(Bloomberg) — Pinterest Inc. shares jumped more than 20% in postmarket trading after the Wall Street Journal reported that activist investor Elliott Management has acquired a stake in the struggling social-media company.
Elliott has built a stake of more than 9%, making it the company’s biggest investor, the newspaper reported Thursday, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter. The shareholder has engaged in discussions with Pinterest management, though the nature of those talks wasn’t clear, the Journal said.
The news follows a shake-up at Pinterest last month, when co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Ben Silbermann handed the reins to Google and PayPal Inc. veteran Bill Ready. The San Francisco-based company, which lets users create virtual scrapbooks, has been trying to expand further into e-commerce.
The company also fielded a takeover approach by PayPal last year, but the digital-payment company said in October that it wasn’t going to pursue such a deal.
What Bloomberg Intelligence Says:
“Pinterest’s turnaround strategy may get help from the Elliott stake, as most social media platforms remain challenged by weak digital-ad spending. We believe comparisons could ease in 2H, and partnerships with e-commerce providers could spark a revival in top-line growth.”
— Mandeep Singh, BI senior technology industry analyst
Click here to read the research
Pinterest had enjoyed a surge in growth during the early days of Covid-19, when locked-down consumers turned to the service. But like other pandemic darlings such as Peloton Technology Inc., Pinterest suffered a slowdown in recent months. Its shares are down more than 50% this year, a steeper drop than broader technology indexes.
It’s not the first time Elliott has targeted a well-known technology company in recent years. The firm took a $1.4 billion stake in EBay Inc. in early 2019, and CEO Devin Wenig stepped down later that year.
Elliott then accumulated a stake of more than $1 billion in Twitter Inc., a holding that was made public in early 2020. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey kept his job for another 20 months, but Elliott’s presence led to aggressive revenue and user growth goals. The company was still struggling to meet those targets by the time Elon Musk showed up with a takeover offer this year — a deal that’s now unraveling.
People familiar with the situation have said they believe Dorsey left his job at Twitter in part because he was worn down by Elliott’s pressure.
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