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Showing posts with label Bill Ackman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Ackman. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Pershing Square (Bill Ackman) discloses updated portfolio positions in 13F filing

Highlights from Q2 2023 filing as compared to Q1 2023:
  • Increased positions in: GOOG (to ~9.38 mln shares from ~8.07 mln shares), HHH (to ~16.57 mln from ~15.98 mln), HLT (to ~9.33 mln from ~9.3 mln)
  • Maintained positions in: GOOGL (~2.19 mln shares)
  • Decreased positions in: LOW (to ~7.47 mln shares from ~10.04 mln shares), QSR (to ~23.35 mln from ~24.19 mln), CMG (to ~0.95 mln from ~1.03 mln), CP (to ~15.1 mln from ~15.24 mln)

Friday, March 24, 2017

Valeant (VRX) : Ackman exit fails to sway valuation expert

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. has enough value left for Aswath Damodaran to maintain a stake. The New York University professor and author of four books about company valuation disclosed in a blog posting Thursday that he still owns shares bought last year, before Valeant dropped to its lowest price since 2009 and investor Bill Ackman sold his entire holding at a loss. Damodaran estimated the drugmaker’s value as a going concern at $13.68 a share, 26 percent higher than Thursday’s close -- and 35 percent lower than his average cost of about $21.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Valeant Pharmaceuticals (VRX) in free-fall

  • Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, owned a whopping 19.47 million Valeant shares as of the end of June. That was 5.7% of the company. Another investment advisory firm called Ruanne, Cunniff & Goldfarb, which runs the $8.1 billion Sequoia Fund, owned 33.88 million shares. That was 9.9% of the float.
The biotechnology firm was already under political pressure due to its strategy of buying up competitors, then dramatically hiking prices for the drugs those firms sold. Federal and state prosecutors recently subpoenaed the company, looking for information on its drug distribution and pricing strategies.


Then today, Valeant shares plunged a whopping $28.13, or 19%, after a leading short-selling research firm questioned the firm’s sales practices. Specifically, Citron Research zeroed in on a relationship Valeant allegedly has with a specialty pharmacy.

It said Valeant improperly boosted its own sales by dumping too much inventory on a company called Philidor RX Services. Citron also noted that the websites of several other pharmacies bear a striking similarity to Philidor’s, something it said could imply that Valeant has been stuffing inventory elsewhere.

Citron even went so far as to ask: “Is this Enron part deux?” That caused Valeant’s shares to plunge so far, they were ultimately halted.


monthly


Sunday, June 24, 2012

Ackman discloses 12% stake in newly public Burger King

  
  • Burger King (BKW): Now part of Restaurant Brands International (QSR).  The company is majority-owned by 3G Capital—the previous majority owner of Burger King—holding a 51% stake. The remainder of the company is publicly traded on the New York and Toronto Stock Exchanges, and owned by the prior shareholders of Burger King and Tim Hortons. The company began trading on December 15, 2014.
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Hedge-fund manager Bill Ackman just reported a 12% stake in the newly public shares of Burger King Worldwide (BKW). The head of Pershing Square Capital Management has 41,922,908 shares of the Whopper maker, according to the filing.


*** BKW one week later ***



Burger King returned to the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday, less than two years after 3G Capital purchased the company and took it private in order to focus on turning around the brand.
While that tranformation is far from complete, this year's early signs of progress were enough to spark the interest of Justice Holdings. The investment company co-founded by hedge fund veteran William Ackman paid $1.41 billion in a deal that closed Wednesday for a 29 percent share in the Miami fast-food chain. The complex transaction took Burger King Holdings public in a reverse merger through the Justice Holdings shell company.
After Burger King management rang the bell Wednesday at the New York Stock Exchange, the company's stock opened trading under the ticker BKW at $14.50 per share. During a day that saw nearly seven million shares change hands, the stock went as high as $16.21 per share. It closed at $15.01.
The price is lower than when Burger King last went public in 2006 at $17 per share. While Burger King's brand recognition remains high, industry experts say investors will want to see proof that the company's recent results are sustainable.
I don't think anybody thought this was going to be a high-flying IPO, said Dennis Lombardi, a restaurant industry analyst with WD Partners. This is more of a balance-sheet financial transaction that has little to do with what the consumer experiences.
It's a matter of waiting to see if it's a growth stock or if it's just going to move with the market, he said. Any real significant change in the stock is going to depend on management's ability to improve the brand.
That challenge lies with Burger King management, which will remain intact. The deal leaves 71 percent of the company in the hands of 3G Capital, which purchased Burger King in 2010 for $4 billion. No changes are planned in the company's strategy. The focus remains on expanding Burger King's menu to appeal to a broader base of consumers, reimaging the North American restaurants and improving service. At the same time, Burger King is aggressively expanding the brand in high-growth countries overseas.
We're in a position where the value of the brand is much more than the value of the business, Daniel Schwartz, Burger King's chief financial officer, said in a phone interview. We have a global iconic brand with over 12,500 restaurants operating in over 80 countries. In the U.S., we believe there is a tremendous opportunity to close the sales gap with our peers. Internationally, we can nearly double the brand presence.
Burger King's global expansion kicked into high gear last week with the announcement of a deal to open 1,000 restaurants in China over the next five to seven years as part of a joint venture with the Kurdoglu family, a longtime Burger King franchisee in Turkey, and the Cartesian Capital Group, a global private equity firm. The company completed a similar deal recently in Russia and one last year in Brazil.
The international joint-venture deals are part of an overall strategy by Burger King management to reduce the amount of company-owned restaurants and shift toward a completely franchised system with a steady stream of royalty revenues. Based on the success of Dunkin' Donuts' public offering, many companies see this model as a key to gaining a higher valuation from Wall Street investors.
It also helps that currently investors have a healthy appetite for restaurant stocks.
If you are a believer that consumer spending is going to turn around, one of the first places that should show up is in restaurant sales, said Mark Kalinowski, restaurant industry analyst with Janney Capital Markets. You've got to eat every day and it's a relatively low average check.
Burger King's return to the public markets comes as the company has started to see progress in its turnaround efforts. During the first quarter of 2012, sales at North American restaurants grew 4.2 percent, the first positive growth in more than two years.
The increase in this key measurement helped Burger King turn a net profit of $25 million for the quarter ending March 31, compared with a loss of $5.9 million during the same period last year.
The chain still needs to lure back consumers and regain market share after losing its place to Wendy's as the country's second-largest burger chain.
In the first 18 months, we've delivered tangible results, Schwartz said. It's on us to execute. If we deliver on our goals, the stock should be significantly higher in the future.
About 16 percent of Burger King's shares will be immediately eligible for trading on the open market, Schwartz said. Justice's founders have agreed to hold their 13 percent interest for a year and 3G Capital will not trade any stock for six months.
That should help Burger King's stock price.
A limited supply relative to demand should keep prices higher, said Dean Haskell, a restaurant industry consultant with National Retail Concept Partners and a former Wall Street analyst. Stocks priced in the teens are typically oriented at retail consumer investors.