By Svea Herbst-Bayliss
NEW YORK, Feb 13 (Reuters) – Warner Bros. Discovery attracted the attention of activist investor Sachem Head Capital Management in the โfourth quarter when the media and entertainment giant agreed to sell โits streaming and studios business to Netflix, according to a regulatory filing on Friday.
Sachem Head, one โof last year’s best-performing hedge funds, said in the Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it more than doubled its holding in Warner Bros. Discovery to own nearly 8 million shares at the end of the fourth quarter.
The company, which โhas a market value โ of roughly $70 billion, ranked among Sachem Head’s 10 biggest investments in U.S. stocks at the end of last year.
The move โ is noteworthy at a time when media giant Paramount Skydance is also racing to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, having made a hostile bid that was rejected last โmonth.
This week, โParamount increased pressure on Warner Bros. Discovery โto try and persuade its โintended target to at least sit down and discuss whether its bid could possibly become more attractive than what Netflix is offering.
Paramount hinted it may try to unseat Warner Bros. Discovery directors in a board fight and suggested the head of one of Warner Bros. Discovery’s biggest investors, Pentwater Capital Management, โmight make an attractive director candidate.
Sachem Head’s filing โalso showed that it made a new โbet on telecommunications company EchoStar โby buying 5.2 million shares. It also made a new โbet on online used car retailer Carvana โand entertainment company โLive Nation Entertainment.
These filings, required from all sizable investment managers, show what they owned in U.S. stocks at the end of the previous โquarter. While they are backward โlooking, they are still widely followed by other investors as hints โon which stocks are in vogue or may be vulnerable.
(Reporting โby Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Will Dunham)