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Company: Cost Group Inc. (CSGP)
Business: Costa Group It is a supplier of real estate markets online, information and analysis in real estate markets. It manages its business in two segments: North America, which includes the United States and Canada, and International, which mainly includes Europe, Asia-Pacific and Latin America. Its main brands include Costa, a global provider or commercial real estate data, analysis and news; Loopnet, a commercial real estate market; Apartments.com, a platform for apartment rentals; and Homes.com, a residential real estate market.
Market value: $ 32.64b ($ 77.39 per share)
Costa group in the last 12 months
Activists: the Shaw and the third point
Shaw’s property: after
Property of the third point: 2.04%
Average cost: after
Activist comment: The Shaw is a great multi-strategy background is not historical known to activism. The company is not an activist investor. Rather, use activism as an opportunistic tool in situations where the company considers it useful. The SHAW is looking for solid businesses in good industries and if you identify a low performance that is under the control of management, it will assume an active role. Grants a premium on private and constructive commitment to management and, as a result, it reaches an agreement with the company before its position is equally public.
Third Point is a multiple strategies coverage fund founded by Dan Loeb, which will selectively take activist positions. Loeb is one of the true pioneers in the field of shareholders activism and one of a handful of activists who shape what has become the activism of modern shareholders. He invented the poison letter letter at a time when it was or necessary. As times have changed, it has made the transition from the poisonous pen to the power of the argument. Third Point has friendly obtained the representation of the Board in companies such as Baxter and Disney, but he does not doubt a fight of power if it was.
What is happening
On April 6, Costa Group held support agreements with Shaw and the third point in relation to a refrigeration of the Board and corporate governance improvements. This includes the incorporation of Christine McCarthy, John Berisford and Rachel Glaser as directors of the Board; The retirement of Michael Klein, Christopher Nassetta and Laura Kaplan of the Board. It also includes the appointment of Louise Sams as president of the Independent Board and the creation of a capital allocation committee. The Shaw and the third point agreed to comply with certain regular detection and voting provisions.
Behind the scenes
Costa Group is a supplier of real estate markets online, information and analysis in real estate markets. Manage important brands that include Costa Suite, Loopnet, Apartments.com and Homes.com. Approximately 95% of the company’s revenues are derived from the central business, which consists largely in costing Suite and Apartments. Due to these dynamics, this business has negotiated historical with a cousin to its information service colleagues, but is now operating in line with them.
This regression in the company’s valuation comes largely from the aggressive investment of costing in its residential market business, Homes.com, which acquired in May 2021. Unlike its suite and apartments of well established apartments such as Zillow. However, never, the company is deviating approximately 75% of its $ 1.3 billion of profits before interest, taxes, deposit and amortization of its main business to finance the $ 900 million losses of Homes.com. As a result, capital expenses have increased 878% from 2021 to 2024, marked by a 347% increase in 2024 alone.
Enter Shaw and Third Point that have been separated by separate support agreements with costing in relation to a refrigeration of the Board and corporate governance improvements. This includes the following: (i) the incorporation of Christine McCarthy (former Disney CFO), John Berisford (former president of S&P Global) and Rachel Glaser (former CFO of ETSY) as directors; (ii) the withdrawal of President Michael Klein, Christopher Nassetta and Laura Kaplan of the Board; (iii) Louise Sam’s appointment as an independent president; And (iv) the creation of a capital allocation committee, which Berisford and McCarthy will join. In activism, there are agreements that are meean to appease an activist investor to keep them silent, and there are genuine agreements that mean a real agreement with the activist on how to process. This is the last. First, the obvious indication is that three directors were replaced on an eight -people board, which is a large soda (approximately 40% of the Board). But less obvious and more account is the structure of the settlement and who was replaced. First, the agreement was structured as a replacement of the directors, not an addition of three directors, which is more common in settlements, particularly those that have relatively narrower joints (that is, eight directors for a $ 30 billion company). Second, the three directors who were replaced were three of the four oldest directors, excluding the CEO, and one of them was the president of the company since 1987. Moreover, the new president of the Board is the second newest director before Latin. This is not only a refreshment of the Board on behalf, but also in substance.
There is also a more subtle provision of the agreement that we believe that sacrifices more of which levers can follow the levers for value creation: the formation of a capital allocation committee, which will consist of four directors, two or who will be the new directors of Shaw/Third Point. This is a clear situation of something that is from Sen in activist campaigns, a central business that is enormously profitable, but whose profits are used to finance a non -essential non -essential business. But it is not likely that the plan here completes the exhibition of the Homes.com business, or otherwise we would have seen a strategic transaction committee. It is more likely that this capital allocation committee will be responsible for finding ways to finance the homes.com business without using the main business flow. This could include a business spin-off with a co-star that retains some property, a sale of a business part of a strategic investor or increases in some third-party capital. The capital allocation committee also has the task of evaluating international expansion. Costa has already made movements to expand International, including the acquisition of Relegarket.com at the end of 2023, one of the three most visited residential property portals in the United Kingdom. The company too Recently sacrificed to acquire the domain of the signature of real estate of Australian real estate. The Capital Assignment Committee will certainly evaluate this potential transaction, as well as others, and make recommendations to the recently reconstituted Board. Ultimately, the objective here is to arise with the central business of costing with the international growth prospects that are valued in a multiple of its $ 1.3 billion consistent for the Ebitda multiple that it historically received. This would result in an approximate company value of $ 45 billion compared to around $ 30 billion today.
Both the third point and the Shaw are not purely activists, but companies of multiple strategies that often use activism as an opportunistic tool. The third point, founded by Dan Loeb, is a true pioneer in shareholders’ activism, but has used it with more moderation in recent years as dictated by the market wages and notable opportunities. The Shaw is relatively new in activism, but the firm has demonstrated in recent years that it is as competent in activism as it is in the other strategies that it is so successful in its multi-strategy background. While both established themselves with the company in their own agreements, the two certainly have a related mind, but do not act as a group. This is an encouraging development, and it is something that we often see today, but we would rarely see 15 years ago: it puts the value of the shareholders above the ego. Third point revealed that it has a 2.04% position in co -star. The Shaw did not deactivate its position, but as a coverage fund of $ 70 billion, it does not take small activist positions: we would expect to be at least the size of the third points.
Ken Squire is the founder and president of 13D Monitor, an institutional investigation service on shareholders’ activism, and the founder and portfolio manager of the 13D activist fund, a mutual fund that invests in an investment portfolio 13d Invests 13d.