Exclusive: Investor Gatemore pushes for break-up of
logistics firm Wincanton
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[April 16, 2018]
By Ben Martin
LONDON (Reuters) - Gatemore Capital
Management has built a stake in Wincanton and called on the British
logistics company to break itself up by selling one of its two
divisions, according to a letter sent by Gatemore to its own investors.
The asset management firm, which often pursues activist campaigns at
companies where it has bought shares, said in the letter it had built a
2 percent stake in Wincanton.
Gatemore believes the company, which has a market capitalization of
about 284 million pounds ($406 million), is "a sleeping giant whose
intrinsic value is underestimated by the market," according to the
investor letter seen by Reuters.
Wincanton traces its roots back to 1925, when it started as a milk
distribution business, and has since grown into a haulage and
warehousing company with a fleet of about 3,600 vehicles.
It is organized into two main divisions, a retail business that supplies
grocers and general retailers, and a construction and transport business
that handles industrial products such as bricks and fuel.
The firm's retirement scheme had a deficit of 69.3 million pounds at the
end of September, a shortfall that a division sale would help to
resolve, according to Gatemore.
"We have engaged in constructive discussions with Wincanton's management
and, in private, are calling for the company to conduct a strategic
review, sell one of its two divisions, fund the pension, and refocus the
business," Liad Meidar, Gatemore's managing partner, wrote in the
letter.
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Drivers wait next to their parked lorries on the M20 motorway, which
leads from London to the Channel Tunnel terminal at Ashford and the
Ferry Terminal at Dover in southern England, Britain July 31, 2015.
REUTERS/Neil Hall/File Photo
"In due course, we will discuss our ideas with other large shareholders and seek
their support in promoting productive change in the company."
A spokeswoman for Wincanton did not immediately comment.
Gatemore is familiar with the British logistics market, having built a 24
percent stake in courier and logistics business DX Group, overhauled its board,
and helped the firm with financing.
Its proposal for Wincanton comes amid a rise in activist investment in Britain,
aimed at boosting returns for shareholders.
Recent campaigns include a push by U.S. hedge funds Elliott and Sachem Head for
leisure company Whitbread to split its Costa coffee shop chain from its Premier
Inn hotels business, and an unsuccessful attempt by Sandell Asset Management to
force supermarket giant Tesco to lift its takeover offer for wholesaler Booker.
(Reporting by Ben Martin; Editing by Mark Potter)
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