The
$14 billion firm, run by Daniel Loeb, lost 11.3 percent in 2018
but said corporate activism, including campaigns it waged at
Campbell Soup and Nestle SA last year, will remain a priority in
the future.
Shorting, or betting that stocks will drop, as well as
opportunistic credit investments and identifying mispriced
intrinsic value securities, are other areas where Third Point
can compete in a world increasingly dominated by computer driven
trading and passive investments like index funds.
Loeb pressed management and boards at several companies over the
last year and on Thursday he gave a shout-out to Mark Schneider,
CEO of food company Nestle SA, as well as Mark Clouse, the newly
appointed CEO of Campbell Soup, who was recruited to the
position with Third Point's help.
Eight months after publicly pressuring Nestle for more sales and
restructuring, Loeb praised Nestle and Schneider for announcing
plans to explore alternatives for its Herta charcuterie business
and announcing a strategic review of its skin health business.
"We believe Nestlé can sustain this new momentum beyond 2020, as
the company continues to sharpen its strategy, better align its
portfolio around key categories, and improve its
organization to become more agile," the letter, seen by Reuters,
said. Loeb added "We remain confident in Mr. Schneider’s
leadership."
This is the first time Loeb has spoken extensively about Nestle
since admonishing the company in July saying "This is a call for
urgency -- rather than incrementalism."
The letter also said that Third Point had called on management
at United Technologies, where it remains a large owner, to
consider a "value-creating transaction" for Carrier, and said
"management are receptive to these suggestions."
Third Point, like many other activist investors, lost money last
year, ending the year with a 11.3 percent loss. It was only the
second double digit decline in its 24 year history, the letter
said. The fund said it has made money this year and is well
positioned to benefit when volatility picks up and markets sell
off anew.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; editing by Jonathan Oatis and
David Gregorio)
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