
Greenlight Capital’s David Einhorn bought 7.9 million shares between April and the end of June, raising his investment to 14.6 million shares. Einhorn had told investors about the stake but details on how much he actually bought were only released on Friday in a regulatory filing.
For Einhorn it marks the return to a company he had long invested in but exited nearly a year earlier.
Soroban Capital opened a new position in GM, buying 3.5 million shares, while Leon Cooperman’s Omega Advisors bought 1.8 million shares, raising the firm’s stake to 3.6 million shares. Investment managers are required to say what they owned at the end of every quarter and these so-called 13-F filings, while backward looking, often highlight new investment trends.
GM ranks as one of the most iconic U.S. companies. But it faced a distracting battle with shareholders earlier this year when a group threatened to mount a proxy fight for board seats in order to push the carmaker to give some of its cash to investors.
The company approved plans to buy back $5 billion in stock.
Hedge fund mogul David Tepper was one of the investors pressuring the company early in the year and in the second quarter his Appaloosa Management bought an additional 3.5 million shares, raising its stake to 18.8 million.
Taconic Capital Advisors, a long-time investor, bought only a few more shares, to push its investment to 8.2 million. Kyle Bass’ Hayman Capital, one of the dissident investors, kept its stake unchanged.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 16th, 2015.
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