4/3/2026

Align Partners Sets Multiple 'Firsts' at General Meetings of Six Listed Companies

Asia Business Daily (04/03/26) Daehyun, Kim

On April 3, Align Partners Asset Management stated, "We will continue our shareholder engagement activities based on the strong support from shareholders," and announced the results of shareholder activism carried out for a total of six listed companies: DB Insurance (KRX: 005830), Gabia, (KOSDAQ: 079940), SoluM (KRX: 248070), Coway (KRX: 021240), Dentium (KRX: 145720), and Aplus Asset (KRX: 244920). The most notable achievement was with DB Insurance. At this year’s general meeting, Align Partners succeeded in appointing a director (Min Sua) through a shareholder proposal—marking the first such case in the insurance industry and among listed companies with a controlling shareholder and a market capitalization exceeding 10 trillion won. Although the amendment to the articles of incorporation, centered on re-establishing the Internal Transactions Committee, was voted down, 60.8% of the shares represented at the meeting were in favor, confirming broad support among minority shareholders. In response, the DB Insurance Board of Directors resolved to re-establish the Internal Transactions Committee. Changhwan Lee, CEO of Align Partners, said, "I hope that within this year, DB Insurance will announce meaningful changes so there will be no need for another shareholder proposal-driven vote next year." At Gabia, a record was set by putting a court-recommended, non-binding shareholder proposal on the general meeting agenda for the first time in Korea, which passed with a 61.4% approval rate. This was also the first instance of two directors appointed via shareholder proposal by ordinary resolution alone, without the 3% rule or cumulative voting. CEO Lee commented, "I hope this case will serve as a catalyst for more active use of non-binding shareholder proposals in the Korean capital market going forward." At Dentium’s general meeting, a shareholder proposal to set the directors’ remuneration limit was approved for the first time among listed companies. However, Align Partners noted that during the on-site review, they identified multiple cases with suspected proxy irregularities and announced plans to investigate these suspicions and consider legal action if necessary. With SoluM, rather than a vote, a comprehensive agreement was reached through negotiations with the largest shareholder. The agreement includes adjustments to the largest shareholder’s RCPS (Redeemable Convertible Preferred Shares) rights, securing a majority of independent directors on the board, and a transition to a professional management system. CEO Lee emphasized, "We will continue to provide active support and attention as shareholders so that SoluM can regain its rightful market evaluation as a leading global electronic components and ESL company." Although shareholder proposals were ultimately rejected at Coway and Aplus Asset, they gained overwhelming support from minority shareholders. Coway’s candidate, Park Yukyung, received approval from 50.1% of the represented shareholders, and the shareholder proposal for the appointment of an audit committee member at Aplus Asset also received majority support from minority shareholders. Regarding Aplus Asset, concerns were raised about the recent surge in insurance sector shareholdings and procedural delays in disclosure timing related to the general meeting. Align Partners stressed, "We will continue shareholder engagement activities until there is a fundamental change in attitude." Regarding Coway, CEO Lee stated, "Many of the shareholder proposals for Coway this year could have been voluntarily accepted by the board or settled through compromise," and added, "We will continue our shareholder engagement until Coway announces fundamental changes to improve capital allocation efficiency and board independence."

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4/2/2026

Randian Capital Joins Push for Overhaul at Snap

Investing.com (04/02/26) Juricic, Luke

Randian Capital, a New York-based retail activist firm, has intensified the pressure on Snap Inc (NYSE: SNAP) by issuing an open letter to Chief Executive Evan Spiegel. The firm, which holds economic exposure to over 160,000 shares through common stock and options, is calling for "urgent and aggressive actions" to reverse years of value erosion. The move follows a similar offensive by Irenic Capital Management, which launched a "Save Snap Now" campaign on Tuesday and disclosed a 2.5% economic interest in the social media firm. While the two firms are not partnered, Randian’s demands mirror Irenic’s focus on bloated costs and what it characterizes as a "governance vacuum" in Santa Monica. Randian’s proposal centers on the immediate separation of Spectacles, Snap’s augmented reality hardware venture, which it estimates has consumed $3 billion in investment. "It is imperative that Snap immediately separate Spectacles into an independent entity that is financed separately, allowing the core business to stand on its own merits," the firm stated in its letter. The investor also took aim at the company’s spending habits, specifically pointing to $1 billion in annual stock-based compensation and a $1.6 billion research budget. Randian argues that these outlays represent a "sustained destruction of shareholder value" given the lack of recent meaningful product enhancements and the stock’s 80% decline since its IPO. The firm’s formal turnaround plan outlines a rigorous path to operational efficiency, including a demand to leverage AI across the enterprise to enable a leaner model. Beyond cost-cutting, the plan calls for an immediate review of the organizational footprint and a commitment to total shareholder return as a core priority. Additional recommendations include the holding of a formal investor day to outline a credible strategy and the appointment of two new independent directors with founder-level experience. Randian also insists that if Snap cannot deliver value as a public entity, the board "should undertake a thorough review of strategic alternatives." A primary grievance for the investor remains Snap’s multi-class share structure, which grants founders Spiegel and Bobby Murphy total control while leaving public investors without a vote. "The absence of any shareholder governance has produced a predictably horrible total return," Randian noted in a social media post preceding the letter. To address this, the firm is urging the board to collapse the dual-class structure and restore shareholder enfranchisement to attract a stable institutional base. These recommendations align with Irenic’s view that the current structure prevents Snap from being included in major indices and increases the company’s cost of capital. “We thank Irenic for leading the charge, and hope management and the Board begin listening to frustrated and long-suffering shareholders,” Randian said in a statement to Investing.com. Randian, known for its involvement in the retail-led movement around Opendoor Technologies Inc (NASDAQ: OPEN) last year, as well as its turnaround plans for One Group Hospitality Inc (NASDAQ: STKS) and DocuSign Inc (NASDAQ: DOCU), intends to leverage its influence to organize retail investors. The firm has announced a "Snap Investor Town Hall" to be held live on X on April 6 at 7 PM EST to discuss its turnaround plan. "We believe retail investors need to make their voices heard to let Evan Spiegel know urgent and aggressive actions are needed to save the company," the firm wrote. By fostering a collective voice, Randian aims to force a strategic shift that it believes is long overdue for the social media pioneer.

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4/2/2026

Investment Trusts Call for UK Rule Change to Frustrate Activist Investors

Financial Times (04/02/26) Arnold, Martin

The UK investment trust industry is calling on the financial regulator to change rules to frustrate activist investors seeking to take control of the listed vehicles, intensifying the contest over the future of the 150-year-old sector. The Association of Investment Companies (AIC) said on Thursday that a tussle for control of a UK-listed investment trust had “exposed gaps which need to be addressed” and urged the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to overhaul its rules in response. The trade body, which represents closed-ended funds including investment trusts, said the FCA should change its related-party rules to prevent large shareholders from voting on their own proposals to appoint themselves as a trust’s asset manager. The AIC’s petition comes ahead of a crucial shareholder vote next week at Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust (LSE: EWI) to decide if the board of the FTSE 250 trust is taken over by Boaz Weinstein’s Saba Capital or if its investors accept an offer to cash out first. The contest has been given added urgency by the fact that EWIT’s biggest asset is a stake in SpaceX, Elon Musk’s rocket company that is preparing to go public in what is expected to be the world’s biggest initial public offering. Saba, which has invested in several UK-listed investment trusts, is seeking to replace the board of EWIT and take over as its appointed manager from Baillie Gifford. Richard Stone, AIC chief executive, said: “Saba’s admission this week that it wants to replace Baillie Gifford and become the investment manager for Edinburgh Worldwide highlights a potential conflict of interest that the current listing rules are not designed to tackle.” The FCA said last month it would review its listing rules for investment companies, including how they apply to board independence and related-party provisions. But FCA executive director of markets Simon Walls told the Sunday Times that calls for it to suppress shareholder activism risked appearing “short-sighted” and “self-interested." Jonathan Simpson-Dent, chair of EWIT, then issued an open letter criticizing the FCA’s stance and saying “retail investors deserve better safeguards from activist campaigns." “Retail investors deserve a system that works for them, as well as for the most powerful shareholders,” Simpson-Dent said. “I therefore welcome the FCA’s consultation later this year, though for the shareholders of Edinburgh Worldwide, any changes will come too late.” The AIC said Saba’s push to gain control of EWIT “raises urgent questions about the nature of board independence." “The current listing rules need amending to ensure shareholder activism remains a positive influence in corporate culture, not a route to riches at the expense of other shareholders,” Stone at the AIC said. “Our priority is to prevent potential conflicts of interest and better protect the rights of all shareholders.” Saba Capital said the AIC “only has one priority: to protect its paying members, who are the investment trusts and their managers, at all costs." The investor added: “Its recent self-serving actions make clear it has no interest in shareholder democracy or in holding boards and managers accountable.” The FCA said in a statement on Thursday: “We welcome engagement on this as we’ve already announced a review looking at whether it could be clearer that our related-party and board independence rules apply to prospective investment managers and directors.” “We want to ensure minority shareholders have the right protections against conflicts of interest in the terms under which investment managers are appointed.”

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4/2/2026

Ingles Markets Pushes Back on Summer Road LLC

Grocery Dive (04/02/26) Silverstein, Sam

Ingles Markets (NASDAQ: IMKTA) is pushing back on an effort by an investment firm linked to the opioid epidemic to elect one of its representatives to the grocer’s board of directors, which the company said would harm its operations and damage its stock price if approved by shareholders. The investment firm, Summer Road LLC, sent a letter to owners of Ingles’ stock urging them to vote for Rory Held during Ingles’ upcoming annual meeting, which is set for April 30. In a letter to shareholders, Ingles’ board said that associating with Held, who it said is an employee of Summer Road, would “be harmful to Ingles and all of our stakeholders.” Summer Road said Held would provide an independent voice on Ingles’ board, adding that the board and the company’s management “have failed [shareholders] by treating the Company like a private entity run for the benefit of Chairman Robert P. Ingle, II.” Summer Road, which says it owns about 3% of the outstanding shares of Ingles’ Class A common stock, said in the letter that Ingles’ shareholder returns have underperformed those of other publicly traded grocers and companies in the S&P 500 in recent years. “[I]ngles leadership has presided over prolonged periods of underperformance, maintained a culture of opacity and prioritized their own capital returns while keeping our dividends stagnant for decades,” Summer Road wrote. Ingles said in its letter that its shareholder returns have in recent years “meaningfully outperformed” those of members of the S&P SmallCap 600, an index that tracks companies with relatively small market capitalizations. The grocer added that it has also outperformed “relevant grocery peers.” Ingles said shareholders should not vote for Held because Summer Road is the family investment office for members of the Sackler family, which controlled pharmaceutical manufacturer Purdue Pharma. Purdue Pharma was forced to file for bankruptcy protection over its role marketing highly addictive opioid medications and has been restructured. Ingles said in the letter that allowing Held to join its board would potentially lead to lost sales because of Summer Road’s connection with the Sackler family. Ingles also believes it would lose pharmacy and fuel sales in addition to opportunities to create value over the long term, according to the letter. “We believe customers may choose to shop anywhere else but at a store whose Board includes a Sackler Representative – particularly if they have experienced the loss of a family member or friend due to the addiction caused by the Sacklers’ OxyContin,” Ingles said, referring to the brand name of an opioid-based painkiller Purdue Pharma developed and distributed. Ingles urged shareholders to vote for its nominees, who include Dwight Jacobs, a former Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK) senior executive, and Rebekah Lowe, a former regional bank president. Summer Road said that Held, if elected to the board, would push Ingles to consider breaking into two companies — one to handle its grocery operations and the other to own its real estate. According to Ingles’ annual report for fiscal year 2025, the company owns the property occupied by 174 of its supermarkets. Held would also advocate for “an exhaustive, data-driven study” of how the company allocates data, Summer Road said, adding that it believes that returning capital to shareholders is likely the highest-return opportunity available to the company. In addition, Held would urge Ingles to reinstate quarterly earnings calls and make other changes to how it handles relationships with investors, according to Summer Road. Ingles, which runs about 200 supermarkets in six Southeastern states, recorded net sales of $1.37 billion during the first quarter of fiscal 2026, up 6.6% compared with the same period during the prior year. Net income for the quarter rose almost 70%, to $28.1 million.

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4/1/2026

New BP CEO Meg O'Neill Starts Off by Promising Consistency, Staff Note Shows

Reuters (04/01/26) Kelly, Stephanie; Nasralla, Shadia

BP's (BP.L) new CEO Meg O'Neill began her stint on Wednesday by offering consistency while accelerating the group's performance, a year after the company pivoted its strategy firmly back to oil and gas, according to a staff note seen by Reuters. O'Neill is BP's fourth CEO since 2020 and its first external hire for the role in more than a century. She is the first woman to lead a top-five oil major. Formerly of Australia's Woodside Energy (WDS.AX) and Exxon Mobil (XOM.N), O'Neill arrives as BP seeks to move away from an ill-fated foray into renewables. "I believe we can safely accelerate performance and drive innovation, sustainability and growth," she said in the note to employees. "I'm committed to providing clear direction and consistency so we can move forward together with confidence." She joins new chairman Albert Manifold, who took up the role in October and has underscored the need to further reshape BP's portfolio to boost profitability. Elliott Investment Management, one of BP's largest shareholders, has called on Manifold to address what it has called the company's shortcomings. Manifold recently announced a leaner board, with former Shell finance chief Simon Henry among those departing, saying fewer directors would allow for faster decision-making and sharper oversight as part of BP's reset. BP has cut billions of dollars from planned renewable energy projects, pledged to divest $20 billion of assets by 2027, and to reduce debt and costs. Net debt fell to $22 billion from $26 billion in the fourth quarter last year, and BP reiterated its target range of $14 billion-$18 billion by end-2027. The company suspended share buybacks in February to focus on cutting debt and refocusing investment on oil and gas projects.

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3/31/2026

Palliser Engages MSG Maker Ajinomoto in AI Hunt

Bloomberg (03/31/26) French, Alice

Palliser Capital has expanded its hunt for overlooked AI beneficiaries in Japan with a stake in seasoning maker Ajinomoto Co. (TYO: 2802), according to people familiar with the matter. Palliser has built a position in Ajinomoto within the past six months and is lobbying for the firm to raise prices for its chip insulation products, the people said, asking not to be named as the information is private. Palliser is now among Ajinomoto’s top 25 shareholders, they said. The fund is calling for a more than 30% increase in prices for Ajinomoto Build-Up Film (ABF), according to a document seen by Bloomberg. ABF is used to package high-performance semiconductors, and Palliser believes Ajinomoto is missing out on substantial share price upside from the AI infrastructure buildout, the document shows. The investment is part of Palliser’s move to identify lesser-known winners from the ongoing artificial intelligence boom. It follows the fund’s recent stake in toilet maker Toto Ltd. (TYO: 5332), where it is calling for more disclosure around the company’s chip parts business. Ajinomoto holds more than 90% of global market share for insulating materials used in PCs and data center servers, according to its website. Palliser is urging the company to establish the ABF business as a standalone segment to raise awareness of its strength, according to the people. Ajinomoto shares have gained around 3% in the past six months, underperforming Japan’s benchmark Topix, which has risen almost 12%. In contrast, other chip material makers like Ibiden Co. (4062.T) and Resonac Holdings (4004.T) have rallied more than 60%. Ajinomoto, which is known for discovering MSG seasoning more than 100 years ago, brought its resin-based chip insulating films to market in 1999. Their origins lie in Ajinomoto’s command of MSG. Chlorinated paraffin, a byproduct of the MSG-making process, can be used to soften resin, according to the company’s website. ABF sales are rising due to AI demand and the business will “drive company-wide performance” in upcoming quarters, according to Ajinomoto’s February earnings presentation. The company opened a new facility to produce ABF products in Gunma, central Japan, in October. The ABF business currently falls under Ajinomoto’s “healthcare and others” segment, which accounted for around 29% of the company’s total business profit in the fiscal year ended March 2025.

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