By David Polonitza
Pershing Square Capital Management, the hedge fund that successfully forced Wendy’s into their restructuring plan that saw the spin-off of Tim Horton’s, recently revealed in their 13F filing with the SEC on February 14th that they hold a stake in both Borders (11.5% of shares outstanding) and Barnes and Noble (9.2% of shares outstanding).
Pershing Square, run by William Ackman, is a very concentrated fund known for its activism, holding shares in only four companies: McDonalds, Ceridian, Borders Group, and Barnes and Noble. Both McDonalds and Ceridian’s management teams have been subject to intense pressure by activist shareholders to restructure their respective companies.
I have not seen any groups recently target Borders or Barnes and Noble, but the combination of the new firms makes sense.
Barnes and Nobles and Borders Group are the number #1 and #2 big box book stores in the country. There would be considerable cost savings in merging the two companies with respect to distribution, management, along with the increased purchasing power. Each company’s online presence is still not competitive with the likes of Amazon and might fare better combined.
Barnes and Noble and Borders Group together would be a much stronger competitor to the likes of Amazon then they are apart. With Pershing Capital Management focusing attention on the two companies, the talk of a merger or partnership will surely become louder.
Update: I discovered an article from the NY Times regarding Pershing’s activities in Barnes and Noble and Borders. It does not speculate that Mr. Ackman might try to push the companies to combine, but views both bookstores as possible LBO candidates.
