Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks
ExxonMobil and Starbucks are victims of the latest trend
Trade unions rarely look to corporate raiders for inspiration. Yet the Strategic Organising Centre (SOC), a coalition of North American workers groups, is mounting the sort of campaign normally associated with hedge funds. The group’s target is Starbucks, a coffee-shop chain with a market capitalisation of $107bn. Whereas traditional activist investors take a chunk of a company and pressure its management to change strategy, hoping to gain from a bump in the share price, the SOC owns a mere $16,000-worth of Starbucks shares, and ultimately wants to improve the lot of the firm’s workers.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Stakeholders at the gate”
Finance & economics March 2nd 2024
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- Are passive funds to blame for market mania?
- Activist investing is no longer the preserve of hedge-fund sharks
- How Trump and Biden have failed to cut ties with China
- Uranium prices are soaring. Investors should be careful
- What do you do with 191bn frozen euros owned by Russia?
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