By Svea Herbst-Bayliss
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Hedge fund Anson Funds is gearing up for a boardroom fight at Match Group and plans to nominate several directors to the online dating companyโs 10-member board, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Anson, which owned roughly 0.6% of Match at the end of December according to a regulatory filing, has been pressing the parent of dating sites Tinder, Hinge and OkCupid for over a year to rethink capital allocation, cut costs, and consider a strategic review of its MG Asia business, the sources said.
Additionally the investor has raised concerns about Matchโs governance and pushed for management to refine its corporate strategy, said the people who requested anonymity to speak about the private discussions.
Only three of Matchโs 10 directors will stand for election this year, creating a flash point for many investors who generally want all board members to be up for election annually.
Anson also highlighted tight business connections among a handful of Match directors and ties to former owner IAC/Interactive as worrisome and found the quick paced turnover in the executive suite where the company has had four chief executives in five years to be problematic, the sources said.
A Match representative said the companyโs board was committed to โgood corporate governance and to protecting the interests of its stockholders.โ
โUnder the leadership of our CEO Spencer Rascoff, appointed last month, Match Group is intensely focused on growing our business and generating shareholder value with the oversight of our skilled and experienced board,โ the representative said.
A representative for Anson declined to comment.
Over the last year, Anson and Match have held a dozen meetings and the company has made some changes, including holding an investor day and agreeing to return capital more aggressively, suggested by activist investors including Anson.
For Sagar Gupta, who is leading the campaign after he joined Anson as a portfolio manager in 2023 to build the firmโs activism practice, the pace of change remains too slow, the sources said.
Gupta, who joined the board of U.S. call center software company Five9 in December, has a track record of investing in technology, media and telecommunications. He spearheaded many such investments at activist Legion Partners, where he worked before joining Anson.
Match is valued at roughly $8 billion but has shrunk dramatically since the COVID pandemic when it was worth around $40 billion. Its stock price, which closed at $32.03 on Monday, has slipped nearly 2% this year but it has lost 67% in the last three years when the broader S&P 500 stock market index gained 41%.
Matchโs declining stock price has made the company vulnerable, prompting at least three activist investors to push for changes within the last year.
In early 2024, Elliott Investment Management, one of the worldโs biggest and most prominent activist investors, unveiled a $1 billion investment. The company named two new directors to the board several weeks later.
In July Starboard Value, another activist investor, was urging Match to consider a sale if it could not revitalize the business.
Regulatory filings detailing the two activistsโ holdings at the end of 2024 show Elliott owned a 4.8% stake while Starboard held 5.8% of the company.
While Ansonโs holding is considerably smaller, lawyers and bankers say the size of an activistโs position is less important now as a growing number of investors push for changes at all types of companies and corporations are bracing for more expensive and noisy fights with corporate agitators.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Chris Reese and Tomasz Janowski)
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