11/17/2025

Comerica Investor Who Pushed for Sale Questions Fifth Third Deal

Bloomberg (11/17/25) McKay, Georgie; Wang, Yizhu

HoldCo Asset Management LP is demanding that Comerica Inc. (CMA) release additional details on its deal to be acquired by Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB), calling the sale process “flawed” ahead of a shareholder vote in early January. The activist investor pushed the regional lender to sell itself earlier this year, but now says Comerica failed to allow for an independent, competitive process, according to a HoldCo presentation seen by Bloomberg News. Comerica also failed to negotiate meaningfully with Fifth Third and accepted a deal at the low end of the valuation range of Fifth Third’s first offer, according to the presentation. “It appears that Comerica steered the sale toward a preferred bidder (Fifth Third) rather than running an open, competitive process designed to maximize shareholder value,” HoldCo said. At issue is the deal announced Oct. 6 for Fifth Third to acquire Comerica in an all-stock transaction valued at $10.9 billion. It came after mounting pressure from Comerica investors, tired of its underperforming shares following years of lagging behind competitors in loan growth and cost management. Cincinnati, Ohio-based Fifth Third has said the acquisition of Dallas-based Comerica would help accelerate its expansion, after it spent years building branches in the Southeast. But now HoldCo is demanding Comerica release additional disclosures about the sale process, including the identity of another bidder that came to light in a Nov. 5 regulatory filing, and Comerica’s correspondence with it. The unidentified “Financial Institution A” verbally proposed to Comerica Chief Executive Officer Curt Farmer a potential all-stock merger transaction in September, the filing shows. Fifth Third’s offer on Sept. 22 proposed that “Comerica stockholders would receive at least 1.8663 shares of Fifth Third common stock for each share of Comerica common stock,” and Comerica went on to accept this price, according to the filing. HoldCo questioned if there was proper negotiation from Comerica to push for the optimal outcome, when the wording of “at least” in the filing implies that that was the low end of what Fifth Third was willing to pay. If Comerica declines to amend the S-4 filing materially, HoldCo will consider suing it in the Delaware Court of Chancery to obtain the disclosures, according to HoldCo’s presentation. After it gets to review any supplemental disclosure, it would assess whether to oppose the transaction. It said it may also sue Comerica for breaching fiduciary duty in connection with the sale process. In July, HoldCo published a slide deck disclosing a 1.8% stake in Comerica and urging the company to pursue an immediate sale. Just over two months later, Fifth Third announced an all-stock acquisition at a 22% premium to HoldCo’s initial disclosure price. HoldCo currently owns about 2 million Comerica shares, or roughly 1.6% of shares outstanding, according to the presentation. On Sept. 23, Comerica’s board of directors held a meeting to discuss the Fifth Third proposal, including how it compared to a transaction with the unnamed bidder and other potential counterparties, according to the filing. The board believed the Fifth Third proposal “appropriately valued” Comerica with a higher valuation than the one implied in the proposal by “Financial Institution A.”

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11/15/2025

Jana Partners Push to Break Up Cooper Cos. Could Change the Stock’s Outlook

CNBC (11/15/25) Squire, Kenneth

Cooper Companies (COO), a global medical device company, has a stock market value of $14.41 billion ($72.49 per share). On Oct. 20, Jana Partners announced that it has taken a position in Cooper Cos. and plan to push for strategic alternatives, including a potential transaction to combine its contact lens unit with peers such as Bausch + Lomb. Cooper Cos. operates through two segments: CooperVision and CooperSurgical. CooperVision (66% of revenue) is focused on the sale of contact lenses. CooperVision is the global leader by contact wearers and second in terms of market share (26%), competing against Johnson and Johnson (JNJ) (37%), Alcon (ALC) (26%), and Bausch + Lomb (10%) (BLCO). The global soft contact lens market is estimated to be worth about $11 billion and is growing at 4% to 6% annually. The segment has numerous tailwinds including a steady shift into silicone hydrogel 1-day lenses (about 40% of consumers are still using non-daily lenses), global growth in contact users, and high barriers to entry for competitors. As such, this is a great business that generates EBITDA margins in the mid-30s. CooperSurgical (33% of revenue) is focused on women’s health services, with 60% of its fiscal year 2024 revenue derived from office and surgical (Paragard IUDs, stem cell cryostorage, medical devices) and 40% from fertility (IVF consumables, equipment, genomic and donor services). Fertility treatment is a $2 billion global market, also expected to grow at a 4% to 6% pace annually. For most of its history, Cooper was a pureplay vision business, until they added CooperSurgical in the 90s. Initially, this was a small — arguably tax-motivated — add-on. However, the company began heavily investing in this segment in 2017 — spending over $3 billion on the segment since. The problem with this shift is pretty clear — Cooper is effectively siphoning off cash from a really good contact lens business and then reinvesting it in what most people would judge to be a less attractive business. This is evident in the company’s declining returns on capital, with CooperSurgical now operating at lower margins than they did in 2017 despite these massive investments. A key factor behind this operational shift may be management changes. The company’s CEO Albert White, who previously led CooperSurgical, assumed leadership shortly after this expansion began. This raises a larger question about the company’s strategic focus, leading many to question why the leader of this company would not have expertise in its core business. These strategic missteps have been further compounded by near-term headwinds across both segments, some self-inflicted. For CooperVision, the company mismanaged market expectations for the rollout of its new daily lens product, MyDay Energys, which is now behind schedule. For CooperSurgical, its highest quality business, IVF, has slowed meaningfully, likely attributable to comments from President Donald Trump suggesting potential reimbursements for IVF costs, causing patients to delay treatment in anticipation of this potential coverage. As a result, top-line organic growth fell meaningfully below expectations to 2%, down from 7% the prior quarter, forcing Cooper to significantly lower its full-year guidance at its third-quarter earnings call, sending the company’s share price down 12.85% the following day. Now, Cooper is trading at a 12-month forward P/E of 16.4x — a steep discount to its 10-year average of 23.1x. All of this has prompted Jana Partners to announce a top portfolio position in Cooper and plans to push for strategic alternatives, including a potential transaction to combine its contact lens unit with peers such as Bausch + Lomb. While a transaction of this nature would typically raise some antitrust concerns, this may actually be the opposite case here, according to Kenneth Squire, founder and president of 13D Monitor. First, a merger would not result in a market leader, as the combined market share of 36% would be just below market leader J&J’s share of 37% and not too far ahead of Alcon’s 26% share. Secondly, these businesses are highly complementary with minimal geographical and product overlap, suggesting a reduction in the likelihood of regulatory hurdles. Notably, Bausch + Lomb has not been shy about their potential interest and also sees no regulatory issues, as CEO Brent Saunders has publicly stated that a potential combination with Cooper would “strengthen competition and create a more scaled company in the contact lens segment.” But Bausch + Lomb is not the only potential acquirer. Companies like European eyewear manufacturer EssilorLuxottica (ESLOY) could also have interest and with even less regulatory uncertainty. As for CooperSurgical, there would certainly be private equity interest, as evidenced by Blackstone and TPG nearing a deal to acquire peer Hologic (HOLX). However, Cooper shareholders may realize more value from the company cleaning up this portfolio internally — focusing more on the higher-multiple IVF business, shedding certain non-core assets, and potentially putting in new operators to execute a strong turnaround. Overall, with short-term headwinds likely to ease, Cooper has multiple avenues to recover its discount and open itself up for a potential rerating. Jana’s thesis is straightforward: these two businesses make no sense under the same roof and a strategic combination for the vision business could yield $300 million to 500 million synergies, which is a lot for a business with $850 million in EBITDA. But step one in their plan is convincing management that separating the two businesses is the right strategic move; and despite growing public attention, there is no guarantee that management, especially with this type of operating history, will agree. Should management resist, this campaign changes dramatically from a strategic thesis to a leadership/governance thesis, likely centered on appointing a new CEO with a deep background in the contact lens industry to refocus the company on its core, while still positioning it for a separation down the line. "Jana is not outwardly calling for a management change and White may even be the best person to lead a standalone CooperSurgical business," concludes Squire. "But activism is about the power of the argument and Jana seems to make a persuasive one here. Let’s hope for all involved that management sees it that way."

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11/14/2025

Charles River Labs to Lay Off Workers at Wilmington HQ

Boston Business Journal (11/14/25) Baratham-Green, Hannah

Charles River Laboratories International Inc. (CRL) is laying off workers as it partially closes one of its Massachusetts facilities. The contract research organization is cutting 68 jobs at its headquarters facility in Wilmington, according to a state filing shared with the Boston Business Journal on Friday. Charles River Labs is one of the largest life sciences employers in Massachusetts, with about 2,200 local workers. Charles River Labs said in its filing that the workforce reduction is tied to the decision to partially cease operations at its Wilmington site. The company said its gnotobiotics, foundation, and humanized models work conducted at the site will be transferred to other locations. The site closure will begin in January 2026 and layoffs will continue after this date “for a number of months” as Charles River Labs transfers this work. The workers losing their jobs are largely technicians and technologists. Charles River Labs has been undergoing a shakeup in recent years, most recently driven by its new activist investor shareholder Elliott Investment Management. Earlier this year the company agreed to conduct a strategic review of its business and shake up its board, which resulted in the decision to sell “underperforming or non-core businesses,” and focus on areas with more growth potential. Prior to this, Charles River Labs had already been taking steps to cut costs after seeing a reduced demand for its services from customers experiencing their own financial headwinds. CEO James Foster said last year that the cuts will manifest in both layoffs and consolidating parts of the company’s global footprint. Charles River Labs’ workforce has indeed dropped. The company’s latest annual report shows it had 20,100 employees at the end of 2024, down by about 1,700 people from the end of 2023.

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11/14/2025

SEC to Examine Proxy Advisory Process, Chair Atkins Says

Bloomberg (11/14/25) Howard, Megan; White, Nicola

SEC Chair Paul Atkins said the regulator will consider reforms for proxy advisors as the industry, which provides guidance to shareholders, continues to face greater scrutiny. “We’ll be looking at this entire area and come out with proposals and clarifications,” SEC Chair Paul Atkins stated Friday. The Federal Trade Commission is investigating whether Institutional Shareholder Services Inc., and Glass Lewis & Co. breached US antitrust laws by advising shareholders on how to vote on politically charged topics. ISS said that as a registered investment advisor, it “has been subject to oversight by the SEC for a quarter of a century.” “ISS is proud of its history of providing high-quality, independent, and objective advice to the world's most sophisticated institutional investors,” the firm said in a statement. The companies play an important role in reviewing shareholder proposals and advise pension funds, endowments and other asset managers on how to vote. Both Glass Lewis and ISS have disputed claims that they improperly influence investors' votes for ideological reasons. Atkins has previously called to “de-politicize shareholder meetings and return their focus to voting on director elections and significant corporate matters.” The industry has also drawn the ire of Republican lawmakers, who have questioned some firms about potential political bias and conflicts of interest.

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11/14/2025

Paul Singer’s Elliott Seeks Stake in Mideast Health Firm

Bloomberg (11/14/25) Naidoo, Prinesha

Paul Singer’s Elliott Investment Management is seeking a stake in Integrated Diagnostics Holding (IDHC), a London-listed health care company that operates in the Middle East and Africa. Funds managed by the U.S. investor have entered into an agreement to purchase private equity firm Actis GP LLP’s entire 21.67% stake in IDH through a special purpose vehicle, the health-care company said in a statement. The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals, it said. Elliott has become one of world’s biggest hedge funds, managing assets of about $76.1 billion as of June 30, according to its website. IDH has a market value of about $400 million, implying Actis’s stake is worth about $87 million. IDH offers clinical pathology and radiology services through its 700-strong branch network across Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan. It's seeking to expand into new markets in the Middle East, Africa, and East Asia with similar consumer trends and where it can capture a significant share of fragmented markets. Elliott's move “signals comfort with the broader macroeconomic environment and its confidence in its ability to unlock value from companies operating in the region,” said Ali Alnasser, a founding partner and portfolio manager at Vergent Asset Management in London. Vergent holds a 2.9% stake in IDH on behalf of clients. IDH's board hasn't interacted with Elliott about the transaction or any other matters related to the company, it said in the statement.

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11/14/2025

H&R REIT Concludes Review Without Finding Buyer, Pledges $2.6 Billion in Property Sales

Toronto Globe & Mail (11/14/25) Willis, Andrew

H&R Real Estate Investment Trust (HRUFF) has concluded a strategic review without finding a buyer for one of the country’s largest property owners, prompting a plunge in the price of its units and a pledge from the company to sell $2.6 billion of assets. H&R units fell 11% on Friday after the company announced late Thursday it had ended a nine-month sales process that attracted multiple bidders for specific properties but failed to find a suitor for the entire REIT, which owns $9.6-billion of properties. H&R launched the review in February after receiving an unsolicited offer from a potential buyer. In July, the REIT disclosed the process was underway and the price of its units jumped 12%. “While the update is not completely surprising given the time elapsed since review was initiated, we think this is a disappointing outcome,” said analyst Jimmy Shan at RBC Capital Markets in a report. He said H&R units trade at a 35% discount to the value of the company’s properties and a 15% discount to the average valuation of domestic peers. Toronto-based H&R is one of the few domestic REITs with residential, office, industrial, and retail real estate holdings. Most REITs focus on a specific sector. H&R has been the target of activist investor campaigns, and analysts have said the REIT could eventually be taken private by its own executives, with financial backers such as a private equity fund. “Management has received interest in select assets and is under discussion to sell 25% of the portfolio,” National Bank analyst Matt Kornack said in a report. “We still think it is possible that they could pursue a roll-up themselves vs. giving away the upside to a consortium.” Activist investor K2 & Associates Investment Management Inc. has been pushing for improved performance from H&R for several years. Over the past five years, the price of H&R units dropped by 8.9%, compared to a 3.4% decline in the S&P/TSX Capped REIT Index. In July, K2 chief investment officer and chairman Shawn Kimel pushed the REIT’s board to disclose offers received during the review. “K2 would view it as a failure if the board were to fumble this unique opportunity,” he said. Late Thursday, H&R said while the REIT is no longer negotiating sale of the entire company, it is in talks with various parties to sell up to $2.6 billion of real estate and expects to announce transactions by the end of the year.

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11/14/2025

Irenic Builds Stake in Papa John's, Sources Say

Reuters (11/14/25) Herbst-Bayliss, Svea; Summerville, Abigail

Irenic Capital Management built a stake in Papa John's (PZZA) during the third quarter, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Friday, adding a fresh dimension to mounting speculation about the pizza chain's future. The size of Irenic's stake was not known. Potential buyers have been circling the pizza chain for months but may have been frightened off as U.S. consumers are pulling back on spending at quick-serve restaurant chains like Papa John's. Apollo Global (APO) recently withdrew an offer to take the chain private at $64 a share, Reuters reported earlier this month, helping send the company's stock tumbling. With no offer on the table, Papa John's CEO Todd Penegor told analysts on last week's quarterly earnings call that while the board would certainly look at all proposals, it was now moving ahead on executing its own strategy. Industry analysts and investors said they supported Penegor's candid and pragmatic assessment, helping the stock price recover some. Its shares seesawed this week after a website called ABC Money published a report on Monday saying there was a new bid for the company, driving its stock north. Its shares tumbled on Tuesday after other media outlets dismissed the story as a hoax. A source close to Papa John's confirmed that the report was false. Some investors said Papa John's remains a desirable property but given new economic uncertainties, it might take time for potential bidders to come to an appropriate price.

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11/14/2025

Starboard Sells Pfizer Stake After Pushing for Changes

Reuters (11/14/25) Herbst-Bayliss, Svea

Starboard Value has liquidated its position in Pfizer (PFE), according to a regulatory filing on Friday, ending its push for changes aimed at boosting the drugmaker's share price. Starboard sold roughly 8.5 million Pfizer shares during the third quarter, according to its 13-F filing which details asset managers' holdings in U.S. publicly traded companies at the end of a three-month period. At the end of the fourth quarter 2024, the hedge fund reported owning 15.4 million Pfizer shares. The hedge fund made a splash a year ago by announcing a roughly $1 billion stake in the drugmaker at a time when its shares were trading at roughly half of the company's pandemic-era high. Starboard founder Jeffrey Smith said at an industry conference that Pfizer's board needed to hold management accountable for its underperformance. Starboard is one of the industry's busiest activist investors, building positions this year at travel site TripAdvisor (TRIP), engineering firm Rogers (ROG), and financial automation software company BILL Holdings (BILL), where it quickly secured a board seat for one of its principals. The hedge fund had approached two former Pfizer executives, including former CEO Ian Read, to help with its campaign but the cooperation soon fizzled. Pfizer now has a market value of $142 billion compared with a market value of roughly $162 billion when Starboard's Pfizer position was revealed in October 2024. Friday's filing also showed that Starboard liquidated its position in contract research organization Fortrea Holdings (FTRE), selling 2.5 million shares during the third quarter. The hedge fund announced its investment in Fortrea, which was spun out of Laboratory Corp in 2023, in October 2023 in a regulatory filing. The share price has dropped nearly 50% since Starboard's investment became known.

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