Hedge Fund and Insider Trading News: Boaz Weinstein, Christopher Hohn, Cathie Wood, David Tepper, ValueAct Capital, ExodusPoint Capital Management, Strategy Capital, Calavo Growers, Inc. (CVGW), Tidewater Inc. (TDW), and More

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How to Trade the Banking Turmoil, According to a Hedge Fund Veteran (Bloomberg)
Bank Bets: Boaz Weinstein has made his fortune at moments like this. The choppier markets get, the more mispriced financial assets his firm, Saba Capital Management, can find to exploit. One of Saba’s funds has posted a 6.9% gain this month alone. Weinstein, who was thrust into prominence a decade ago when he took on JPMorgan’s London Whale, sees plenty of price dislocations in the market. Prominent among them: Junior bank debt. Some is still overvalued, he says, even after the selloff this week that followed the wipeout of $17 billion of Credit Suisse Group junior debt.

Exclusive: ValueAct Seeks to Oust Four Directors of Seven & I (Reuters)
ValueAct Capital informed Seven & i Holdings (3382.T) on Friday it would lobby to remove four directors from the Japanese convenience store operator’s 14-member board, citing “a failed corporate strategy”. ValueAct, which owns a 4.4% stake of Seven & i, had called on the company’s management in January to spin off its 7-Eleven convenience store chain. The fund has been invested in the company and making proposals since 2021.

Billionaire Hedge Fund Boss Who Beat Irish Attempt to Burn Bondholders Says Swiss Must Pay (Independent.ie)
US billionaire David Tepper, who beat the Irish Government’s attempt to burn junior bondholders back in 2013, has now put himself in the vanguard of efforts to fight €17bn of losses on risky Credit Suisse bonds. The losses on holders of very risky bank bonds were imposed by Swiss authorities as part of the lightning fast rescue of Credit Suisse last weekend and are controversial because holders were wiped out even before shareholders.

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

Bill Ackman Shares ‘Learnings’ From Investing ‘Mistakes:’ 1 Stock He Missed Out On, Another That Burnt His Fingers (Benzinga)
Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman spends a lot of time learning from his mistakes and in a recent interview he discussed how his bets have served as learning opportunities. Reliving Gotham Days: Following a debacle, there may not be a formal postmortem but certainly, there were a lot of lessons learned, Ackman said in a 20VC podcast that was published earlier this week.

Bed Bath & Beyond Investor Preserves Fundraising Deal Despite Tanking Shares (The Wall Street Journal)
Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. has secured a temporary stock-price waiver from key equity investor Hudson Bay Capital Management LP to keep a fundraising agreement intact despite a possible price failure when the retailer’s shares dropped below $1 this week. The waiver will remain in effect until the morning of April 3, allowing Bed Bath & Beyond to continue raising money from its agreement with the hedge fund to exercise warrants for new preferred convertible shares, the company said Thursday.

A Three Arrows Capital Founder Talks About His New Crypto Bankruptcy Exchange (CoinDesk)
Less than a year after Three Arrows Capital (3AC) imploded along with $2.5 billion of clients’ money, the hedge fund’s founders, Su Zhu and Kyle Davies, are back with a new cryptocurrency exchange where people can trade bankruptcy claims – a hot area given all the distress in the industry. The Open Exchange (OPNX) was announced last month, garnering wry smiles and smirks. The crypto community hadn’t always been so skeptical of the duo. Until the $60 billion Terra ecosystem collapsed last April, they were hailed as messiahs among their peers, touted for running the hottest hedge fund and often endorsed by trading firms and market makers.

This Hedge Fund Lost Big Last Year — But That Didn’t Scare Investors Away (Institutional Investor)
Strategy Capital, like many managers of technology stocks, had a rough 2022. But the long-only, tech-focused hedge fund’s dismal performance — it was down 65 percent — doesn’t seem to have turned off investors. Bill Mitchell, partner and managing director, said Strategy Capital didn’t lose a single investor and had its best fundraising year since it started in 2013. The fund attracted more than $200 million from new and existing clients, bringing its total assets under management to nearly $600 million.





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