti & Auld, the law firm representing the Boca Raton pension, said in a statement that the latest New York City filing “correctly highlights” the connection between the Texas move and the retail voting program.

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5/7/2026

Individual Shareholders Step Up Criticism of Samsung Labor Unions

Korea Times (05/07/26) Hyun-woo, Nam

Individual shareholders of Samsung Electronics (KRX: 005930) are raising their voices against a planned strike by the company's labor unions, warning of legal action if the walkout violates the law and causes damage. A Samsung Electronics individual shareholder group, whose name roughly translates in English to the “Republic of Korea Shareholder Activism Headquarters,” said Thursday that it will take “stern shareholder actions” against the unions, while urging lawmakers to increase efforts to protect shareholders’ rights. “If an illegal strike takes place or management reaches an unfair agreement with the unions, we will take comprehensive shareholder actions,” Min Kyung-kwon, head of the group, said during a press conference at the National Assembly in Seoul. “If excessive strike actions by the unions damage the company’s core assets, shareholders will coordinate through online platforms and respond firmly.” The warnings came in response to the unions' plan to launch a massive strike May 21 demanding the company remove a cap on performance-based bonuses and allocate bonuses equal to 15% of annual operating profit. If their demands are met, the company could pay around 45 trillion won ($31 billion) in bonuses this year alone. Through multiple rallies since last month, the shareholders' group has argued that the union's strike threat and bonus demands will undermine the competitiveness of not only Samsung Electronics but also the Korean economy as a whole. The group said if any illegal activities during the strike damage the company’s assets and harm shareholder value, shareholders will jointly seek damages from all union members for infringing on their third-party rights. The group also said it would file shareholder derivative suits against management if the company reaches what it described as “unfair agreements” with the unions in an attempt to avoid conflict, arguing that such moves would seriously infringe on shareholders’ dividend rights. “Samsung Electronics’ massive semiconductor achievements do not belong solely to management, labor unions or shareholders,” Min said. “They are the collective result of Korea as a whole, built on enormous support from the national power grid and government policies, as well as the hard work and dedication of partner companies.” He added: “Under market economy principles, there should be a way for a single company’s achievements not to be monopolized selfishly, but to circulate in a virtuous cycle through partner companies, national infrastructure and shareholder returns." Min urged individual shareholders to join forces through ACT, a shareholder activism platform in Korea. ACT has been conducting a survey since May 4 on whether shareholders should take actions such as seeking damages against the unions. As of Thursday morning, Samsung shareholders representing 100,983 shares out of 103,547 agreed. ACT said that it could urge Samsung Electronics’ board and labor unions to establish a reasonable performance sharing scheme in line with global standards, as well as seek legal measures, such as shareholder derivative lawsuits against the board and claims for damages over third-party rights violations. Another shareholder group identifying itself as Samsung Electronics Shareholder Activism Headquarters has also been raising its voice against the unions by hanging banners in Seoul’s Hannam-dong area, where Samsung Electronics Executive Chairman Lee Jae-yong’s home is located. On the banners, the group claims that “the unions’ strike will result in windfall gains for foreign semiconductor rivals," urging the unions to “face public anger at a time when the national economy is at its worst.” In November last year, three of Samsung Electronics’ five labor unions formed a coalition for joint wage and collective bargaining negotiations, demanding the removal of the cap on performance-based bonuses and allocations equal to 15% of annual operating profit. However, earlier this week, one of the three, Samsung Electronics Co. Union, withdrew from the joint action, arguing that the coalition’s demands were largely focused on the company’s chipmaking division. The unions’ demands and strike threat are apparently failing to gain broad support from the public, civic groups and even the liberal Lee Jae Myung administration, amid criticism that the 15% demand is excessive and concerns over the potential damage a strike could inflict on the company and the broader economy.

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5/7/2026

Palliser Takes Minor Stake in UK's Autotrader, Source Says

Reuters (05/07/26) Bedi, Prerna

Palliser Capital has built up to a 2% stake in Britain's Autotrader Group (AUTOA.L), a source familiar with the matter said on Thursday, at a time when the automotive marketplace is under pressure from artificial intelligence and regulatory intervention. Autotrader shares were up 4.2% at 521.2 pence per share at 0921 GMT, outperforming the benchmark FTSE-100, which was down 0.7%. The fund manager's stake is likely to be between 1% and 2%, the source told Reuters. It would be worth up to 81.2 million pounds ($110.6 million), based on Reuters calculations using Autotrader's previous closing stock price. Palliser has previously pushed for changes at several big firms, from Japan's SMC Corp (6273.T), to deliver shareholder returns, to an unsuccessful campaign last year at Rio Tinto (RIO.L), asking the miner to reconsider its dual listing. Sky News, which first reported on Palliser's stake purchase, said that while the investor was supportive of the company, it is pushing the group to return about 700 million pounds to shareholders via buybacks, dividends and tender offers. London-based Palliser declined to comment, while Autotrader did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the stake-buy. Autotrader connects buyers and sellers of new and used vehicles online, providing advertising, data, and transaction services. As AI capability expands, there is growing concern that global advertising and data companies' business models would be most vulnerable to disruption. In March, Britain's competition regulator had launched investigations into five companies, including Autotrader, as part of its crackdown on fake reviews and misleading online ratings. Autotrader shares have lost nearly 42% of their value in the past 12 months. At their peak in May 2025, they were worth 920 pence each.

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5/7/2026

GameStop CEO Says eBay Shut Account After Funding Stunt

Bloomberg (05/07/26) Graf, Rachel

GameStop Corp. (NYSE: GME) Chief Executive Officer Ryan Cohen said his eBay Inc. account was suspended following a publicity stunt in which he listed a raft of personal items — including a pair of socks — to fund his $56 billion bid for the online marketplace. Cohen shared a screenshot of a notice from eBay saying his account had been suspended. He previously said he was raising money on the platform to help pay for the deal. His account racked up scores of bids totaling tens of thousands of dollars for a hodgepodge of items. Bloomberg News couldn’t immediately verify that Cohen’s account, which was still publicly accessible on Thursday, had been suspended. eBay declined to comment through a spokesperson. The fundraising gimmick is unlikely to sway skeptics who view GameStop’s bid for a company four times its size as a nonstarter. Earlier this week, GameStop offered $125 per share in cash and stock for eBay. GameStop secured an initial, non-binding “highly confident letter” from TD Bank (NYSE: TD) to provide about $20 billion of debt financing for the deal, but Cohen has still been peppered with questions about how he’ll manage to pay for a deal. eBay has confirmed that it received GameStop’s unsolicited offer and said that it will review it. The gaming retail chain made famous in the 2021 meme stock craze will need billions more to actually buy eBay, whose market value is now $48 billion. Beyond the socks offered on Cohen’s eBay account, other sought after items include a pair of GameStop signs and what appears to be a life-sized Halo 2 statue, both of which are going for more than $10,000. Among the other goods for sale are vintage baseball cards including Willie Mays and an unopened package of Windows 2000 software. Cohen promised that, as a thank-you gift for their purchase, buyers will get a hand-signed copy of the offer letter he sent to eBay’s board, plus free shipping.

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