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						Prominent investors stock up on eBay, then activists 
						flex muscle
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		 [February 15, 2019]   
		By Svea Herbst-Bayliss 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - EBay Inc.'s stock 
		price slumped for most of last year but a number of prominent hedge 
		funds were so convinced that change is on the horizon for the e-commerce 
		company that they established new or added to existing positions in the 
		last months of 2018.
 
 Baupost Group, run by Seth Klarman, and BlueMountain Capital both made 
		new investments while Hudson Bay Capital Management and Adage Capital 
		Partners expanded their bets with sizable purchases during the fourth 
		quarter, regulatory filings and data compiled by Symmetric.io show.
 
 Banking giants UBS AG, Citigroup Inc, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, 
		which invest for retail and institutional clients, also purchased 
		millions of new shares, the data show.
 
		
		 
		
 For these investors, the nearly 30 percent gain in eBay's share price in 
		the first seven weeks of trading this year represents a sizable windfall 
		that was likely fueled by behind-the-scenes moves of two activist hedge 
		funds that also built stakes recently.
 
 Elliott Management, one of Wall Street's busiest and successful 
		activists, said in its regulatory filing that it made a new bet on eBay 
		in the fourth quarter, listing call options on 8.5 million shares. In 
		January, Jesse Cohn, a partner at Elliott and head of its U.S. Equity 
		Activism, wrote to eBay's board to urge a sale of StubHub ticketing and 
		its classified-ads business, forecasting that doing so could help push 
		the stock price to as high as $63 a share in 2020. It closed at $36.32 
		on Thursday.
 
 Starboard Value, another prominent hedge fund which has won more board 
		seats through settlements than others, also built a stake and contacted 
		management, people familiar with the move said, even though eBay was not 
		listed on Starboard's filing.
 
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			 The eBay app is seen on 
			a mobile phone in this illustration photo October 16, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration 
            
			 
		Starboard did not respond to questions about the position. 
		The 13-F regulatory filings that require fund managers to detail the 
		amount of stock they held in U.S. companies at the end of the previous 
		quarter often do not require filers to disclose derivatives, which means 
		an investor can build a position without its showing up on this filing. 
		Ebay on Thursday announced a restructuring plan that will unite 
		geographic regions under a global segment and said that a senior 
		executive, Scott Cutler, will leave.
 Baupost's 13-F filing shows that it bought 21 million shares of eBay in 
		the fourth quarter, making the company one of eBay's top five U.S. 
		holdings.
 
 To be sure, there were also hedge funds that backed away. Larry Robbins' 
		Glenview Capital Management, which boasted a 17 percent gain in January 
		after losing 16 percent last year, sold 4.4 million eBay shares, cutting 
		its position by 37 percent.
 
 (Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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