U.S. activist investors, Icahn cry foul over proposed stock disclosure
rule
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[March 03, 2022] By
Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Katanga Johnson
(Reuters) - Activist investors including
Carl Icahn say a U.S. proposal that would require them to disclose 5%
stakes in companies days sooner than current rules could make it
unprofitable for them to build the large positions they need for
successful campaigns.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proposed the new rule last
month in a push to reduce the information advantages that the $18
trillion private funds industry has over retail investors.
The rule would halve to five days the time investors have to disclose
when they have bought at least 5% of a public company. That news often
causes the stock to jump as activists like Icahn, Starboard Value and
Elliott Management announce they will leverage the stake to push for
changes, like selling businesses or adding board members.
Because activists spend millions of dollars on research and legal fees,
they say they often need 7% to 9% of a target's stock to make campaigns
viable. With the shorter reporting window, accumulating that many shares
could be too costly to be profitable.
The long-term impact of the SEC proposal, activists said, would be to
reduce the number of such campaigns, weakening an important force for
holding companies accountable to shareholders and making the best use of
their capital, which benefits all investors.
"This is a sad day for many American businesses, which need to replace
incompetent chief executives rather than entrench them," said Icahn, one
of the industry's most successful activist investors with a net worth of
more than $16 billion.
Icahn, 86, has waged battles at corporate giants from Apple to
Occidental Petroleum and has recently taken on McDonald's over how it
sources pork and the treatment of pigs. Since 2011, he has invested his
own personal fortune.
While Icahn said the rule won't hurt him much because he doesn't need
outside money, its potential to dampen returns will be painful for
activists who must court outside investors.
The rule is subject to consultation and could come into effect later in
the year if finalized by SEC commissioners.
"This is a step backwards for shareholder governance without any
discernible benefit to the market," said one prominent activist hedge
fund manager.
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U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Gary Gensler
testifies before a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Committee oversight hearing on the SEC on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., September 14, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool
SEC chair Gary Gensler, though, said activists currently have too long to
benefit from material non-public information.
Other investors should know sooner when an activist has targeted a company,
especially since the evidence on whether activists create long-term value is
inconclusive, critics said.
Ty Gellasch, head of Washington-based group Healthy Markets, said activists do
play a "critical" role in pushing for change but was skeptical the rule would
seriously harm them.
Likewise, Jim Rossman who defends corporations against activists as co-head of
capital markets advisory at Lazard, said the 5% hurdle is not "magic." "Good
ideas are valuable in themselves even if an activist owns a smaller stake," he
said.
WRONG MESSAGE?
Still, other investors said the proposal sends the wrong message. As passive
index-tracking has allowed most investors to disengage from corporate boards,
the market needs more investors willing to spend the time and money ferreting
out information and identifying undervalued companies.
With just $195 billion in assets, according to research firm Insightia,
activists are already a tiny fraction of the market.
"Fewer investors than ever are actually doing the work of analyzing companies
and holding underperforming boards and CEOs accountable," said Rob Collins,
executive director of the Council for Investor Rights and Corporate
Accountability.
"The SEC should be encouraging engaged shareholders to use their rights and
their voices to push for value-creative change, not making their jobs more
difficult."
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson in Washington and Svea Herbst-Bayliss in Boston;
Editing by Michelle Price and Cynthia Osterman)
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