Who's Daniel Loeb -> Bloomberg magazine article PDF: http://ddo.typepad.com/ddo/files/DanLoeb_Bloomberg.pdf
"Third Point plans London listing"
By James Mackintosh in London
Published: June 13 2007 22:43 | Last updated: June 13 2007 22:43
Daniel Loebâs Third Point Capital will Thursday announce plans to list a â¬500m-â¬700m hedge fund in London in the first move by a US hedge fund to raise money from European equity investors.
The move by the â¬5bn ($6.7bn) Third Point demonstrates confidence in demand for listed hedge funds following the disappointing â¬770m float of the first London main market hedge fund in March by Brevan Howard, the London manager. Other funds have listed in Amsterdam or on Londonâs Aim while Man Group has announced plans for a New York-listed fund. The listing â of Third Point Offshore Investors, a Guernsey-based company that will invest exclusively in Third Pointâs main hedge fund â also brings one of New Yorkâs most aggressive activists to London.
Mr Loeb is known for letters in which he berates executives. In one letter, he expressed shock at the provision of âanything more than subway tokensâ to a chief executive in receipt of a $53,000 car allowance. The listed vehicle â designed to diversify the fundâs investor base which already comes primarily from Europe â is expected to draw in mostly new investors. The existing fund is closed, making the listed fund the only way into Third Point. Fees are identical, at 2 per cent a year and 20 per cent of profits, while Third Point pays the listing costs. Mr Loeb, 45, does not appear worried about the increased disclosure requirements from a stock market listing.
âThe genieâs already out of the bottle,â he told the FT, pointing out Third Point had registered voluntarily with the Securities and Exchange Commission. âI havenât exactly been a shrinking violet with . . . some of the companies we deal with.â While Third Point, founded in 1995, is best-known for its activism, many of its discussions with management take place behind closed doors. It operates as an event-driven fund, looking for undervalued companies it believes will be boosted by restructuring either already planned or which it can persuade management to adopt.
In Europe, Mr Loeb said he held DaimlerChrysler, Philips and Infineon, had met their chief executives and had no plans to take an activist stance against them. âI wouldnât step into Dr Zâs shoes and tell them to do anything different,â he said of Dieter Zetsche, chief executive of DaimlerChrysler.
The listing is being led by UBS and Société Générale.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/50b4053c-19e5-11dc-99c5-000b5df10621.html
"Third Point plans London listing"
By James Mackintosh in London
Published: June 13 2007 22:43 | Last updated: June 13 2007 22:43
Daniel Loebâs Third Point Capital will Thursday announce plans to list a â¬500m-â¬700m hedge fund in London in the first move by a US hedge fund to raise money from European equity investors.
The move by the â¬5bn ($6.7bn) Third Point demonstrates confidence in demand for listed hedge funds following the disappointing â¬770m float of the first London main market hedge fund in March by Brevan Howard, the London manager. Other funds have listed in Amsterdam or on Londonâs Aim while Man Group has announced plans for a New York-listed fund. The listing â of Third Point Offshore Investors, a Guernsey-based company that will invest exclusively in Third Pointâs main hedge fund â also brings one of New Yorkâs most aggressive activists to London.
Mr Loeb is known for letters in which he berates executives. In one letter, he expressed shock at the provision of âanything more than subway tokensâ to a chief executive in receipt of a $53,000 car allowance. The listed vehicle â designed to diversify the fundâs investor base which already comes primarily from Europe â is expected to draw in mostly new investors. The existing fund is closed, making the listed fund the only way into Third Point. Fees are identical, at 2 per cent a year and 20 per cent of profits, while Third Point pays the listing costs. Mr Loeb, 45, does not appear worried about the increased disclosure requirements from a stock market listing.
âThe genieâs already out of the bottle,â he told the FT, pointing out Third Point had registered voluntarily with the Securities and Exchange Commission. âI havenât exactly been a shrinking violet with . . . some of the companies we deal with.â While Third Point, founded in 1995, is best-known for its activism, many of its discussions with management take place behind closed doors. It operates as an event-driven fund, looking for undervalued companies it believes will be boosted by restructuring either already planned or which it can persuade management to adopt.
In Europe, Mr Loeb said he held DaimlerChrysler, Philips and Infineon, had met their chief executives and had no plans to take an activist stance against them. âI wouldnât step into Dr Zâs shoes and tell them to do anything different,â he said of Dieter Zetsche, chief executive of DaimlerChrysler.
The listing is being led by UBS and Société Générale.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/50b4053c-19e5-11dc-99c5-000b5df10621.html

