12/5/2025

Rightmove Under Pressure as Activist Investor Takes £250m Stake

Telegraph.co.uk (12/05/25) Man, Pui-Guan

An activist investor has bought a near £250 million stake in Rightmove (RTMVY), piling fresh pressure on the embattled property giant. London-based Independent Franchise Partners (IFP) has built up a 5.8% stake in the house-buying portal in recent weeks, becoming Rightmove’s third-biggest shareholder. The investment was made after the company warned its profit growth will slow next year because of investment in AI. That announcement wiped £1 billion off Rightmove’s market value. IFP has in the past led activist campaigns against the likes of Japanese brewer Kirin (KNBWY) — unsuccessfully pushing it to spin-off its non-beer assets — and is preparing to push for change at cosmetics company Shiseido (SSDOY). The investment group is also one of the largest independent shareholders in Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp (NWSA) and Fox Corp. (FOX). IFP publicly spoke out against plans for the two to recombine in 2022. Founded in 2009 by a group of former Morgan Stanley employees, IFP has around $22 billion (£16 billion) in assets under management. It describes its approach as one that focuses on generating “attractive long-term returns” for clients “with a strong capital preservation bias.” IFP declined to comment. IFP’s link to the Murdoch media empire is likely to reignite speculation that Rightmove could be a takeover target. Last year the property website rejected a £6.2 billion takeover approach from REA Group, an Australian online property company owned by Murdoch’s News Corp. At the time it rejected the bid, Rightmove argued that it “materially” undervalued the business, pointing to “long-term growth and returns." But the £4 billion company is now reeling from a dramatic slump in share prices, with stocks plunging by just over 30% in the past six months. Anthony Codling, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said: “If nothing changes with the share price, you could understand why [investors] might think [bids would return].” Shares in Rightmove rose 1.8% following The Telegraph’s report. Rightmove’s grip on Britain’s property market makes it an attractive asset. It is the biggest property listings website in the UK by site traffic and property numbers, garnering more than 80% of all time spent by consumers on property portals. The FTSE 100 company advertises one million UK homes every month. However, investors have lately become concerned about the potential threat posed by AI. Chatbots could reinvent the way people hunt for houses, allowing people to ask for tailored listings. Rightmove sought to counter the threat by unveiling plans to spend £60m on AI last month, including launching automated valuations, new conversational searches, and visualization tools. Johan Svanstrom, its chief executive, said AI was becoming “absolutely central” to its strategy. But the announcement sent shares in the company tumbling after Rightmove said the investment would take three years to pay off, affecting profits until 2028. The heavy spending comes against a backdrop of a subdued property market, with buyers and sellers reluctant to commit ahead of last month’s Budget and now facing uncertainty ahead of the introduction of a new council tax surcharge in 2028. Rightmove also faces the threat of a £1 billion lawsuit from estate agents who claim it abused its market dominance to charge “unfair” prices, backed by the litigation funding arm of U.S. activist Elliott. The property portal has said it is “confident in the value we provide to our partners." Since August, Rightmove has lost £2.3 billion of value. Giles Thorne, of Jefferies, said: “The more any share price goes down, by definition, the higher the probability an activist comes in. “It’s just the rules of the game because they’ll see grounds for management to take some kind of strategic action that would push the share price up.” Codling said: “I would argue Rightmove’s management should focus just on running the business to the best of their ability and let the share price take care of itself.”

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12/5/2025

Upstart Hedge Fund Launches Fresh Attack on U.S. Regional Banks

Financial Times (12/05/25) Franklin, Joshua; Quinio, Akila

An upstart hedge fund has launched its fifth activist campaign of the year engaging U.S. regional banks, arguing that the industry has been allowed to become too comfortable and needs a shake-up. HoldCo Asset Management is pushing to oust the chief executive of U.S. bank KeyCorp (KEY), a lender with a market value of about $20 billion in which the activist has taken a $140 million stake. The Florida-based hedge fund gained prominence this year when it pushed Comerica (CMA) to sell itself. An $11 billion takeover quickly materialized with Fifth Third, and the fund has claimed credit for concessions made by two other targets, Columbia Bank (COLB) and First Interstate (FIBK). Some bankers have questioned the extent of its influence, arguing that Comerica was a takeover target regardless of HoldCo’s role. But the fund’s noisy campaigns have generated plenty of attention and shaken up boardrooms at U.S. regional banks. “It certainly has companies nervous,” said one investment banker who specializes in bank deals. “It is going to spur activity.” The U.S. regional banking sector is undergoing a slow consolidation, shrinking from about 10,000 banks three decades ago to roughly 4,000 now. Dealmaking has picked up under the new administration of Donald Trump, with mergers now getting approvals at the fastest pace in more than 30 years. However, HoldCo said it believed many acquisitions were value-destructive for shareholders, delivering greater benefit to the executives who pursued them. “Management teams generally get paid more if banks get bigger,” said HoldCo’s co-founder Vik Ghei. “And the easiest way to grow a bank is by doing an acquisition. Even if an acquisition is terrible for shareholders.” HoldCo, which has nine employees and $2.6 billion in assets under management, is an outlier among activists in targeting banks. Activists typically target poorly managed companies, but badly run banks are usually viewed as dangerous investments. “It’s just pretty shocking how no one publicly opposes these guys, right?” said Misha Zaitzeff, HoldCo’s other co-founder. “The way that management teams and boards have gotten away with murder and abusing the shareholders has just been really, really, really bad.” Ghei and Zaitzeff founded HoldCo in 2011 and are now on their fifth fund. Their first activist campaign was in 2020 and engaged Boston Private, which ended up selling itself to Silicon Valley Bank. HoldCo subsequently urged shareholders to vote down the deal due to what they saw as the overvalued SVB shares being used in the merger. In a 50-page presentation addressed to KeyCorp’s board of directors, HoldCo criticizes its acquisition in 2015 of First Niagara as a millstone for the bank and says the bank has underperformed due to assets acquired when interest rates were low. KeyCorp sold a minority stake worth about $2 billion to Canada’s Scotiabank in 2024. Ghei and Zaitzeff are pushing KeyCorp to use its excess capital to buy back stock, adopt a clear “no acquisitions” policy, and for chief executive Chris Gorman and board member Alexander Cutler to depart. HoldCo said it was also “evaluating other remedies available to us,” including a near-term proxy contest or pressing for a sale of the bank to a larger rival such as PNC or Wells Fargo.

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12/4/2025

Cooper Companies Initiates Strategic Review; Shares Jump

Reuters (12/04/25) Santhosh, Christy; Choudhury, Kamal

Cooper Companies (COO) said it is initiating a formal strategic review aimed at identifying opportunities to enhance long-term shareholder value, sending shares up 10% in extended trading. The medical device maker said it is actively focused on improving performance in core markets, expanding market share, enhancing operational efficiency and generating strong returns through capital deployment initiatives as part of the review. The company, which makes contact lenses and vision-care products through its CooperVision unit and offers women's health and fertility products via CooperSurgical, has come under activist pressure in recent months to improve its operations. In November, investment management firm Browning West urged the company to add four directors to its board and warned it was ready to launch a proxy fight if the company refused. In October, Reuters reported that activist investor JANA Partners built a stake in Cooper Companies and was planning to push for strategic alternatives and improve capital allocation to boost returns for the firm. "The formal review of strategic alternatives announced today is an important first step towards unlocking Cooper's value," said Scott Ostfeld, managing partner at JANA Partners. Separately, Cooper forecast fiscal 2026 profit above Wall Street expectations, banking on cost savings from a major reorganization and strong demand for its contact lenses. The San Ramon, California-based company expects annual adjusted earnings per share of $4.45 to $4.60, above analysts' average expectation of $4.39 apiece, according to data compiled by LSEG. For fiscal 2026, Cooper sees revenue ranging between $4.30 billion and $4.34 billion. Analysts were expecting annual sales to be $4.32 billion. The company completed significant reorganization activity during the fourth quarter, resulting in about $89 million in charges, and expects annual pre-tax savings of about $50 million beginning in fiscal 2026. Cooper also announced that Colleen Jay will become chair of its board of directors, effective January 2, 2026, succeeding Robert Weiss, who will remain on the board.

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12/4/2025

Josh Harris’s Firm Strikes Deal for Middleby Unit That Makes Viking Stoves

Wall Street Journal (12/04/25) Gottfried, Miriam; Thomas, Lauren

Billionaire investor Josh Harris’s firm, 26North Partners, struck a deal to take a controlling stake in Middleby’s (MIDD) kitchen-products division, report executives of the companies. 26North is set to own 51% of the unit that houses a number of luxury cookware-equipment brands, including Viking, Lynx, La Cornue, Rangemaster, and Aga. Middleby is set to own the remainder. The deal, unveiled Thursday, values the unit at $885 million, said Middleby Chief Executive Tim FitzGerald. Middleby, which has a market value of around $6 billion, designs, and manufactures cooking equipment used in commercial, residential, and industrial settings. Harris, a co-founder of Apollo Global Management, launched 26North in 2022. 26North has roughly $32 billion in assets under management and focuses on private-equity, credit and insurance. Harris is also a co-owner of professional sports teams including the Philadelphia 76ers and the Washington Commanders. Middleby shares were down more than 11% year to date through Wednesday, in part because lower foot traffic and higher food costs have hurt the restaurant industry. They were trading up over 4% Thursday after the deal was announced. The company faced additional pressure from activist investor Ed Garden, who earlier this year landed a seat on Middleby's board. Garden, a co-founder of activist hedge fund Trian Fund Management, who has since launched his own firm, had argued Middleby was lagging behind peers. In February, Middleby said it would spin out its food-processing business to focus on commercial food services. Its commercial food-service platform delivered about $2.4 billion in revenue last year. FitzGerald said he sees a recovery happening across the restaurant industry and in residential, which had stalled as the housing market slowed. 26North, meanwhile, has been looking to put more money to work through private-equity deals. The Middleby transaction will mark its sixth such deal in roughly a year, Mark Weinberg, who leads 26North's private-equity arm, said in an interview. The firm struck its debut private-equity deal in September 2024 when it agreed to buy ArchKey Solutions, a provider of electrical, technological and specialty systems. A month later, it announced a deal for the gym chain Onelife Fitness.

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12/4/2025

Advisory Firms Favor Dissident in Cannae Holdings Proxy Fight

Jacksonville Daily Record (12/04/25) Basch, Mark

As a monthslong proxy fight over Cannae Holdings Inc.’s (CNNE) board of directors heads for a resolution Dec. 12, two advisory firms are recommending shareholders support an activist investment firm. Four seats on a 12-member board are up for reelection at the stockholder meeting of Cannae, the investment firm spun off from Fidelity National Financial Inc. (FNF). Investment firm Carronade Capital Management LP began publicly pushing for changes at Cannae in March and nominated its own slate of four nominees to replace four existing directors at Cannae. With the annual meeting approaching, proxy advisory firms Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis both issued reports recommending stockholders vote for the Carronade slate. Both firms said the current board’s close ties to Cannae Vice Chairman and Fidelity Chairman Bill Foley are an issue and said the company could benefit by electing directors with more independence. Foley “is not on the ballot. However, this proxy contest has shined a light on his role at the company,” ISS said in its report. ISS said Cannae’s performance has been hurt by investments in businesses tied to Foley. “There is little evidence to suggest that a board without a significant amount of new, independent voices can restore effective oversight and prevent similar missteps in the future,” it said. Two of the current directors up for reelection, Erika Meinhardt and Frank Willey, are former executives of Fidelity. Another director is Jim Stallings, managing partner at Jacksonville-based PS27 Ventures. “Carronade’s nominees bring a narrow specialization in bankruptcy, distressed debt and restructuring, while offering little to no experience in public company leadership or governance,” Cannae said in a Dec. 1 news release urging shareholders to support its current directors. “Cannae’s four nominees possess the sector-specific operational expertise required to guide our growth strategy and provide effective, independent oversight — expertise that cannot be replaced by generalist restructuring skills,” it said. However, Glass Lewis said in its report that Carronade’s nominees have the necessary qualifications. “Though elements of Cannae’s defense are not entirely out of line, it seems evident the market is unwilling to reward a stated strategy which relies on, among other things, the existing board effectively overseeing capital allocation with the interests of independent shareholders front of mind and without further leakage to the sprawling investment complex overseen by Bill Foley,” it said. “Perhaps more important under the circumstances, Carronade’s nominees appear suitably independent and are under no obligation to pursue a predetermined agenda, Carronade’s or otherwise,” Glass Lewis said. “We believe support for this option — which, again, contemplates reconstitution of only one-third of Cannae’s sitting board, and is thus not a campaign for majority turnover would represent a more immediate and direct mandate for increased accountability, enhanced transparency, bolstered strategic coherency and strengthened corporate governance,” it said. One of Cannae’s investments in companies tied to Foley was a stake in payments processing company Paysafe Ltd. (PSFE). However, Paysafe disclosed in an SEC filing that Cannae divested its remaining stake in the company Nov. 24, and Fidelity sold off part of its stake. Paysafe went public in 2021 by merging with a special purpose acquisition company formed by Foley. The London-based company then moved its North American headquarters to Jacksonville in 2023. Paysafe said in the SEC filing it was repurchasing about 4 million shares in total from Cannae and Fidelity for about $6.70 per share. Cannae said in a separate filing that it sold about 2.46 million shares and no longer held any Paysafe stock. Paysafe’s annual report said Fidelity had 3.75 million shares, or 6% of the stock, but Fidelity said in a Dec. 1 SEC filing after the sale that its stake was reduced to 3.9%. No reason for the sales was disclosed in the SEC filings but when Cannae released its third-quarter earnings report in November, the company said it was reducing its investments in publicly traded companies and focusing on privately owned businesses. Cannae’s investment portfolio has fallen from 70% in public companies to about 20%, the company said.

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12/4/2025

Barrick Chair Thornton Considered Splitting Company in Three Parts as Early as 2018, but Doubled Down on Risky Assets Instead

Toronto Globe & Mail (12/04/25) McGee, Niall; Kiladze, Tim

Barrick Mining Corp. (B) chairman John Thornton considered carving up the Canadian gold miner into three parts and selling off its African mines in 2018, according to court filings, but doubled down on the risky jurisdiction instead. At the time, Thornton was executive chair of Barrick and had operational control. With its shares in the doldrums, he was under a lot of pressure to turn the company around. One way out of the morass, as he saw it, was to break it up. The split strategy, which came to light in a recent lawsuit against Barrick and Randgold Resources Ltd., an African mining company that Barrick acquired in 2019, suddenly holds new weight. Seven years on, Barrick is being pressed by an activist investor to split itself up, and this week the company set in motion a process that could see that happen. The revelation that Thornton considered breaking Barrick up in 2018 but then bulked up by buying Randgold’s extensive African operations — a strategy that ultimately failed — raises questions about his judgment. Thornton, who was recruited by Barrick founder Peter Munk, has been with the company since 2012. Investors assign a premium valuation to Barrick’s North American mines, but multiple geopolitical spats at its African sites over the years have led to those assets being valued at a significantly lower level. In January, Barrick was forced to shut down its Malian operations after clashing with the country’s military leaders over a new mining code. The company recently reached an agreement with Mali to end the dispute, but it’s unknown when mining will resume. The lawsuit detailing Thornton’s original breakup idea centers around Ian Hannam, a London-based investment banker who sued the company, alleging he was owed US$18 million in fees for his work on the Randgold deal, even though he was never formally hired as an adviser. The case ultimately went to trial, and Thornton and former Randgold CEO Mark Bristow, who went on to become Barrick’s CEO, both took the stand. Back in 2015, Barrick was struggling to pay off billions in debt from an expensive copper acquisition and a botched mining project high in the Andes. Around this time, Bristow started talking to Thornton to see if a deal between the two companies was possible. While Bristow originally wanted Barrick to buy Randgold for a premium, Thornton was willing to pay only the market price. Randgold’s shares were trading at a much higher valuation than Barrick’s at the time, so it made little sense to accept a deal with no premium. As an alternative strategy, Thornton, a former Goldman Sachs investment banker, pitched a three-way split that would see Barrick keep its core North American mines, spin off its copper operations and sell its African assets to Randgold, according to the court documents. Bristow was keen on buying the African business, given his company’s exclusive focus on operating African mines, and he had a reputation for running them well. After Hannam, the banker, sent him details of the proposed three-way split, Bristow replied: “I would take the global non-USA!!!! That’s where [Randgold] would sit comfortably.” However, the possibility of a split quickly died because Randgold went through a period of underperformance relative to Barrick and Thornton quickly realized he had leverage to push for a no-premium acquisition of Randgold. He was also partial to the Randgold acquisition because it would bring Bristow in as CEO, potentially helping to solve Barrick’s operational problems in Africa. In September, 2018, Barrick announced it was acquiring Randgold at no premium for approximately US$6 billion, with Bristow indeed becoming Barrick’s CEO. The acquisition brought mines in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Mali into the Barrick portfolio, on top of its existing Tanzanian exposure. On Monday, Barrick said it was considering spinning off a minority share in its North American operations, opening up the possibility once again of carving up the company. Investors in the spinoff would get exposure to the company’s politically safe operations in Nevada and the Dominican Republic but won’t have any exposure to risky Africa. A minority spinoff falls short of the full split many investors have called for. And while the new proposal has shades of what Thornton originally pushed for back in 2018, Barrick shareholders will still have heavy exposure to African operations as part of the new plan. As for the lawsuit, a judge handed Hannam a partial victory in March, deciding that he did indeed help broker the Randgold deal in some fashion, even though there was no formal record of him being hired as an adviser or agreement that he should be compensated. In the end, the judge, a former corporate lawyer, wrote that “any sensible investment banker will after a while decide that a particular mandate is no longer worth pursuing, on the principle of not throwing good money after bad. However, until that point is reached, as [Alexander] Pope wrote in his “Essay on Man,” hope springs eternal in the human breast.” The judge awarded Hannam US$2 million, plus his expenses.

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12/4/2025

Barington Capital Engages Bill Holdings, Pushes for Sale

Bloomberg (12/04/25) Tse, Crystal

Activist investor Barington Capital Group has taken a stake in business payments firm Bill Holdings Inc. (BILL), joining Elliott Investment Management and Starboard Value LP, and is urging the company’s board to explore a sale. The hedge fund has built a roughly $25 million position and is engaging with the company, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified because it’s private. “Based on our research, it is our belief that the company would be an extremely attractive acquisition candidate for both strategic and financial buyers,” Barington Chief Executive Officer James Mitarotonda said in a letter to the board of Bill that was reviewed by Bloomberg News. Mitarotonda said the board should “engage a financial adviser and form a special committee of independent directors to explore strategic alternatives for the company, including a potential sale, merger or other business combination.” Bill Holdings rose as much as 6.3% in premarket trading in New York on Thursday. The company’s market capitalization was at about $5.2 billion as of Wednesday. The San Jose, California-based company has already been exploring a potential sale and working with an adviser. Since then, shares of Bill have climbed 11%, giving the company a market value of about $5.2 billion. Starboard, an activist fund run by Jeff Smith, entered a cooperation agreement with Bill in October after disclosing a stake earlier this year. Bill appointed four new independent directors, including one Starboard pick, and said it would hold an investor day in the first half of 2026. Elliott also built a position in Bill.

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12/4/2025

Activist Investor Litt Urges Changes at First Industrial Realty to Boost Stock, Sources Say

Reuters (12/04/25) Herbst-Bayliss, Svea

Activist investor Jonathan Litt wants warehouse operator First Industrial Realty Trust (FR) to sell assets, return capital to shareholders and refresh its board, steps that could boost the stock price by 30%, according to sources familiar with the matter and a document seen by Reuters. Even a review of strategic alternatives, including a possible sale, should be considered if other changes are not enough to eliminate the gap between First Industrial's share price and its net asset value, said the two people who are familiar with Litt's thinking but prohibited from discussing it publicly. Litt, whose Land & Buildings Investment Management owns a 1% stake in First Industrial, thinks highly of the company whose warehouses are used by Fortune 500 companies including Amazon and are located near some of the country's biggest urban areas, from southern California to eastern Pennsylvania. Over the last decade the company has newly developed nearly 40% of its portfolio and disposed of more than 40% of its legacy portfolio. Still, Litt is concerned that investors have not fully appreciated First Industrial's portfolio at a time when the company has some 2.3 million square feet that remain to be leased, the sources said. More generally, industrial warehouses are seen to be attractive as new construction starts dropped dramatically over the last two years and e-commerce retailers require much more warehouse space than bricks-and-mortar retailers, industry analysts have said. Land & Buildings plans to work closely with First Industrial's board and management team to come up with ways to boost the Chicago-headquartered company's share price, the sources said. First Industrial has a market valuation of roughly $7.4 billion and its stock closed trading at $55.93 on Wednesday. The commercial real estate market has traditionally been attractive to institutional investors like pension funds who have used it as an asset stream that isn't tied to the stock market, something potentially appealing if investors begin to worry more about a possible artificial intelligence bubble.

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