Preparing for bigger, bolder shareholder activists

| Artigo

Activist investors1 are getting ever more adventurous. Last year, according to our analysis, the US-listed companies that activists targeted had an average market capitalization of $10 billion—up from $8 billion just a year earlier and less than $2 billion at the end of the last decade. They’ve also been busier, launching an average of 240 campaigns in each of the past three years—more than double the number a decade ago. And even though activists are a relatively small group, with only $75 billion in combined assets under management compared with the $2.5 trillion hedge-fund industry overall, they’ve enjoyed a higher rate of asset growth than hedge funds and attracted new partnerships with traditional investors. As a result, they have both the capital and the leverage to continue engaging largecap companies.

Shareholders generally benefit. Our analysis of 400 activist campaigns (out of 1,400 launched against US companies over the past decade) finds that, among large companies for which data are available, the median activist campaign reverses a downward trajectory in target-company performance and generates excess shareholder returns that persist for at least 36 months (Exhibit 1).2

1
Activist campaigns, on average, generate a sustained increase in shareholder returns.

Internationally, others have reached similar conclusions.3 That’s consistent with a general shift in the tone of the debate around activist involvement.4 Today, we encounter more awareness of the positive effects that an activist campaign can have—on improving strategy and operations, for example, or strengthening the board of directors, or even mitigating perceived pressure for short-term performance.5

But that presents a challenge for executives, many of whom reflexively resist activists, should they make an approach. Activists themselves often provoke that response, our analysis finds, with confrontational or even acerbic overtures. Those executives who can set aside tone and style, though, will find that some activists do indeed have ideas that create value and improve shareholder performance. In fact, a collaborative, negotiated, or settled response to activist initiatives tends to lead to higher excess shareholder returns than a combative one (Exhibit 2).

2
A collaborative settled outcome tends to lead to higher shareholder returns in the 3-year time horizon.

In order to shape the kind of relationship they want with activists, managers must first understand what attracts them. Then they can gauge their own vulnerability to undertake for themselves the kinds of value-creating actions an activist would likely propose. They should also have plans at the ready for responding, well in advance of an activist’s overture.

What attracts activist shareholders?

An activist campaign itself can be costly for management, both in direct expenses and in the significant time and attention diverted from running the business. Our interviews suggest that each contested campaign costs a company between $10 million and $20 million—plus weeks of management time to develop plans and meet with investors. Executives who can identify and address the weak spots that an activist would target before an activist gets involved can help a company reap the benefits without incurring the cost—whether through preemptive actions or a fast path to compromise should an activist launch a campaign.

What are those weak spots? Not unexpectedly, our research finds that fundamental underperformance is the most likely weakness to trigger an activist investor. Most often, activists focus on underperformance relative to industry peers, rather than absolute declines in performance, and they especially react to shareholder returns that have significantly lagged the industry in the previous two years, anemic revenue growth, and a growing gap in margins relative to peers. Large cash balances and recurring restructuring charges are also strong indicators of looming activism. Notably, in our research, we found that executive compensation and a company’s gap in consensus earnings do not appear to be significant indicators of activist interest despite the frequent use of these metrics in activist-campaign rhetoric. If a company shows signs of underperformance relative to peers, it’s quite likely that an activist is already watching.

Executives can run a preemptive activist audit to evaluate their company’s fundamental performance—and we’ve observed a growing number of companies doing so, proactively testing whether they may be a target and reviewing their operating and strategic plans in that light. A rigorous and unbiased preemptive audit that identifies weak spots and evaluates all options can help keep activists at bay and uncover opportunities for value creation. One company took a detailed look at performance trends against peers and dug deep into the fundamental factors creating value for each of its business segments. Armed with this information, it was able to better understand the intrinsic value of each of its businesses and compare this with how the market valued the sum of the parts. Finally, it considered all possible options for closing the gap, including operational improvements, changes in capital allocation and financing, and fundamental changes to its portfolio.

In certain sectors, we have also observed a pattern of industry-specific investment theses. For example, industrial companies are attractive targets where the breadth of the corporate portfolio leads to a market value lower than the sum of the independent businesses. Other tempting targets are basic-materials companies with stranded or undervalued raw-material assets and pharmaceuticals companies with drug pipelines (R&D or production) perceived to be weaker than those of their peers.

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What to do when approached by an activist

If an activist does reach out, how executives react plays a big part in how collaborative or hostile a campaign gets. Three in four campaigns start collaboratively, our research finds, but half of those eventually turn hostile (Exhibit 3). This suggests that management teams should think as much about how they engage with an activist as whether they accept activist proposals.

3
Most campaigns begin collaboratively but turn hostile.

Some tips can help in planning response tactics.

Form a response team. When an activist engages a management team, executives should pull together an ad hoc team to respond. Those who respond without team support can easily make missteps, underestimating the gravity of the overture or overlooking the full range of options; this can lead to a rapid escalation of an activist’s moves. In one recent instance, the chair of a health-care company’s board, in the face of an aggressive overture from a large activist shareholder, made a unilateral decision to ignore an activist—which provoked the activist to campaign for board control. Contrast that with another recent example, where the CEO of a global industrial company quickly assembled a confidential working team including himself, his CFO, his general counsel, investor relations, and a support analyst. The team quickly assessed the benefits and risks of the activist proposal and generated a plan for compromise that enabled the CEO to settle an activist campaign by proactively gaining support from large shareholders for his plan.

This variability in response tactics exposes executives to significant risk—often driven by emotion. Agreeing on a team structure and governance in advance can be a highly effective tool for preventing unilateral decisions with great consequences. It matters less that the team members are known and named in advance and more that there is a clear set of guideposts in place for how an executive team will manage its reaction. Clear governance and process are the best defense against inadvertent decisions in the heat of confrontation.

Moreover, the right team will look different depending on whom activists first approach, for example, and what kinds of suggestions they bring. If they approach the board, members may want a team that includes more independent external voices than if they first approach the CEO, who may want a less public and even internally confidential team for tactical analysis, planning, and communication. And the types of recommendations the activist makes will also heavily influence the makeup of the response team, since the team will need different insights to weigh a proposed new strategic direction rather than potential structural changes or financial engineering.

Internal team members will naturally include the executive team, board members, general counsel, and investor relations. External advisers are also essential to the process. Legal advisers are often the first call, but strategic, financial, and communications specialists all play a valuable role in driving shareholder returns while preserving company leadership. Many advisers will push for a poison pill or other structural defenses. Yet this approach can give a false sense of protection as activists seek support from other large shareholders rather than attempt an outright corporate takeover. The experience at one global retailer highlights this dynamic. The shareholder involved continued his campaign even after the board adopted a poison-pill approach that would have diluted shareholders in the event of a hostile takeover bid. It wasn’t until the company won shareholder support for its own plan by clarifying its intentions that the activist withdrew. The addition of strategic and communications specialists to help inform investors played an important role in management retaining control of the company.

Understand the activist. As with most negotiations, what actions you take will depend on what kind of counterparty is engaging you—and response teams need to quickly develop a point of view on the specific activist’s tactics, methods for engaging shareholders, track record, and industry experience. There are no clear-cut definitions of hostile versus collaborative activist investors, but the nature of their initial overture, the thoughtfulness of their proposals, and their track record at creating value offer important indications of the kind of campaign you’re likely to face.

Campaigns tend to be hostile if the activist’s objective is a change in governance or legal matters, such as revisions to bylaws, for example, rather than strategic or M&A-oriented proposals. Aside from that, certain activists have a propensity toward more collaborative interactions with management teams. They launch their campaigns with private letters to management and one-on-one discussions with executives. Less collaborative activists launch campaigns with more confrontational approaches, such as open letters or proxy statements. Our analysis suggests that more hostile investors will openly threaten a fight or launch a proxy contest in up to 70 percent of their campaigns, while more collaborative activists remain cooperative in 70 percent of their campaigns.

Similarly, some activist funds offer detailed and thoughtful perspectives on a target’s strategic and operational challenges, while others offer only vague assertions and aggressive plans for engineered returns. In the first case, management can gain useful perspectives on increasing returns to shareholders. In the second, an activist’s proposals could represent significant risks to long-term health. In interviews with executives, we have observed that companies whose managers engage in a dialogue with activist shareholders in advance of a 13D filing often gain important context and insight into the activist’s intentions. We’ve also heard repeatedly that an early move to cooperate or compromise leads to a collaborative dynamic, whereas lack of engagement or outright rejection of activist suggestions leads to a more hostile dynamic.

Understand the activist’s proposal. In addition to assessing the activist, the response team needs to evaluate the activist’s argument, understand its potential for value creation, and assess any potential risks to the company. Managers at one industrial company, for example, assembled a response team of internal and external specialists in a structure similar to an M&A due diligence. Through this war-room format, they evaluated direct and indirect benefits and costs of the activist proposal compared with existing plans, applying the same rigor to the review of each plan in order to identify the best path. When they ultimately recommended that the board accept significant portions of the activist plan, managers did so with the same level of detailed support they would ascribe to their own strategic plans.

Develop a response plan. Most of the executives we interviewed commented that activists’ initial rounds of communication often come across as confrontational and sometimes disrespectful. We believe that it’s important to see past this and acknowledge the activist in a manner that encourages a constructive dialogue. Our research suggests that acknowledging activists respectfully, constructively, and quickly—within days, followed by real engagement within weeks—and engaging them on the merits of their proposal helps to avoid major disruptions and preserve management control.

As crucial, if not more so, is engaging other large shareholders in explicit, proactive dialogue about an activist’s proposal compared with management’s alternative. In most cases, activist investors have themselves polled large shareholders and lobbied for support. In one recent example of a successfully negotiated settlement with an activist, the key success factor was a blitz of investor outreach that included clear management plans, the introduction of new team members, and examples of the company’s management track record. In response to this outreach, large shareholders stood by management rather than supporting the activist. It would be naive for a management team not to open this type of shareholder dialogue and expect a beneficial outcome from an activist negotiation.

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