The Children's Investment Fund Management
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Hedge fund |
Founded | 2003 |
Founder | Chris Hohn |
Headquarters | , |
AUM | US$ 49 billion (as of January 5, 2024)[1] |
Website | www |
The Children's Investment Fund Management (TCI) is a British hedge fund management firm founded by Chris Hohn in 2003 which manages the Children's Investment Master Fund. TCI makes long‐term investments in companies globally.
The management company is authorized and regulated in the United Kingdom by the Financial Conduct Authority. Its holding company is TCI Fund Management Limited, based in the Cayman Islands. TCI derives its name from a charitable foundation called the Children's Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF), set up by Chris Hohn and his ex-wife, Jamie Cooper-Hohn, and initially contributed a proportion of profits to the foundation.
In January 2022, TCI was named by the Guardian as the world's top-performing hedge fund. It is known as one of the most aggressive activist investors.[2]
Like most hedge funds, TCI requires investors to commit their capital for multi-year periods. This long-term horizon allows the fund greater flexibility when trading and investing capital independent of any potential ad hoc time constraints.
Charity
[edit]TCI derives its name from the Children's Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF), a charitable foundation set up by Chris Hohn and his ex-wife, Jamie Cooper-Hohn. In an example of "venture philanthropy", CIFF initially received a portion of TCI's profits and other donations. CIFF focuses on improving the lives of children living in poverty in developing countries, and has grown to be one of the largest charities in the United Kingdom. After suffering a 43% loss during the 2008 calendar year, as of July 2009 the previous financial year had seen a rebound of over 70% profit and revenue for TCI.[3]
Through changes set in motion in 2012, the fund and foundation were split up. The fund no longer donates money to the foundation on a contractual basis, though it has done so on a discretionary basis.[4]
Investor activism
[edit]TCI has a reputation for aggressive shareholder activism.[5] TCI has been a major shareholder of the German stock exchange Deutsche Börse where it forced the resignation of the CEO after he refused to abandon his plan to take over the London Stock Exchange.
In 2007, after acquiring 1% of the shares of major Dutch bank ABN AMRO, TCI led an attack demanding the bank split up or sell to the highest bidder to produce shareholder value.[6] ABN was ultimately split and sold to Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), Fortis, and Banco Santander and was a major contributing factor in the downfall of both RBS and Fortis. In June 2007, TCI failed in its attempt to get the Japanese utility J-Power, in which it had acquired a 10% stake, to boost its dividend. The general meeting of shareholders rejected the proposal, prompting a severe selloff in the stock.[citation needed]
In 2006, as a shareholder of both Mittal Steel Company and Arcelor, TCI supported Mittal Steel in the company's unsolicited takeover offer for Arcelor.[7]
TCI initiated legal action against the Government of India using provisions in the bilateral trade treaty between United Kingdom and India regarding the under pricing of coal by Coal India Limited, in which TCI holds a 1% stake.[8]
In 2008 the US railroad company CSX won a court case against the Children's Investment Fund and 3G Capital Partners, another hedge fund, after the funds announced that they had acquired about 20% of CSX's stock.[9] TCI succeeded in electing four of its five directors to the CSX board, but CSX shares declined by about 50 percent after the meeting. TCI declared defeat and sold its shares, taking its directors off the board. Chris Hohn, the founder of TCI vowed to abandon shareholder activism as an investing strategy.[10] When the case was appealed, the judge gave limited support for the original finding.
In 2008 the company was suffering from heavy losses but recovered very well and assets under management reportedly stood around $6 billion. At the end of 2010, the company recorded a loss of 80% in profits as a result of reduced investment performance.[11] By 2020 the hedge fund was managing more than $30 billion. It recorded a 41% gain in 2019 after gaining just 0.9% in 2018.[12]
In November 2022, Chris Hohn on behalf of TCI wrote an open letter to Sundar Pichai, CEO of Alphabet and Google.[13][14] In the letter, Hohn stated that Google's headcount was too high and should be reduced.[13][14] He also stated that there should be more effort to reduce losses in its self-driving unit Waymo.[13][14] On 20 January 2023 Alphabet cut 12,000 jobs which was 6% of its workforce.[15] On the same day, Hohn issued another letter to Pichai stating that there should be further job cuts with a target of 20%.[15]
Awards
[edit]The fund won Eurohedge's European Hedge Fund of the Year award in 2004, 2005,[16] and 2013.[17]
References
[edit]- ^ "Chris Hohn's hedge fund TCI beats markets with 33% gain". Financial Times. 16 September 2019. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
- ^ Neate, Rupert (17 January 2022). "Extinction Rebellion donor leads world's top-performing hedge fund". The Guardian.
- ^ Opalesque (3 July 2009). "TCI sees big rebound in 2009".
- ^ "TCI Hedge Fund in Britain Ends Ties to Charitable Arm". 18 June 2014.
- ^ Businessweek—A Little Fund With Big Demands
- ^ NRC Handelsblad (Dutch Newspaper), February 22, 2007
- ^ Staff, Correspondence. "TCI Fund Management Ltd – 13F Holdings – Fintel.io". fintel.io. FinTel. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
- ^ BS Reporter (29 March 2012). "TCI starts legal action against Indian govt under UK, Cyprus treaties".
- ^ "Anticlimax in long-running CSX court case". New York Times. 19 July 2011. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
- ^ "Hedge fund dumps stake in CSX". New York Times. 28 April 2009. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
- ^ "TCI sees profits fall 80%". efinancialnews.com. Retrieved 6 September 2012.
- ^ "Billionaire Hohn's TCI Fund Surges 41% in Best Year Since 2013". Bloomberg. 8 January 2020. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
- ^ a b c Kruppa, Miles (15 November 2022). "Activist Investor TCI Calls on Google Parent Alphabet to Slash Costs". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2022-11-26.
- ^ a b c "Investor TCI urges Alphabet to cut excessive headcount, costs". Reuters. 2022-11-15. Retrieved 2022-11-26.
- ^ a b "Christopher Hohn wants Alphabet to lay off 20% of its staff and cut employee pay | Fortune". 2023-01-23. Archived from the original on 2023-01-23. Retrieved 2023-01-24.
- ^ "Chris Hohn – Childrens Investment Fund – 2020 13F Holdings, Performance, and AUM – Insider Monkey". www.insidermonkey.com.
- ^ TCI, Jabre, Toscafund, VR lead EuroHedge Awards 2013 winners
Further reading
[edit]- Financial Times: Feared fund turns to business of charity By James Mackintosh July 2 2007
- Management Today: The new new philanthropists by Ian Wylie October 1 2007
- Spectator: The real driving force in the battle for ABN by Matthew Lynn May 9 2007
- Financial News: Financial News 100, 2007
- The Economist: Leader of the swarm July 12 2007
- The Independent: Financier in record £230m donation to charity by Arifa Akbar July 3 2007
- Wainewright, Will, "What's in a name? The Children's Investment Fund Management" (password access), HFM Week, 28 September 2011.
- "Hedge Fund Dumps Stake in CSX", New York Times Dealbook, April 28, 2009.