By George Stahl And Lauren Pollock
Activist investor ValueAct Capital Management LP reported Friday
a 5.1% stake in Baker Hughes, a provider of oil-field services.
The timing of the stake is interesting as Baker Hughes is in an
agreement to be bought by rival Halliburton Co. The cash-and-stock
deal was valued at nearly $35 billion when announced in November
but has fallen in recent months as the sharp decline in oil prices
has pressured the valuation of many energy-related companies.
ValueAct didn't indicate its motives in the filing with the
Securities and Exchange Commission that revealed its stake.
Representatives from the fund and Baker Hughes were unavailable for
comment.
ValueAct bought the Baker Hughes stake for $1.22 billion and
started buying the week after the deal was announced. It averaged a
price of about $55.68 a share. Baker Hughes closed Friday at
$56.56, which is about 10% below where the Halliburton deal values
the stock.
In November, Halliburton agreed to buy Baker Hughes for $34.6
billion in stock and cash. The deal came after weeks of discussions
that at one point turned hostile.
The agreement also contains a $3.5 billion breakup fee should
the deal collapse over antitrust issues. The two companies have
many overlapping businesses, such as computer-controlled horizontal
drilling and hydraulic fracturing of oil and gas wells. They also
drill in many of the same regions, from U.S. shale fields in Texas
and North Dakota to the deep waters off the coast of Brazil.
ValueAct, founded by former Fidelity stock picker Jeffrey Ubben,
garnered attention in 2013 when it secured a board seat at
Microsoft Corp. despite holding less than 1% of the stock, marking
the first time the software giant appointed an activist shareholder
to its board.
The roughly $15 billion San Francisco hedge fund typically likes
to work behind the scenes with management rather than fight
publicly like many activists. The Wall Street Journal reported last
month that ValueAct planned to raise up to $1.5 billion in new
funds, joining a group of activist investors who are gearing up to
target a fresh crop of companies.
Activist investors, who buy stakes in companies and push them to
make financial or strategic changes, solidified their position as a
force in U.S. markets and boardrooms in 2014, forcing deals,
unseating boards and pushing for other corporate changes.
David Benoit contributed to this article.
Write to George Stahl at george.stahl@wsj.com and Lauren Pollock
at lauren.pollock@wsj.com
Access Investor Kit for Baker Hughes, Inc.
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