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Exclusive: Anson Funds eyes proxy fight at Match, plans to nominate directors, sources say

Exclusive: Anson Funds eyes proxy fight at Match, plans to nominate directors, sources say

Reuters11-03-2025
NEW YORK, March 11 (Reuters) - Hedge fund Anson Funds is gearing up for a boardroom fight at Match Group (MTCH.O), opens new tab and plans to nominate several directors to the online dating company's 10-member board, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Anson, which owned roughly 0.6% of Match at the end of December according to a regulatory filing, has been pressing the parent of Tinder, Hinge and OkCupid for over a year to rethink capital allocation, cut costs, and consider a strategic review of its MG Asia business, the sources said.
Additionally the investor has raised concerns about Match's governance and pushed for management to refine its corporate strategy, said the sources who requested anonymity to speak about the private discussions.
Only three of Match's 10 directors will stand for election this year, creating a flash point for many investors who generally want all board members to be up for election annually.
Anson also highlighted tight business connections among a handful of Match directors and ties to former owner IAC/Interactive as worrisome and found the quick paced turnover in the executive suite where the company has had four chief executives in five years to be problematic, the sources said.
Over the last year, Anson and Match have held a dozen meetings and the company has made some changes, including holding an investor day and agreeing to return capital more aggressively, suggested by activist investors including Anson.
A representative for Match was not immediately available for comment and a representative for Anson declined to comment.
For Sagar Gupta, who is leading the campaign after he joined Anson as a portfolio manager in 2023 to build the firm's activism practice, the pace of change remains too slow, the sources said.
Gupta, who joined the board of U.S. call center software company Five9 in December, has a track record of investing in technology, media and telecommunications. He spearheaded many of those types of investments at activist Legion Partners, where he worked before joining Anson.
Match is valued at roughly $8 billion but has shrunk dramatically since the COVID pandemic when it was worth around $40 billion. Its stock price, which closed at $32.03 on Monday, has slipped nearly 2% this year but it has lost 67% in the last three years when the broader S&P 500 stock market index gained 41%.
Match's shrinking stock price has made the company vulnerable, prompting at least three activist investors to push for changes within the last year.
In early 2024, Elliott Investment Management, one of the world's biggest and most prominent activist investors, unveiled a $1 billion investment. The company named two new directors to the board several weeks later.
In July Starboard Value, another activist investor, was urging Match to consider a sale if it could not revitalize the business.
Regulatory filings detailing the two activists' holdings at the end of 2024 show Elliott owned a 4.8% stake while Starboard held 5.8% of the company.
While Anson's holding is considerably smaller, lawyers and bankers say the size of an activist's position is less important now as a growing number of investors push for changes at all types of companies and corporations are bracing for more expensive and noisy fights with corporate agitators.
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JEFF PRESTRIDGE: Neil Woodford must pay for his failures
JEFF PRESTRIDGE: Neil Woodford must pay for his failures

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

JEFF PRESTRIDGE: Neil Woodford must pay for his failures

A lot has happened in the UK since June 2019. None of us will ever forget Covid, the loss of loved ones, the economic destruction it brought about and the hole it put in the nation's finances. A black hole that Rachel from Accounts widens every day as a result of her inability to curb public spending. We've seen four prime ministers come and four go – and, for better or worse (I will let you be the judge), we now have the first Labour government since 2010. Personally, I've lost my mother (Helen of Troy) to cancer, finally got divorced after a 13-year separation, and been diagnosed with prostate cancer. Yet, in the financial world, one thing has not changed. Investment manager Neil Woodford once considered the UK's answer to Warren Buffett, has yet to be punished for the part he played in the collapse of his flagship fund, Woodford Equity Income. A collapse that was hurried along by the fund's suspension in June 2019 when a big institutional investor – Kent County Council – wasn't able to get its money out. The withdrawal couldn't be made because the fund's portfolio was chock-a-block with illiquid stocks that were difficult to sell in a hurry. A collapse which triggered painful losses for hundreds of thousands of investors despite a subsequent redress scheme. Last week, after six long years, the City's regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority, finally spelt out the punishment it would be meting out to Neil Woodford and his company, Woodford Investment Management: respective fines of £5.9 million and £40 million – and a ban preventing Mr Woodford from running retail investment funds in the future. Hurrah, you would think. Justice at long last. But not yet. Mr Woodford passionately believes he is innocent of any wrongdoing and has appealed against the regulator's decision. It will be heard in the Tax and Chancery Chamber of the Upper Tribunal, which deals with appeals against enforcement decisions made by the FCA and other financial regulators, such as the Prudential Regulation Authority and The Pensions Regulator. If the judge sides with Woodford, the fines and ban could be quashed. Fund expert Alan Miller believes there are enough flaws in the basis of the regulator's decision to make this a possibility. Equally, the judge could rubber stamp the FCA's decision. But irrespective of the outcome, we won't find out for a while. Judgments made in the Upper Tribunal are not handed out quickly. For example, an appeal made by two former Metro Bank executives against fines that the FCA wanted to impose on them for breaches of City listing rules was made in late 2022. It was only in June this year that the Upper Tribunal decided to uphold the FCA's decision – a wait of more than two and a half years. There is nothing to indicate that Woodford's appeal will be judged any quicker. So investors, sore over how Woodford has so far escaped financial punishment, might need to wait until the end of 2027 or early 2028 to discover whether he will finally pay a price for leaving them out of pocket. I know this will irk many former Woodford investors because they have repeatedly told me they have waited too long for him to get his comeuppance. They feel let down on many levels. First, by Woodford's risky management of a fund labelled as a plain vanilla UK equity income fund – skewing the portfolio towards smaller illiquid stocks. Most investors bought the fund on the understanding they were getting exposure to a basket of dividend-friendly UK blue chip shares, the strategy that proved so successful for Woodford investors when he previously ran money for Invesco Perpetual. Secondly, by an inadequate £235 million redress scheme arranged by the FCA which still left most investors nursing big losses. Thirdly, by the fact that while the FCA has been looking into Woodford, he reinvented himself as an investment strategist, inviting people to pay for details of portfolios designed to deliver income, growth or a mix of the two. It's a business which currently sits outside the financial regulatory framework. And of course, finally, by the regulator's protracted probe into Woodford's management of the fund in the run up to its suspension. Many Woodford victims will not like to hear this, but even if the FCA's decision is upheld it is likely the bulk of the fines will never be paid. Woodford Investment Management, a limited company, might have generated big profits in the past – and regularly paid Woodford and his colleague Craig Newman multi-million-pound dividends – but it now has barely two pennies to rub together. Unaudited financial statements for the year to the end of March 2024 indicate that it has net liabilities of £230,028. In other words, its debts exceed its assets – and it does not have the financial wherewithal to pay a £4 million fine, let alone a £40 million one. The £5.9 million personal fine shouldn't be a problem – and it's interesting that Woodford has just put his Salcombe bolthole on the market for £10 million. Yet there is a possibility Woodford might not end up having to pay a penny. Miller, the founding partner of wealth manager SCM Direct and previously with both Jupiter and New Star, has been a long-term critic of the way Woodford ran the Equity Income fund. But he believes Woodford's lawyers may well be able to pick holes in how the regulator has arrived at its decision. He says the illiquidity of Woodford Equity Income's portfolio was not just an issue 'between 31 July 2018 and 3 June 2019' – the time period used by the FCA to base the fines on. It went back even further. For example, at the end of December 2014, according to the fund's own accounts, 30 per cent of the portfolio were in illiquid assets, compared to 5 per cent for the Invesco Perpetual High Income fund that Woodford previously managed. Miller says: 'The fund was illiquid from day one, which begs the question: why didn't anyone – the regulator or the fund's overseer Link – do anything about it?' He also says that there are a number of small cap UK funds open today which have highly illiquid portfolios. These issues, Miller says, could help Woodford in his quest to get the FCA's decision overturned. A travesty, but one of the regulator's making. Last Wednesday, in the wake of the announcement from the FCA on the intended fines, I asked to speak to Neil Woodford to get his side of the story, but I was met with a wall of silence. No surprise there. Six years ago the same happened when I drove to his company's head office in Oxford at the crack of dawn to confront him in the wake of the fund's suspension. Although I was standing outside his offices when he arrived at 7am in a swish black Audi, he sneaked in before I could get anywhere near him – the company's facilities manager at the time had just ordered me and my photographer to leave because we were on private property. He might think silence is golden. I think he should pay a price for the way he let down his investors. But I'm not banking on it.

M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal
M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal

North Wales Live

time15 hours ago

  • North Wales Live

M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal

From Monday the UK will be celebrating Afternoon Tea Week (August 11-17), an event that honours a truly British tradition as well as possibly one of our biggest debates - cream or jam first? Just in time for the occasion, M&S customers can now purchase an Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £5 thanks to a deal stack. The box of treats will be delivered directly to shoppers' doorsteps and includes a variety of cakes, biscuits, and teabags. The sweet goodies on offer include all-butter shortbread fingers, carrot and walnut cakes, Victoria sandwich cake, and Millionaire shortbread bars, reports the Express. While the box usually costs £20 including UK-wide delivery, savvy shoppers have spotted a way to get it even cheaper, thanks to a money-saving website. TopCashback offers a free £15 bonus to all new members when they sign up and then a percentage back on all qualifying purchases from thousands of retailers, including M&S. This means new Top Cashback members shopping at Marks and Spencer for the first time will effectively get the Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £4.67 after cashback. Meanwhile, new Top Cashback members who are existing M&S customers can get the Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £4.83 after cashback. M&S is not the only retailer celebrating by offering shoppers a way to get the essentials at home to mark the occasion. Artisan baker Cutter and Squidge's afternoon tea home delivery range starts from £29.99 and includes a picnic-friendly tea perfect for taking out on a sunny day. Meanwhile, if you're more a fan of biscuits than cakes, luxury hamper brand Cartwright and Butler has unveiled a £20 afternoon tea selection packed with biscuits and in an eye- catching tin. Elsewhere, home bakers looking for new inspiration - or an unusual gift - can snag Wonderbly's newly launched illustrated personalised baking book which is packed with recipes for delicious treats. But if you'd rather get out and about and let other people do the prep, Wowcher has up to 68% off thousands of afternoon teas up and down the country. If all of that feels like a lot of hard work though, M&S' Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift can be delivered straight to the door and has garnered high praise from customers, with a satisfaction score of 4.8 based on more than 5,000 reviews. One satisfied customer hailed it as the 'perfect gift'. They added: "All the cakes and biscuits were fresh and tasty. I thoroughly enjoyed it. The box arrived on time-although the box was slightly squashed, nothing was damaged." Another buyer praised the gift but noted a concern regarding the shelf life of the cakes: "Bought for a gift, looked lovely, nicely packaged. The only drawback is the dates on the cake. When it arrived, the dates were that we only had a week to use it." A different customer said: "Bought as a present for my sister, she was very pleased with the contents, which arrived in good condition and had a good selection of cakes with plenty of time on the use-by dates. Very happy with this purchase." Yet another customer shared their positive experience: "I ordered the afternoon tea letterbox to be sent to my daughter on a specified date. The box arrived on the date, and I was kept informed regarding the delivery time. "It was well received, and the contents were delicious. The recipient was delighted." The Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift Contents: Victoria Sandwich Cake (75g) x 2 Millionaires Shortbread Bar (50g) x 2 Carrot Cake with Walnuts (75g) x 2 All Butter Shortbread Fingers (84g) All Butter Milk Viennese Chocolate Dipped Fingers (135g) Luxury Gold Tea Bags (16 Bags) Victoria Sandwich All Butter Milk Viennese Chocolate Dipped Fingers Millionaires Shortbread Carrot Cake Walnuts All Butter Shortbread Fingers How to get an M&S afternoon tea for £5 with TopCashback:

M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal
M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal

Wales Online

time15 hours ago

  • Wales Online

M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal

M&S shoppers can get 'delicious' £20 afternoon tea box for £5 in limited deal The box is packed with enough treats for two and is 75% off the usual price to coincide with Afternoon Tea Week Get the M&S Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £5 (Image: M&S) From Monday the UK will be celebrating Afternoon Tea Week (August 11-17), an event that honours a truly British tradition as well as possibly one of our biggest debates - cream or jam first? Just in time for the occasion, M&S customers can now purchase an Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £5 thanks to a deal stack. The box of treats will be delivered directly to shoppers' doorsteps and includes a variety of cakes, biscuits, and teabags. The sweet goodies on offer include all-butter shortbread fingers, carrot and walnut cakes, Victoria sandwich cake, and Millionaire shortbread bars, reports the Express. While the box usually costs £20 including UK-wide delivery, savvy shoppers have spotted a way to get it even cheaper, thanks to a money-saving website. TopCashback offers a free £15 bonus to all new members when they sign up and then a percentage back on all qualifying purchases from thousands of retailers, including M&S. This means new Top Cashback members shopping at Marks and Spencer for the first time will effectively get the Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £4.67 after cashback. Meanwhile, new Top Cashback members who are existing M&S customers can get the Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift for £4.83 after cashback. Carrot Cake with Walnuts is included in M&S's Afternoon Tea set (Image: M&S) M&S is not the only retailer celebrating by offering shoppers a way to get the essentials at home to mark the occasion. Artisan baker Cutter and Squidge's afternoon tea home delivery range starts from £29.99 and includes a picnic-friendly tea perfect for taking out on a sunny day. Meanwhile, if you're more a fan of biscuits than cakes, luxury hamper brand Cartwright and Butler has unveiled a £20 afternoon tea selection packed with biscuits and in an eye- catching tin. Elsewhere, home bakers looking for new inspiration - or an unusual gift - can snag Wonderbly's newly launched illustrated personalised baking book which is packed with recipes for delicious treats. But if you'd rather get out and about and let other people do the prep, Wowcher has up to 68% off thousands of afternoon teas up and down the country. If all of that feels like a lot of hard work though, M&S' Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift can be delivered straight to the door and has garnered high praise from customers, with a satisfaction score of 4.8 based on more than 5,000 reviews. One satisfied customer hailed it as the 'perfect gift'. They added: "All the cakes and biscuits were fresh and tasty. I thoroughly enjoyed it. The box arrived on time-although the box was slightly squashed, nothing was damaged." A range of biscuits included in the M&S afternoon tea box (Image: M&S) Another buyer praised the gift but noted a concern regarding the shelf life of the cakes: "Bought for a gift, looked lovely, nicely packaged. The only drawback is the dates on the cake. When it arrived, the dates were that we only had a week to use it." A different customer said: "Bought as a present for my sister, she was very pleased with the contents, which arrived in good condition and had a good selection of cakes with plenty of time on the use-by dates. Very happy with this purchase." Yet another customer shared their positive experience: "I ordered the afternoon tea letterbox to be sent to my daughter on a specified date. The box arrived on the date, and I was kept informed regarding the delivery time. "It was well received, and the contents were delicious. The recipient was delighted." The Afternoon Tea Letterbox Gift Contents: Victoria Sandwich Cake (75g) x 2 Millionaires Shortbread Bar (50g) x 2 Carrot Cake with Walnuts (75g) x 2 All Butter Shortbread Fingers (84g) All Butter Milk Viennese Chocolate Dipped Fingers (135g) Luxury Gold Tea Bags (16 Bags) Victoria Sandwich All Butter Milk Viennese Chocolate Dipped Fingers Millionaires Shortbread Carrot Cake Walnuts All Butter Shortbread Fingers How to get an M&S afternoon tea for £5 with TopCashback: Article continues below Sign up as a new member at TopCashback for free via this link. Search for M&S on the site, click through and buy the item normally. Get £15 cashback when you spend £15 or more. The cashback will be tracked to the TopCashback 'Earnings page' within seven days of purchase.

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