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Activist Investor Elliott Boosts Stake in Pinterest by $1B

March 3 (Reuters) - Pinterest said activist investor Elliott will buy fresh equity worth $1 billion that would help fund a new $3.5 billion share buyback, in a ​vote of confidence for the image-sharing platform's efforts to tackle ‌uncertain ad spending.

Shares of Pinterest jumped nearly 5% in early trading on Tuesday as Elliott Investment Management's purchase would make it the company's biggest shareholder. The hedge fund already had a 4.8% ​stake in the company worth nearly $725 million as of December, according ​to LSEG data.

The buyback represents nearly a third of Pinterest's market ⁠value and will significantly reduce its outstanding shares.

It follows a poor run for Pinterest ​shares, which last month tumbled to their lowest levels since the 2020 ​pandemic, after the company's weak forecast stoked investor anxiety. The stock has fallen more than 32% this year through its last close.

Pinterest has been struggling to compete with deep-pocketed rivals ​like Meta's Instagram and Facebook in the online ad market, with major ​advertisers scaling back spending on the platform just as AI tools threaten to upend ‌the ⁠industry.

The competition now also includes OpenAI testing ads in ChatGPT and Alphabet's Google adding tools for users to buy products directly from AI-powered results in search and its Gemini chatbot.

As one of the world's most prominent and powerful activist ​investors, Elliott's involvement in ​companies is often ⁠viewed as bringing fresh ideas as well as operational and financial discipline that could boost sagging businesses.

"We have ​been steadfast supporters of Pinterest since we first invested ​in 2022 ⁠and have strong conviction in the company's trajectory," said Elliott partner Marc Steinberg, who also sits on Pinterest's board of directors.

To allay investor worries, Pinterest has ⁠stepped ​up efforts to capitalize on the growing usage ​of AI-driven shopping tools. It had 619 million users as of December end.

Reporting by Deborah ​Sophia and Kritika Lamba in Bengaluru; Editing by Vijay Kishore and Leroy Leo

Source: Reuters


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