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Shares of Kenvue purchased by activist investor Sachem head

Shares of Kenvue purchased by activist investor Sachem head

In the second quarter of 2010, another activist investor, Sachem Head Capital Management, reported that it had bought the stock.

In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday, Scott Ferguson, who runs Sachem, stated that on June 30, it held 10.6 million shares of the consumer healthcare company.

Kenvue ranked fourth in the company's holdings at the end the quarter, after Twilio and Seagate Technology Holdings.

Sachem Head declined comment. The company is known for quietly pushing for changes at companies behind the scenes, but it did mount a loud proxy fight three years ago at US Foods Holding.

Kenvue was spun off from Johnson & Johnson, and has a current market value of 40 billion dollars. It has been battling some of the most prominent industry activists in its first two years of being publicly traded, including Starboard Value and Toms Capital Investment Management.

Kenvue’s board of directors fired Thibaut Mongon in July, setting the stage for the eventual sale, which investors hope and anticipate.

Investors have complained for years about Kenvue’s share price. It has dropped 1% in the past year and closed at $21.06 last Thursday.

Starboard was one of the first companies to publicly ask Kenvue for a review of how its brands are priced and positioned to boost performance. In March, the hedge fund settled their proxy battle with the company when Kenvue agreed that Starboard CEO Jeffrey Smith would be one of three new directors appointed by Kenvue.

Starboard announced in a Thursday filing that it had reduced its investment in Kenvue by 5,10% to 21 million common shares.

Toms Capital Investment Management has been urging the company to explore strategic options. It increased its holdings to 16 million from 14,4 million at the end the first quarter.

Third Point, led by billionaire Daniel Loeb as an investor, purchased Kenvue in the first quarter. However, it did not make any changes to its holdings during the second quarter. As of June 30, Third Point owned 8.5 million Kenvue shares.

In 13F filings, investment managers must tell regulators the amount of stock they own in U.S. firms at the end each quarter. The filings may be backward-looking, but other investors are watching them closely to see if they can provide any hints about trends or which companies activist investors could be targeting.

(source: Reuters)