Home / Business and Economy / Elliott Fights Lowball Toyota Industries Buyout Offer
Elliott Fights Lowball Toyota Industries Buyout Offer
4 Feb
Summary
- Elliott criticizes the Toyota group's buyout proposal as significantly undervalued.
- Loyal Toyota shareholders are expected to tender shares at ¥18,800, below market.
- The deal is a test of Japan's corporate governance reforms and shareholder value.

Elliott Investment Management is firmly resisting the Toyota group's proposed buyout of Toyota Industries, asserting that the offer of ¥18,800 per share "very significantly undervalues" the supplier. The tender period, closing on February 12, sees some Toyota affiliates and insurers, including Aioi Nissay Dowa, Mitsui Sumitomo, and Tokio Marine, intending to tender their shares at the below-market price. This loyalty reflects deeper Japanese business values prioritizing stable governance and amicable relations over purely price-driven decisions, posing a significant challenge for Elliott's activist campaign.
The ongoing standoff, with Toyota Industries shares trading above the ¥6.1 trillion buyout offer at ¥6.3 trillion, serves as a critical examination of Japan's corporate governance reforms. These reforms aim to dismantle complex cross-shareholdings and enhance investor value. For Elliott, which holds a 6.7% stake, the deal's structure means Toyota Industries' own valuable stakes in other companies could effectively render the buyout price as free. Elliott has proposed an alternative standalone plan aiming for a ¥40,000 per share valuation by 2028.




