Join today and have your say! It’s FREE!

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Please Try Again
{{ error }}
By providing my email, I consent to receiving investment related electronic messages from Stockhouse.

or

Sign In

Please Try Again
{{ error }}
Password Hint : {{passwordHint}}
Forgot Password?

or

Please Try Again {{ error }}

Send my password

SUCCESS
An email was sent with password retrieval instructions. Please go to the link in the email message to retrieve your password.

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Quote  |  Bullboard  |  News  |  Opinion  |  Profile  |  Peers  |  Filings  |  Financials  |  Options  |  Price History  |  Ratios  |  Ownership  |  Insiders  |  Valuation

XPO Inc XPO

XPO, Inc. is a provider of freight transportation services. The Company moves goods through its customers supply chains in North America and Europe. It operates through two segments: North American Less-Than-Truckload (LTL), and European Transportation. The North American LTL segment provides shippers with geographic density and day-definite domestic and cross-border services to the United States (U.S.), as well as Mexico, Canada, and the Caribbean. It also includes trailer manufacturing operations. The European Transportation segment offers a range of services, such as truckload, LTL, truck brokerage, managed transportation, last mile, freight forwarding and multimodal solutions, including road-rail and road-short sea combinations. It serves a base of customers in consumer, trade, and industrial markets. The Company offers XPO Connect, a cloud-based digital platform for transportation procurement that encompasses a freight optimizer system, shipper interface and carrier interface.


NYSE:XPO - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Comment by RionsRunon Jun 21, 2015 12:07pm
72 Views
Post# 23853012

RE:Activist Fund(s) Incoming

RE:Activist Fund(s) Incoming
Paul Singer, founder and CEO of Elliott Management 
 
I can't tell what the three funds mentioned are up to or if their agendas are the same. It could be good-as in making sure Jacobs gets the best price for his dealings or something like  merger arbitrage, whatever. 
 
THESE TWO FOLLOWING TEXTS GIVE A CLUE AS TO HOW SINGER WORKS.
 
A Hedge Fund Has Physically Taken Control Of A Ship Belonging To Argentina's Navy 
 
Read more: https://www.businessinsider.com/hedge-fund-elliott-capital-management-seizes-ara-libertad-ship-owned-by-argentina-2012-10#ixzz3dc0VzdIl
 
 
The hedge fund billionaire at war with Argentina is taking on the Samsung family dynasty 
 
LINETTE LOPEZ 
 
JUN. 16, 2015, 12:02 PM 57,879 9 
 
 
 
Paul Singer, founder and CEO of Elliott Management. 
 
Hedge fund billionaire Paul Singer is known for pursuing his investments to the ends of the earth. 
 
Once, in an effort to squeeze money from the Argentine government, he got a Ghanaian Court to impound one of The Republic's naval vessels. It took months and a United Nations Court to get it, and its crew of 200 sailors, back to Argentina. 
 
Now Singer has decided he will no longer play nice with one of the richest families on the planet — South Korea's Lee family. 
 
The Lees, through their massive Samsung empire, control 17% of their native country's economy. But Singer wants to block the family's latest restructuring ploy. 
 
Somebody get me some popcorn. This will be fun to watch. 
 
What the fight is all about 
Here's the deal. For three generations the Lee family has built a sprawling $270 billion empire of companies — not just electronics-maker Samsung. The holding company Cheil Industries, Samsung's parent, contains within it a bunch of businesses raging from textiles to entertainment. 
 
In South Korea this structure is known as a chaebol. It is a complex way of putting together a vast network under one main leader of one powerful family. 
 
Maintaining this over generations hasn't always been easy. The Lees have gone through their ups and downs: corruptions scandals, backstabbing, succession issues. What's happening now is a transition to a new generation and new leader, Lee Jae-yong. He must take the place of Lee Kun-hee, the 110th-richest man on the planet, according to Forbes. 
 
To do that, and to keep Lee Jae-yong's two two very powerful sisters and an older generation of aunts and uncles happy — the Lees want Cheil Industries to purchase Samsung. 
 
For Singer, who owns 7% of Samsung, there's really only one problem with that — the Lees' $9 billion offer price, which Singer thinks undervalues the company. 
 
Remember, the Lees are not necessarily doing this for money. They're doing it for peace. 
 
SAMSUNG CIRCULAR STRUCTURE 
Business Insider 
 
The first gauntlet (lawsuit) has been thrown 
Singer is not known for peace, and he has riled up other investors. The Lees have also rallied their allies, one being the Hyundai family conglomerate. The Lees tried to sell Hyundai's construction firm, KCC, 8.9 million treasury shares in the company to get the votes to push through their merger — a move Singer is trying to block. 
 
"The board's decision to sell the treasury shares is to achieve diversification and synergy through the merger, protect the company and shareholders from hedge funds who seek short-term profits and secure funds to improve the company's financials,” Samsung C&T said in a statement. 
 
Singer did not like that. His allies did not either. So now Singer's Elliott Management is suing Samsung over the sale. 
 
The Lees don't play either 
That was last week. On Monday rumors started flying in the South Korean press that the Lees were giving up. The source of that rumor may have been a report by analyst Kim Chul-Bum of Hanwha Investment & Securities. 
 
"In the present situation, Samsung has only a 19.8% stake, which appears to be favorable to the group, while Elliott Management, which holds a 7.1% stake, has an additional 26.7% stake from foreign investors who appear to be favorable to the company. So, it will be not easy for Samsung to win the majority of votes." 
 
To that, the Lees merely laughed. 
 
"The hypothesis that the group will give up on the merger due to huge litigation costs has made something that never happened into fact. It is a groundless rumor that incites anxiety in the market," a Samsung official said. 
 
Think about it: This is a family whose scion, Lee Kun-hee, acknowledged he had a $200 million slush fund on hand for the sole purpose of paying off politicians and judges in 2008. He also pleaded guilty to embezzlement and tax evasion. He was then pardoned by the president of South Korea and returned as chairman of Samsung in a year. 
 
Do you think they're really going to let one American billionaire push them around? 
 
As I said, pop the popcorn. 
 
 
Read more: https://www.businessinsider.com/paul-singer-battles-samsung-lee-family-2015-6#ixzz3di3d7m1x
 
 
 
 
 
Bullboard Posts