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Third Point Investors move addresses persistent discount
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Discount persisted even after steps taken to mitigate
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TPIL expected to deliver mid-teens returns by end of 2027
(Adds comment from TPIL shareholder Boaz Weinstein in paragraph
5)
By Svea Herbst-Bayliss
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), 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,
likely in the third quarter. Given Loeb's high ownership stake,
it is likely to be approved.
TPIL is considering a tender offer that would allow
investors to get a better price for their shares than on the
open market.
Boaz Weinstein, a TPIL shareholder and prominent U.S.
activist investor who has taken aim at closed-end funds'
discounts, on Wednesday signaled support for the Third Point
plans.
"We're pleased to see a board of directors responding to the
inherent challenges within the UK investment trust market,"
Weinstein said.
"We believe this transaction creates a clear path to value
creation and plan to support it."
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.
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
, Walt Disney ( DIS ) and Campbell's, into a
target for other activist investors.
Four years ago TPIL shareholder Asset Value Investors took
public aim at the 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.-based Weinstein, who waged war
against certain BlackRock ( BLK ) 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 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.
Pershing Square Capital Management's Bill Ackman 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.