4/29/2029

Shareholder Activism in Asia Drives Global Total to Record High

Nikkei Asia (04/29/29) Shikata, Masayuki

Activist shareholders had their busiest year on record in 2024, with the Asia-Pacific region making up a fifth of campaigns worldwide, pushing some companies higher in the stock market and spurring others to consider going private. The worldwide tally of activist campaigns rose by six to 258, up by half from three years earlier, according to data from financial advisory Lazard. Campaigns in the Asia-Pacific tripled over that period to 57, growing about 30% on the year. Japan accounted for more than 60% of the regional total with 37, an all-time high. Activity is picking up this year as well in the run-up to general shareholders meetings in June. South Korea saw 14 campaigns, a jump of 10 from 2023. Critics say South Korean conglomerates are often controlled by minority investors that care too little about other shareholders. Australia and Hong Kong saw increases of one activist campaign each. North America made up half the global total, down from 60% in 2022 and 85% in 2014. Europe had 62 campaigns last year. The upswing in Japan has been fueled by the push for corporate governance reform since 2013 and the Tokyo Stock Exchange's 2023 call for companies to be more mindful of their share prices. The bourse has encouraged corporations to focus less on share buybacks and dividends than on steps for long-term growth, such as capital spending and the sale of unprofitable businesses. Demands for capital allocation to improve return on investment accounted for 51% of activist activity in Japan last year, significantly higher than the five-year average of 32%. U.S.-based Dalton Investments called on Japanese snack maker Ezaki Glico (2206) to amend its articles of incorporation to allow shareholder returns to be decided by investors as well, not just the board of directors. Though the proposal was rejected, it won more than 40% support, and Glico itself put forward a similar measure that was approved at the following general shareholders meeting in March. U.K.-based Palliser Capital took a stake last year in developer Tokyo Tatemono (8804) and argued that more efficient use of its capital, such as selling a cross-held stake in peer Hulic, would boost corporate value. Activist investors are increasingly seeking to lock in unrealized gains from rising land prices, reaping quick profits from property sales that can go toward dividends. Companies in the Tokyo Stock Exchange's broad Topix index had 25.88 trillion yen ($181 billion at current rates) in unrealized gains on property holdings at the end of March 2024, up about 20% from four years earlier. After buying into Mitsui Fudosan (8801) in 2024, U.S.-based Elliott Investment Management this year took a stake in Sumitomo Realty & Development (8830) and is expected to push for the developer to sell real estate holdings. This month, Dalton sent a letter to Fuji Media Holdings (4676), parent of Fuji Television, calling for it to spin off its real estate business and replace its board of directors. Activist campaigns have sparked share price rallies at some companies. Shares of elevator maker Fujitec (6406) were up roughly 80% from March 2023, when it dismissed Takakazu Uchiyama -- a member of the founding family -- as chairman under pressure from Oasis Management. The rise in demands from activists "creates a sense of tension among management, including at companies that don't receive such proposals," said Masatoshi Kikuchi, chief equity strategist at Mizuho Securities. Previously tight cross-shareholdings are being unwound, and reasonable proposals from minority investors are more likely to garner support from foreign shareholders. Some companies are going private to shield themselves from perceived pressure. Investments by buyout funds targeting mature companies in the Asia-Pacific were the highest in three years in 2024, according to Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu. Toyota Industries (6201) is considering going this route after facing pressure from investment funds last year to take steps such as dissolving a parent-child listing with a subsidiary and buying back more shares. Toyota Industries holds a 9% stake in Toyota Motor (7203). The automaker "may have proposed having [Toyota Industries] go private as a precautionary measure," said a source at an investment bank.

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1/16/2027

Dealmakers See More Retail Mergers and IPOs in 2026 After Tariffs Sidelined M&A Last Year

Reuters (01/16/27) Summerville, Abigail

Dealmakers predict an uptick in mergers and IPOs for retailers and consumer goods companies this year after punishing tariffs on imports to the United States had sidelined activity in the industry for the first half of 2025. Several national restaurant and convenience store chains are primed for IPOs, along with organic baby food company Once Upon a Farm, Hellman & Friedman-backed auto repair company Caliber Holdings, and Bob’s Discount Furniture, which is owned by Bain Capital, according to more than two dozen CEOs, M&A advisors and private equity investors who attended the ICR Conference in Orlando, Florida this week. “The number of high-quality companies that are in queue to go public in 2026 is higher than we’ve seen since 2021,” Ben Frost, Goldman Sachs' (GS) global co-head of the consumer retail group said in an interview. “The question is does that mean more will go public? If it does, private investors will see the ability to exit investments again (in a) regular way, which will help (private equity) activity.” Frost was one of the more than 3,000 attendees at the annual gathering, where executives from Walmart (WMT.O), Shake Shack (SHAK.N), and Jersey Mike’s were among presenters while bankers, lawyers and private equity investors spent much of their time brokering deals and landing clients behind the scenes. The upbeat mood was a marked shift from last spring after U.S. President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcements sent markets skidding and killed or stalled several consumer and retail deals. The second half of the year saw a resurgence in activity that brought with it several mega deals, including Kimberly-Clark’s (KMB.O) nearly $50 billion deal to buy Kenvue (KVUE.N), announced in November. "(Companies) are still really focused on growth and synergies. They’re looking at bigger deals than they’ve been willing to do for the last number of years. The back half of last year was the start of that,” Frost said. Kraft Heinz (KHC.O) announced in September it would split into two companies to unwind its 2015 merger, shortly after Keurig Dr Pepper (KDP.O) had agreed to buy JDE Peet’s for $18 billion with plans to split the coffee and non-coffee beverages into separate companies. In apparel, Gildan Activewear (GIL) bought Hanesbrands for $2.2 billion. Investors could also spur more deals and corporate breakups in the sectors, Audra Cohen, co-head of the consumer and retail group at law firm Sullivan & Cromwell, said in an interview at the conference. Corporate agitators have taken recent stakes in Lululemon Athletica (LULU.O) and Target (TGT.N), but aren't yet pushing for M&A. Lululemon hosted a morning yoga class and its management team met with analysts and investors at the conference. Meanwhile, private equity buyers are beating out companies for some deals, Manna Tree Partners co-founder Ellie Rubenstein told Reuters. Her firm sold its cottage cheese brand Good Culture to a larger consumer-focused firm L Catterton just last week. “A lot of these brands have gotten lost (inside big corporations) and the consumers don’t like it. You may see a lot of corporate carveouts this year,” Rubenstein told Reuters in an interview after her keynote address. She interviewed her billionaire father and Carlyle co-founder David Rubenstein, 76, on stage at the conference. The father-daughter pair contrasted their portfolios, pointing to Carlyle’s history of investing in fast food chains like McDonald's (MCD.N) and KFC Korea while Manna Tree saw big returns from investments in healthier food brands like pasture-raised egg producer Vital Farms (VITL.O) and Good Culture.

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7/16/2026

Gulf Money Quietly Backing U.S. Activist Hedge Funds May Soon Have to Show its Face

National Newspaper (UAE) (07/16/26) Essaid, Salim

The U.S. financial regulator has pressured activist hedge funds to reveal who is backing them. For Gulf family offices quietly co-investing in U.S. markets, that means their names could soon be public. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said activist investors in the United States must disclose the identities of their clients in regulatory filings, in a move that may rattle hedge funds by requesting information they have long fought to keep secret. The updated interpretations of 13D filings and proxy statements, issued last week, clarify how the agency views its rules on critical filings after a busy six months of activist campaigns. For the Gulf, where a fast-growing class of private family offices has been deepening its exposure to markets in North America, the implications go well beyond Wall Street. The SEC regulates US financial markets and is meant to ensure companies play by the rules. One area it has long monitored is activist investing, where hedge funds acquire large stakes in companies to force change, pushing for anything from cost cuts and leadership changes to outright sales. A structure known as a special purpose vehicle allows outside investors to back these campaigns without their names appearing publicly. That arrangement could now be over. The mechanics are straightforward. A Gulf family office, for example, learns that an activist fund is planning to pressure a major U.S. company to sell itself or replace its chief executive. Rather than investing in the fund broadly, the family office backs that one specific campaign, collects its share of the profits if the strategy succeeds and exits. Until last week, that arrangement could remain entirely private. It can no longer. Investors like Elliott Management, Carl Icahn and Bill Ackman's Pershing Square have reshaped major global companies through aggressive public campaigns, from pushing Twitter's board to oust its co-founder Jack Dorsey in 2021, to pressuring BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP) into a multibillion-dollar corporate restructure. Their campaigns demonstrate the real power these funds wield, and precisely why the backers funding them have fought so hard to stay anonymous. Mohammed Soliman, senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, said, “the agency has effectively ended the long-standing practice of shielding investor identities in these targeted vehicles. The change applies broadly, compelling greater transparency in proxy fights and filings without singling out any particular category of capital.” However, Ben Charoenwong, associate professor of finance at Insead in Singapore, cautioned against treating the guidance as settled. “This is not a new rule, but just guidance on the interpretation without a consultation or open period,” he told The National. “A new rule would take over a year of comment letters and court fights that they may lose ... This is staff guidance, not law. The same staff can quietly kill it next year by issuing another guidance.” North America accounts for 50% of Middle Eastern family office portfolios, the largest single regional allocation, according to UBS's Global Family Office Report 2026. A younger generation of Gulf heirs is moving family wealth towards more sophisticated global strategies, including private equity co-investments and alternative assets, according to Ocorian. 68% of Middle Eastern family offices say the next generation is already taking a bigger role in investment strategy, with a growing focus on digital assets and alternatives, precisely the kind of shift that brings Gulf private capital closer to the co-investment structures this SEC clarification now targets. The total amount of Gulf private family office capital deployed in the United States is not publicly tracked. That lack of clarity is what makes this policy reinterpretation of interest. Some of that invisible money may have to show its face. Peter Unwin, head of private wealth and family office at IQ-EQ, offered insight into why Gulf investors have been drawn to these structures in the first place. “Gulf investors and family offices use activist investor vehicles to achieve greater influence over investment outcomes rather than simply waiting for management to improve performance,” he said. “These vehicles are well aligned to the fact family offices often have a longer-term strategy compared to a portfolio manager in a fund who's primarily looking for short-term gains. This style of investing can allow them to act more akin to private equity investors while retaining exposure to public markets.” For sovereign funds such as Mubadala, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Qatar Investment Authority, the direct impact is limited. Rachel Ziemba, founder of Ziemba Insights, said Gulf institutional investors tend to be “less involved in activist campaigns than some other institutional investors. They tend to invest in companies in which they trust and believe in the management rather than those they want to use leverage to change.” The picture is different for Gulf family offices and private investors. “The rule really only bites on the deal-specific structures, the single-company SPVs and the co-investments,” Mr Charoenwong said. “Being named, permanently, on a U.S. filing as the foreign money behind a campaign to break up an American company carries a political cost, both back home and in Washington, and also affects their privacy, which they were afforded previously.” Mr Soliman said the exposure is particularly acute where private wealth sits close to state power. “For Gulf family offices and private investors, whose capital often operates in a region where personal wealth and state interests can overlap, the new disclosure obligations introduce a specific layer of exposure. Public identification of backers in activist campaigns could invite unwanted political or media scrutiny in the United States.” Ms Ziemba cautioned against overstating the significance of the guidance. “The move doesn't make the United States more complicated or difficult for Gulf investors,” she said. “Many of these frictions have been in place for some time. The United States remains a complicated market but one that attracts a lot of Gulf capital due to its size, depth and involvement in capital for technology and key supply chains,” added Ms Ziemba. Mr Charoenwong expects the response from sophisticated investors to be structural rather than a withdrawal from U.S. markets. “Sophisticated money doesn't quit a strategy because disclosure tightens, it moves into the wrapper that shows the least,” he said, adding that they can shift back to mixing with larger funds and opt out of joining anything that names them in a co-bidder line.

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7/14/2026

PepsiCo's Turnaround Stutters as Americans Rethink Snacking

Reuters (07/14/26) Mistry, Anuja; Venugopal, Aishwarya

Americans built one of the world's great snacking cultures. Now PepsiCo (PEP.O) is discovering just how fast that can shift. With one in five American households using GLP-1 weight-loss drugs, surging living costs, and a broader shift toward healthier eating, it is getting harder for the company to reignite growth. The pressure showed up in its quarterly results last week. Sales in the Frito-Lay and Pepsi soda maker's North American food business slipped 2%, while volume was flat in the second quarter ended June 13, even after earlier price cuts of up to 15% on some of its biggest products including Lay's, Doritos, Cheetos, and Tostitos. That marked a reversal from the modest recovery investors thought they were seeing at the start of the year, when volume growth improved to around 2% in the first quarter, with the North America food business returning to growth. Volumes at its food business have fallen four times in the last six quarters. The contrast with Coca-Cola (KO.N) is particularly sharp. PepsiCo's North America beverage volume fell 4% in the latest quarter, while Coca-Cola reported a 4% growth in the region three months earlier, underscoring the challenges facing PepsiCo's snack-heavy portfolio as consumers become more selective about what they eat and drink. Coca-Cola's stock has risen more than 20% so far this year, while PepsiCo is down around 4%. PepsiCo's results are likely to bring more scrutiny from Elliott Investment Management, which disclosed a roughly $4 billion stake nearly 10 months ago and has pushed the company to reinvigorate its soda business, boost its share price and explore selling non-core food assets. Investors "certainly want better volumes in the face of them lowering price," said Stephanie Link, chief investment officer at Hightower Advisors, which holds PepsiCo stock. Americans are increasingly gravitating toward food with perceived health benefits such as higher protein, lower sugar and added fiber. This comes as GLP-1 adoption has increased to 21% of U.S. households in May 2026, from 9% in January 2025, with users buying fewer sweet treats and cutting back on salty snacks, according to a PwC analysis of Numerator data. "Consumers have moved from snacking on autopilot to making much more deliberate decisions about what they eat and how often," said Suzy Davidkhanian, vice president and principal analyst at eMarketer. For PepsiCo, whose food brands including Ruffles and PopCorners generate about 58% of its annual revenue, the shift threatens one of the key engines that has driven growth for decades. Analysts said any turnaround hinges not just on affordability, but on how quickly PepsiCo capitalizes on the demand for functional products. The company's executives said last week that improvement in its North America business was likely to be more gradual than expected. "PepsiCo now finds itself competing harder for every dollar, and increasingly that competition is about relevance as much as price," said Katherine Machado O'Hara, founder of marketing consultancy The Oxigeno Project. The company "must rethink its 'giant in the room' mentality and support their innovation teams to allow products to market much faster ... A year late isn't just a delay, it can mean missing the trend entirely."

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7/9/2026

Starboard’s Dynatrace Play: Activist Turnaround or Setup for a Splunk-Style Sale?

24/7 Wall St. (07/09/26) Thoelcke, Trey

Dynatrace (NYSE: DT) is now the newest test case for the Starboard Value playbook that ended with Cisco Systems (NASDAQ: CSCO) buying Splunk for roughly $28 billion in September 2023. The question is whether the observability leader is on a glide path to a strategic sale, or is this a standalone turnaround with an activist grip on the wheel? In a July 1 disclosure, Dynatrace added George Riedel and Dan Streetman to the board, expanding the board from eight to ten members following engagement with Starboard Value. The company paired the appointments with a $1 billion share repurchase authorization and a plan to lay out a “Rule of 50” target by fiscal 2029 at an Investor Day after Q2 FY2027 results. Starboard framed the opportunity as “significant shareholder value through growth, margin expansion, and capital return.” That language reads as operational value creation for a standalone company, with board seats, buybacks, and margin discipline, rather than a public push for a sale. Dynatrace closed FY26 with revenue of $2,018.39 million, up 18.82% year over year, annual recurring revenue of $2.05 billion, and free cash flow of $529.48 million. CEO Rick McConnell said, “In an AI-first world, observability has become mission-critical to a vastly higher percentage of workloads.” Q4 delivered a record 22 deals exceeding $1 million annual contract value and log management consumption up more than 100% year over year. Guidance for FY27 calls for revenue of $2.317 billion to $2.335 billion, non-GAAP EPS of $1.93 to $1.95, and a 29.5% non-GAAP operating margin. Analysts are optimistic, though their $45.48 consensus target is less than the most recent close. Recent actions include UBS (NYSE: UBS) initiating a Buy rating with a $60 price target, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) raising its target to $50, BMO (NYSE: BMO) also has a $50 target, and Needham has a Hold rating. Shares are down 20.9% over the past year. Cisco’s Splunk deal reset the bar for observability M&A, and Snowflake (NYSE: SNOW) reportedly held talks to acquire Observe for roughly $1 billion in late 2025. Datadog (NASDAQ: DDOG) carries a market cap of $91.4 billion on 32% revenue growth, and Snowflake trades at $90.6 billion on 30% growth. Dynatrace’s $13.1 billion market cap and forward P/E of 23 make it a digestible acquisition size relative to peers.

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7/7/2026

Commentary: When Shareholder Activists Attack a Company, its Rivals May Feel the Heat too and Change Their Ways

The Conversation (07/07/26) Shaheen, Hadi; Kim, J.H.; Goudarzi, Kamyar

Professors with the College of Charleston say, "Shareholder activists are investors who leverage their ownership in a company to push for change. When those activists engage a company, they usually want managers to change strategy, cut costs, improve performance or address issues such as climate change and worker rights. If managers resist, activists may seek board seats, call for leadership changes or criticize the company. When one company is under fire, its competitors may fear that they’re next. Their managers may respond by cutting costs, changing strategies or making public promises even before an activist investor shows up at their door. In other words, shareholder activism can create what our team of business school professors calls “collateral impact”: a domino effect in which pressure on one company changes what its competitors are doing. Consider what happened after a small activist investor, which owned only a 0.02% stake in Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM), successfully pushed the company in 2021 to take its climate commitments more seriously. Many of its oil industry rivals, including Chevron (NYSE: CVX), set more ambitious goals for lowering their carbon emissions soon after. Something similar happened in tech. In 2022, Altimeter Capital engaged Meta (NASDAQ: META), the company that owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, claiming it was hiring too many employees and investing too heavily in the metaverse, an immersive online technology. Meta responded by cutting thousands of jobs and investing less in the metaverse. Shortly after, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) announced its own big round of cost-cutting and layoffs – although no investor activists had engaged it on similar issues. While these moves may appear to be separate decisions made by some of the biggest publicly traded corporations in response to different issues, our study in the Journal of Business Research, published in May 2026, suggests they are part of a larger pattern. We found that when one company changes course in response to activist pressure, its competitors frequently follow suit – even when activists have not engaged them directly. Activist investors use an array of tactics. They may meet privately with executives, submit proposals for a vote, publish open letters or try to replace board members. This pressure can damage a company’s reputation, restrict its decision-making freedom, restrain executive pay or even threaten senior leaders’ jobs. Financially motivated activists may push a company to cut costs, sell parts of its business, return more money to shareholders or avoid risky investments. Socially motivated activists primarily call for stronger action on climate change or other environmental issues, the protection of workers’ rights or other similar demands. When one company makes changes after an activist campaign, competitors might try to avoid becoming the next option by cutting spending, slowing expansion or changing their social and environmental actions, what’s known as corporate social responsibility, or CSR. Such moves might signal to investors that the company is well governed. Managers may make these changes because they worry about their jobs or the company’s reputation if activist investors turn their attention to them. To see whether an activist campaign against one company could also change what its competitors do, we followed companies in the S&P 1500, a group of large, publicly traded U.S. businesses, from 2006 to 2013. We followed a sample of 1,435 U.S. companies over multiple years, creating 16,334 company-year records. Each record represents one company in one year. Of these companies, 215 received at least one type of shareholder proposal during those years. We paid close attention to cases in which activist investors engaged a company and the company tried to meet those demands. Then we tracked close competitors to see whether they made similar changes. We found that competitors do often respond, but not always in the same way. When financial activists pushed one company toward greater financial discipline to boost short-term returns, competing companies tended to launch fewer products and announce fewer market expansions. They also scaled back their corporate social responsibility efforts. We think one explanation is that such campaigns clearly warn managers across the industry: focus on the bottom line, or you may be engaged next. Managers may worry that ambitious growth plans or CSR efforts will be portrayed as expensive, risky or wasteful, so they cut them back before facing direct pressure themselves. Interestingly, when activists pressured one company on social or environmental issues, such as climate change or labor rights, its competitors generally reacted differently. They still became more cautious about growth, since aggressive expansion could be seen as diverting resources away from social and environmental commitments, but they increased their CSR efforts instead. Social and environmental campaigns send a different warning: Protect your company's reputation and respond to public expectations, or you may become the next option. In short, different kinds of shareholder activist campaigns can move competitors in opposite directions. The collateral impact was strongest when the engaged company was a close rival. But greater rivalry did not affect every decision in the same way. Its clearest effect was to constrain initiatives, such as launching new products or entering new markets. These decisions are often costly and uncertain. The closer the competitor that faced activist pressure and pulled back from growth, the more managers appeared to take the warning seriously and were likely to reduce their own growth plans. Closer rivalry, however, did not make companies more likely to change their corporate social responsibility efforts. One reason may be that those decisions are shaped less by rivalry and more by broader concerns about legitimacy, reputation and public expectations. Stock ownership patterns also played a role. Companies with more long-term institutional investors were less likely to make quick cuts to growth after financial activism changed a rival’s behavior. We believe that’s because patient investors may give managers more freedom to continue long-term plans. We also found that company reputation mattered. Well-known companies seemed more sensitive when activists engaged one of their rivals and reacted most strongly. Following a rival’s brush with financial activism, more reputable businesses were more likely to reduce their CSR initiatives. However, they were more likely to increase their CSR efforts if their rival was engaged by socially motivated activism campaigns. We think that because reputable companies face greater scrutiny, they may be more sensitive to activism against a rival. Although our findings suggest that shareholder activists can influence many companies with a successful campaign that took aim at just one corporation, those activists also need to be wary of unintended consequences. A financially motivated campaign may push an engaged company’s rivals to cut not only growth but also their corporate social responsibility efforts. A socially motivated campaign may have a different effect. It may encourage the company’s rivals to respect labor rights or do more on issues such as worker rights, community support or the environment, but also make that engaged company’s rivals more cautious about growth. The lesson here for CEOs and managers is not to change course simply because they fear becoming the next option of shareholder activists. Instead, they can talk more openly with their shareholders, understand the concerns that some of them may express, and explain their short- and long-term strategies before outside pressure drives a rushed response. In business, the fear of being engaged next may be enough to change a company’s behavior before activists ever take aim at it."

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7/6/2026

Activists Take on More Campaigns While Avoiding Proxy Fights

Bloomberg (07/06/26) Sun, Mengqi

Campaigns by activist investors have hit an all-time high this year even as the portion of them leading to proxy battles continues to fall. The number of activist campaigns during the first six months of 2026 increased 20% from the same period last year to 184, a record that is 38% above the five-year-average, according to a report by Lazard Inc. The jump was largely driven by campaigns in the United States and in the Asia-Pacific region — Japan in particular — while Europe saw a slowdown, Lazard found. Activist activity, which had already reached a historic high in 2025, grew despite volatile markets and geopolitical risks that included the U.S. war with Iran, said Chris Couvelier, Lazard’s managing director of shareholder activism and defense. “The high activity level was remarkable, and the fact that we saw two consecutive quarters from record level to record level, despite the market noises,” Couvelier said in an interview. While more companies are finding themselves in the sights of activists, fewer are facing direct challenges to their boards. The 2026 proxy season was more muted than the previous year, with only three proxy fights and major “withhold” campaigns in the United States in the first half, according to a Barclays Plc (NYSE: BCS) report. That’s another sign that activism has shifted and proxy season is no longer the only driver for a campaign, said Jim Rossman, global head of shareholder advisory at Barclays. “Activism is becoming less about that proxy cycle and becoming a year-round focus on undervalued companies,” Rossman said in an interview. Barclays’ count of activist campaigns showed a similarly busy first six months of 2026 — though not a record — with an escalation of activities in the second quarter. The report, whose methodology differs from the Lazard study, noted that the busy second quarter bucked the typical slowdown after the closing of the nomination window in the United States. Mergers and acquisitions remain a top priority for activists, Barclays says, citing the near-record transaction environment and robust capital markets. Lazard also saw more activist demands related to long-term strategy and capital allocation. Artificial intelligence-related demands are also on the rise in activist campaigns, Lazard says. Hedge fund Elliott Investment Management has been pushing London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG.L) to accelerate its deployment of AI across its data and analytics platform to narrow valuation gap with its U.S. peers. Irenic Capital Management has been urging Snap Inc. (NYSE: SNAP) to focus on adopting AI to improve ad monetization. Elliott continued to lead activist activity with 12 campaigns in the first six months and in four different countries, according to the Barclays’ tally. Upstarts appear to be catching up, though. The Bloomberg Global Activism League Tables report, encompassing a broader group of investors and campaigns than the Barclays study, showed that Oasis Management Co. took the lead this year in launching the most campaigns. Oasis has also started the most campaigns engaging companies with more than $1 billion market value, replacing Elliott in that category for the first time since 2015, according to the Bloomberg league tables.

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7/1/2026

Investors’ Campaigns Hit Global Record, With More on the Way

Barron's (07/01/26) Ungarino, Rebecca

Activist shareholder groups have launched a record-high number of campaigns against companies this year, driven by a mix of heightened activity in Asia, a friendlier regulatory environment for mergers and acquisitions, and more campaigns engaging financial firms. Activist investors launched 184 new campaigns globally in the first and second quarters, up 20% in a year and nearly 40% above the five-year average for that period, according to Lazard. The uptick also reflected a growing number of campaigns featuring demands around how companies are using artificial intelligence, the investment bank said in a report on Wednesday. “Prepare for more, and more focused, campaigns,” Cleary Gottlieb lawyers wrote in a report in June. “A concentrated group of sophisticated funds is running more campaigns, though fewer now yield board seats.” Elliott Investment Management, led by Paul Singer, launched 13 new campaigns in the first and second quarters, Lazard’s report said. That’s up 86% in a year. In February, Elliott said it had built a “significant stake” in the London Stock Exchange Group (LON: LSEG). Elliott had also taken a stake in Synopsys (NASDAQ: SNPS), the chip-design software maker, Barron’s reported in March. Jesse Cohn, a managing partner at Elliott, joined the board of Synopsys last month as part of an agreement between the two firms. Activity in Asia and the U.S. led the global campaign uptick in the first six months of the year. Investors that specialize in the Asia-Pacific region such as Dalton Investments, Oasis Management, and Strategic Capital were among the busiest players, Lazard’s data showed. Over the past year, activists are also engaging financial institutions more often than they have in the past. The founders of HoldCo Asset Management, a Florida-based firm, told Barron’s in April that they recently initiated investments in Beacon Financial (NYSE: BBT), a Boston-based lender, and Bank of Hope (NASDAQ: HOPE). “What you can control, indisputably, is how you allocate capital,” Vik Ghei of HoldCo told Barron’s in April. “Yet, many banks refuse to have any sort of framework to evaluate that, and certainly don’t communicate about it. To us, that is the cardinal sin.” All of this activity should be a boon for the lawyers and advisors who work with companies dealing with activist investors. It may also be a way for firms to expand or start relationships with corporate clients. Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) CEO Brian Moynihan, whose bank has a large activist defense group, said last fall that working with a client “at a time of need” can mean they turn to those advisors for other assignments down the line.

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7/1/2026

Investors Make Bigger Push for Campaigns in H1, Seek More M&A

Reuters (07/01/26) Herbst-Bayliss, Svea

Investors pushed global companies more aggressively in the second quarter to make changes and lifted the overall pace of campaigns in the first half of 2026, Barclays (NYSE: BCS) data showed, as their biggest demand was for businesses to sell themselves in a rebounding deal market. Compared with the first half of 2025, investors such as Elliott Investment Management, Jana Partners and Starboard Value, launched 136 global campaigns between January and end-June, a 5% year-over-year increase, according to the data. While first-quarter activity was muted following a record number of 256 campaigns in all of 2025, activity picked up dramatically in the second quarter with 74 campaigns, the data showed. TOMS Capital began pressing U.S. shale operator Devon Energy (DVN.N) to sell assets or put itself up for sale, Starboard Value built a stake in AI-software maker Dynatrace (DT.N) and is pushing for changes, while Elliott built a position in Bio-Rad Laboratories (BIO.N). "The year started on a slower note but is getting much busier now and we have seen a big jump in demands for mergers and acquisitions," Jim Rossman, global head of shareholder advisory at Barclays, told Reuters. "Activists are saying why waste time trying to fix companies when the easier argument is to sell." The bulk of activity during the first six months of 2026 took place in the United States, where Barclays data counted 68 campaigns, representing a jump of 13% from the previous year. More than half of all global campaigns engaged technology and industrial companies as investors believe these sectors are particularly exposed to disruption from AI. As the investors pushed for changes, their most frequently requested demand was for some kind of M&A activity with calls for a sale ranking at the top of the list, the data showed. During the first half of the year, 21% of all campaigns agitated for a sale, compared with only 14% in 2022, Barclays said. Ancora Alternatives is pushing specialty chemicals company Ashland (ASH.N) to sell itself while Jana Partners wants payments company Fiserv (FISV.O) to sell additional assets. Bankers and lawyers forecast these demands will remain popular as deal values have rebounded and the regulatory environment in the United States is seen as friendlier even as economic headwinds remain. Investors also called on companies to refresh their boards, return capital and improve strategy and operations. Elliott, which invests some $80 billion in assets, remained the busiest investors, having launched 12 campaigns in the first half of the year. Oasis Management, Dalton Investments, Irenic Capital Management, and Palliser Capital were also busy and, together with Elliott, they waged some 41% of all campaigns in the first half, the Barclays data showed. Even as investors, once derisively called corporate raiders, pushed aggressively for corporate changes, there were far fewer corporate battles with only two proxy fights that went to a final vote and one major "withhold campaign," recorded in the first half, down from eight in the first half of 2025, the data showed. With fewer fights going to a vote, investors also saw a 17% drop in the number of board seats they managed to win compared with a year earlier. Elliott laid claim to 11 seats, including ones at Synopsys (NASDAQ: SNPS), Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NYSE: NCLH), and J.M. Smucker (NYSE: SJM), while Starboard scored six and Engine Capital got five, the data showed. All seats were negotiated through settlements.

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