
Loeb's Third Point Investors Ltd to become holding company with acquisition
NEW YORK, May 21 (Reuters) - Billionaire investor Daniel Loeb is transforming his London-listed investment company into an insurance holding company following years of criticism about its valuation discount to his New York-based hedge fund Third Point.
Third Point Investors Limited (TPIL)(TPOGu.L), opens new tab, which listed on the London Stock Exchange in 2007, said on Wednesday that it will acquire Malibu Life Reinsurance SPC, a life annuity reinsurer which Loeb launched last year.
The stock-for-stock deal will be voted on by shareholders. Given Loeb's high ownership stake, it is likely to be approved at the vote, which is expected to occur in the third quarter.
TPIL is considering a tender offer that would allow investors to get a better price for their shares than on the open market.
Like other UK-listed investment companies, TPIL is known as a feeder fund and was originally designed to give retail shareholders a taste of hedge funds that had long been off limits to all but the wealthiest and largest financiers.
TPIL, which has roughly $500 million invested in Third Point's flagship Offshore hedge fund, will invest principally in Third Point's various credit strategies.
By the end of 2027, the new reinsurance operating company expects to deliver mid-teens returns, the company said in a statement.
Last year TPIL gained 25.5% after fees. This year it is roughly flat.
The merger is designed to end years of complaints about a persistent gap between where the fund's shares trade and their underlying net asset value.
Criticism about the double-digit discount even turned Loeb, who has waged activist campaigns at companies including Nestle (NESN.S), opens new tab, Walt Disney (DIS.N), opens new tab and Campbell's (CPB.O), opens new tab, into a target for other activist investors.
Four years ago TPIL shareholder Asset Value Investors took public aim at the TPIL discount, and TPIL took steps, including share buybacks, to address it.
But the discount, which persists at many such companies, continues to annoy certain investors. Earlier this year, U.S. activist investor Boaz Weinstein, who waged war against certain BlackRock (BLK.N), opens new tab investment products, turned his attention to the UK where he targeted several local investment trusts with the aim of overhauling their boards.
Last year, without direct pressure from outsiders, TPIL appointed two independent directors -- activist investors Dimitri Goulandris and Liad Meidar -- to its board to lead a months-long strategy review, which led to this move.
The board, which is independent of Loeb and Third Point, earlier this week unanimously approved the planned transaction.
TPIL will own an interest in the Third Point hedge fund and in Malibu after the transaction is finalized. It said it would likely meet Malibu's ongoing capital needs by periodically redeeming capital from the hedge fund. Ultimately, TPIL will become a pure-play operating company within the next 18 months to 36 months.
Late last year, Third Point purchased hedge fund manager AS Birch Grove to help build out its credit platform.
Third Point's move echoes recent steps by other investors, including Pershing Square Capital Management's Bill Ackman, who earlier this month took a listed real estate development company, in which he already owned a stake, and transformed it into a diversified holding company that will buy stakes in other companies.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
Lottery players could still win record EuroMillions jackpot next week
The EuroMillions draw on Friday night offered a record jackpot of £210m, but no winning tickets were purchased. The winning numbers were 20, 21, 29, 30, 35, with Lucky Stars 2 and 12. Seven players won the second-tier prize, entitling them to winnings of more than £2m each. The jackpot is capped at £210m, and additional money has gone to boosting prizes in the second tier. Tuesday's draw will offer an estimated jackpot of £208 million, meaning the record prize amount is still up for grabs.


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
The Bradford Club closes after more than 250 years
It was in the 1860s that the Bradford Club opened in a city that teemed with commerce and industry. This week this venerable institution, which counts Sir Titus Salt and Sir Ken Morrison among its past members, closed its doors for the final decision, taking after patronage declined since the demise of the Bradford wool trade, brought the curtain down on one of the last Victorian gentleman's clubs to still exist in a provincial the closure of the nearby Wool Exchange in the 1970s, the dining room would throng with mill owners and managers on weekdays, while magistrates and solicitors debated in corners. Business deals were sealed over a game of club itself was founded in 1761 before settling in its final premises on Piece Hall Yard. Fixtures and fittings have been stripped out ahead of a new chapter in the Grade II-listed building's history. The BBC bumped into trustee Steven Howard on Piece Hall Yard as final preparations for departure were being made."It's a great shame," he said."Sadly, after many, many years of being here, we're having to close because what we do here is no longer fashionable."Mr Howard added: "We were still getting by as of Covid, but people's habits changed and not temporarily."Many of our overheads were hugely affected by the war in Ukraine."For instance, our power costs went through the roof."Our model just became redundant really." The membership had become elderly and many were no longer living in Bradford. The number of professionals working in the city centre had declined since law and accountancy firms left for of the furniture has been donated to a Halifax-based charity that will send chairs and tables to schools in the building has been bought by the owners of the adjacent City Vaults pub and will become a hospitality venue. Si Cunningham is the chair of Bradford Civic Society as well as the City Centre Heritage Action said: "I think there's a couple of things that have made the site particularly special. "The first one and perhaps the most important one is the building itself. "It's a very architecturally striking building. "It's a bit of a hidden gem for the city as well, because it's located down quite a quiet street in the city centre and has really strong links to Lockwood and Mawson, who are very well-known Bradford architects. "So the building itself helps to tell the story of Bradford, particularly those links to the industry."And I think as far as the club is concerned, that's the part of the city's heritage that probably has quite a lot of fascinating stories and a lot of links to some of the big names from Bradford's wool industry who would have been members there over the years as well." Dr David Pendleton is the current editor of the Bradford Antiquarian, which is the journal of the Bradford Historical and Antiquarian often visited the Bradford Club with the society. "It'll be sorely missed, but in some respects, I'm astonished it's got this far," Dr Pendleton Leeds Club, which had a similar history, closed its doors in 2017. One of the few clubs still going in Yorkshire is the Harrogate Club, which has been in existence since Bradford once had the most private members' clubs outside of London, with five Pendleton said: "There were some very rich members whose names have disappeared from history. "But people like Sir Titus Salt, and the father of the composer Frederick Delius, who owned a big warehouse in Little Germany."Names that we still remember to this day were members of that club and undoubtedly it would have had a lot of famous visitors as well over the years." But as the years went on, the club had to look to other ways of generating income. It was used as a filming location for the 2013 BBC drama The Great Train Robbery, as well as The ABC Murders and recent production far as Dr Pendleton is concerned, he is glad it is being kept in local hands."It's pretty good news that the people from the City Vaults have bought the building because they've got a decent track record of reviving, and doing a good job actually, of some of the city centre buildings," he Mr Howard is still reticent about whether the club's history will be kept alive."I'm not sure how much of it can be preserved if we're not here," he said."We were more interested in the club continuing, but it's not been possible."Times have changed." Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Developers lodge 200-homes plan on edge of Newbold Verdon
Developers have lodged plans to build 200 homes on farmland on the edge of Newbold Homes has earmarked a 20.7-acre (8.3 hectare) site, off the B585 Bosworth Lane in Leicestershire, for submitted by the firm to Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council show the proposed scheme would also include a health and wellbeing hub or community shop and an area of sports pitches and school playing council's planning officers are assessing the application and a decision on whether to grant permission could be made later this year.