4/20/2026

Howard Hughes Holdings Names Former Arch Capital CEO Marc Grandisson to Board

CityBiz (04/20/26)

Howard Hughes Holdings (NYSE: HHH) has appointed former Arch Capital Group (NASDAQ: ACGL) chief executive Marc Grandisson to its board of directors, adding insurance-sector expertise as the company prepares to expand beyond real estate through its planned acquisition of Vantage Group Holdings. Grandisson will join the board effective May 7. His appointment comes as Howard Hughes expects to close the Vantage acquisition this quarter, a deal the company has said will help transform it into a more diversified holding company with insurance as a second major operating business. The move signals Howard Hughes’ strategic shift from being known primarily for large-scale real estate developments into a broader conglomerate structure. The company’s existing assets include master planned communities and mixed-use developments such as The Woodlands near Houston, Summerlin in Las Vegas and Ward Village in Honolulu. Executive Chairman Bill Ackman said Grandisson's track record in profitability, risk management and long-term growth made him a valuable addition at a pivotal time for the company. Grandisson led Arch Capital from 2018 until retiring in 2024 and was part of the insurer's founding team beginning in 2001. During his tenure, Arch grew into one of the more prominent specialty insurance, reinsurance and mortgage insurance companies in the market. His appointment gives Howard Hughes direct access to leadership experience in underwriting cycles, capital allocation and insurance operations—skills likely to be important if the Vantage acquisition closes as planned. Grandisson is also making a personal investment tied to the appointment. He agreed to spend $10 million to purchase warrants on 1,131,273 Howard Hughes shares with a strike price of $100 and a five-year term. The warrants cannot be sold, transferred or hedged for four years, aligning the investment with longer-term shareholder performance. He will join the board as one of Pershing Square's appointees, replacing Ben Hakim. Howard Hughes has close ties to Ackman's Pershing Square, which remains a significant shareholder and influential strategic voice. Grandisson said Howard Hughes is at an important inflection point and that he looks forward to helping execute its long-term vision. The addition of a former insurance CEO to the board underscores how seriously Howard Hughes is pursuing its diversification strategy. If successful, the company could emerge as a hybrid holding company with recurring earnings from insurance alongside long-duration real estate assets—an approach that may appeal to investors seeking more balanced cash flow and valuation drivers.

Read the article

4/19/2026

Japan's Retail Investors Embrace Shareholder Activism

Nikkei Asia (04/19/26) Okamoto, Kosuke; Manabe, Kazuya

Shareholder activism is gaining traction among Japanese retail investors, with a recent survey showing that a majority support activists and other stock owners in pushing for changes in corporate management and other initiatives. Many listed companies in Japan see individual investors as stable shareholders and have been eager to increase this base as they accelerate the unwinding of cross-shareholding arrangements with business partners. While these efforts have led to a sharp rise in the number of individual shareholders, the strategy can backfire if retail investors begin to question management decisions and align their votes with activist campaigns. One company seeking to attract more individual investors is major supermarket operator Blue Zones Holdings (417A.T), which carried out its first stock split in about 10 years earlier in April. "We aim to build a more stable shareholder base by attracting a wider pool of retail investors," said Sumito Kawano, president of the company formerly known as Yaoko. Blue Zones is not alone. "Behind the trend are efforts by companies to build a stable shareholder base after reducing their cross-shareholding ties," said Yuki Seto, a researcher at the Daiwa Institute of Research in Tokyo. The cumulative number of individual shareholders reached a record 84 million at the end of March 2025, according to the Japan Securities Dealers Association. Another survey by the association indicates that, as of last year, about 80% of individual investors had held their shares for an average of at least one year, with the holding period largely unchanged over the past two decades. Many individuals hold onto their shares in anticipation of shareholder perks and other loyalty rewards, while the 2024 launch of the Nippon Individual Savings Account, a revamped tax-exempt program, has helped fuel the trend. The number of individual investors seeking quick profits remains limited, although it has increased since the introduction of online stock trading. Yet individual investors can no longer be considered stable shareholders. A survey by Nomura Securities shows that the proportion of individual investors exercising their voting rights at shareholders meetings rose to 72% in 2025, up around 20 percentage points from two decades earlier. The finding suggests that individual investors, long seen as silent shareholders, are beginning to change. Retail investors are increasingly stepping into corporate management battles. A proposal by Japanese company Bold Investment to overhaul the management of Ekitan (3646.T), a train timetable information service provider, secured about 80% support at an annual meeting in June, reflecting backing from individual shareholders, who make up roughly 60% of its ownership base. A 2024 survey by Link Saussure, an investor relations support provider, found that more than 50% of individual investors backed shareholder proposals at annual meetings held over the preceding year, citing "disregard for shareholder returns" and "distrust of corporate governance." However, even if companies improve earnings, it is by no means easy to retain individual shareholders. An analysis by Nikkei shows that the ratio of individual shareholders tends to drop once listed companies improve their returns on equity (ROE). As a company's earnings improve and its stock price rises, retail investors are often tempted to sell their holdings. This behavior has persisted since it first emerged during the prolonged stock price declines that began after the bursting of the bubble economy in the early 1990s. The trend also underscores individual investors' limited financial means. "Without the financial wherewithal of institutional investors, individuals tend to sell appreciated shares to finance subsequent investments," said Risa Imanishi, a consultant at Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking. When companies view retail investors as silent shareholders and assume their support, management discipline can slacken. In fact, companies with a growing number of individual investors often experience slower improvements in ROE and sales growth, according to a study by Hiroyuki Ishikawa, a professor at Osaka Metropolitan University, and other researchers. "Eager to protect their positions, managers tend to prioritize securing stable shareholders through perks and other loyalty programs rather than focusing on growth," Ishikawa said. The key to gaining long-term investors is to provide clear explanations of growth strategies and management philosophies aimed at enhancing corporate value, thereby winning shareholders' trust and turning them into "fans" of the company's policies. Retail giant Aeon (8267.T), where individual investors account for about 30% of all shareholders, has been working toward this goal by holding annual sessions that encourage direct exchanges of opinions between top executives and shareholders. "I felt the company could continue to grow, so I won't sell my shares anytime soon," said a 30-something participant at such a meeting. Tsukasa Ojima, an adviser to Aeon, said, "Successfully cultivating 'fans' among shareholders depends on how deeply a company considers the benefits of both customers and shareholders in its management approach." Japanese companies may have little choice but to engage in dialogue with retail investors now that an increasing number of these shareholders are siding with activists.

Read the article

4/18/2026

Norway's Sovereign Wealth Fund Supports BP Chair's Election

Reuters (04/18/26) Adomaitis, Nerijus; Calero, Jesus

Norway's $2.2 trillion sovereign wealth fund, the world's largest, said on Saturday it will vote in favor of the election of BP (BP.L) Chair Albert Manifold and other board-supported resolutions at the April 23 annual general meeting. Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which operates the fund, also said it would support the board's proposals to withdraw two earlier climate reporting resolutions that some BP shareholders have said should remain in place. BP has said the two resolutions have been superseded by more comparable, standardized climate reporting. NBIM has also sided with the board in voting against a shareholder resolution filed by climate group ACCR, which called on BP to provide more detail on how its capital allocation plans, including oil and gas spending, align with shareholder value. "We will not support a shareholder proposal that appears to be overly prescriptive in regard to the company's strategy and/or operations or that sets unrealistic timeframes, targets or methods for implementation," the fund said on its website. ACCR said its resolution was promoting transparency about BP's upstream capex expansion, and the fund's decision to side with the management was against shareholder interests. "We're observing a groundswell of support, publicly and privately, from investors motivated by long-term value creation. NBIM's position is out of step with this," Brynn O'Brien, co-CEO of ACCR, said in an emailed comment. Britain's Local Authority Pension Fund Forum and influential proxy advisers Glass Lewis have recommended that shareholders should reject Manifold's election bid and several other board-supported resolutions. Separately, Follow This sought to put forward a resolution on the financial risks of declining oil and gas demand, but BP excluded it from the ballot, prompting further criticism. NBIM is one of BP's largest shareholders, with a 2.98% stake in the company at the end of 2025, valued at $2.7 billion. Norway's wealth fund invests Norway's oil and gas revenues across stocks, bonds, property and renewables, holding stakes in 7,200 companies worldwide, averaging 1.5% of all listed equities.

Read the article

4/17/2026

South Korea Draws Back Investors Even as Iran War Exposes Cracks

Reuters (04/17/26) Hunter, Gregor Stuart

South Korea's capital markets are luring back foreign buyers after a brutal March, as hopes of stability in the Middle East, a red-hot AI memory trade and Seoul's corporate governance reforms lift stocks and bonds alike. The benchmark KOSPI recouped nearly all of last month's 19% tumble, regaining the momentum that made it the best performing major stock index last year. However, the rout brought into focus some of the risks of the East Asian market, with its heavy focus on a handful of AI-linked companies and volatility far exceeding most other equity bourses. The currency also remains stuck near 17-year lows, raising costs for the imported energy on which South Korea depends, while also limiting the scope for stimulus as policies aimed at supporting growth also risk exacerbating inflation. Although $4.2 billion of foreign capital has poured back into South Korean stocks this month, a record $23.8 billion fled in March, LSEG data shows. For Isaac Thong, senior investment director for Asian equities at Aberdeen Investments, the steep selloff offered an attractive re-entry point to the Seoul market. Thong sold holdings in Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturers to buy cheaper stocks of South Korean memory chipmakers such as Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), joining investors angling for a slice of the profits from high bandwidth memory used in data centers. "We're cautiously optimistic, but we think it's a megatrend," he said. "Barring a recessionary scenario, we think this trend is going to continue." Despite its distance from the Middle East, South Korea has been hit hard by market volatility since the war started, with its open and export-centered economy highly exposed to the energy shock, particularly amid persistent weakness in the currency. The volatility of South Korea's stock market far outstripped other equivalent gauges for Asian and U.S. stocks since the start of the Iran war. The volatility of South Korea's stock market far outstripped other equivalent gauges for Asian and U.S. stocks since the start of the Iran war. The KOSPI has seen plunges of as much as 12% in a single day followed by gains of 9%. But even after a turbulent March, the index is up 44.5% this year, building on a 75% surge in 2025. The government is also trying to draw foreign capital with corporate governance reforms, taking aim at the so-called 'Korea Discount,' a persistent valuation gap rooted in weak corporate governance among family-owned conglomerates known as chaebols. Those initiatives have attracted activist funds, seeking the kind of returns seen last decade in Japan under former premier Shinzo Abe's "Abenomics" policies.

Read the article

4/17/2026

Legislation Introduced to Rein in Proxy Advisors

Financial Regulation News (04/17/26) Carey, Liz

Legislation introduced by U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil (R-WI) and Ann Wagner (R-MO) would impose new rules on the proxy advisor duopoly. The lawmakers said their legislation Protecting Americans’ Retirement Savings from Politics Act, would correct issues like a lack of transparency and conflicts of interest which have, they said, tarnished proxy advice and corrupted corporate governance. “Too often, proxy advisors have encouraged votes that run counter to the economic interests of retirees and seniors. Investment advisors and pension funds should be focused on securing your retirement, not advancing their political agenda,” Steil said. “My bill will bring accountability and transparency to the proxy advisor duopoly and help end the politicization of Americans’ retirement funds.” The legislation would provide transparency and accountability to the proxy advisory industry, prohibit robo-voting and the inherent conflict of interest associated with consulting services, and require proxy advisory firm clients to issue annual public reports on their proxy voting. The legislation would also require large asset managers to explain how they use proxy advisor recommendations and put their customers' economic interests first. The congress members said an estimated 70% of the outstanding shares in publicly traded U.S. companies are held by institutional investors like mutual funds and pension funds. American families depend on institutional investors to manage those shares, but in order to save costs, many institutional investors rely on proxy advisory firms for recommendations on how to vote the shares under their control. Two firms – Glass Lewis and Institutional Shareholder Services – jointly manage 97% market share. Often the two proxy advisory firms successfully pressure institutional investors to vote contrary to shareholder economic interests in support of political initiatives. This legislation would fix that, Steil said. Similar legislation was previously introduced by Steil in the 118th Congress.

Read the article