Solera Holdings Inc (NYSE:SLH)‘s stock is up by about 8.55% in trading today after the company confirmed a $6.5 billion buyout offer from Vista Equity Partners. Other parties alongside Vista which are involved in this definitive merger agreement include Koch Equity Development LLC, and an affiliate of Goldman, Sachs & Co. The deal is to acquire Solera for $55.85 per share, which represents a premium of about 17% on the stock’s closing price on Friday. The expected closing of the deal is in the first quarter of next year. Solera Holdings Inc (NYSE:SLH), the $3.31 billion provider of software and services is primarily engaged in automobiles claims. The company’s CEO and founder Tony Aquila said that this event is a pivotal point for the company, as it provides it with the opportunity to proliferate while at the same time creating significant value for its shareholders.
At this point it is interesting to see if the hedge fund community recognized the potential of Solera Holdings Inc (NYSE:SLH) beforehand. Our data of second quarter hedge fund activity shows that generally, professional money managers had this one right. Among over 700 hedge funds that we track, a total of 18 had an aggregate investment of $290.10 million in the company at the end of June compared to 15 firms with $259.69 million in shares at the end of March. The aggregate increase came despite a 14% drop in Solera’s stock price during the second trimester.
Why do we pay attention to hedge fund sentiment? Most investors ignore hedge funds’ moves because as a group their average net returns trailed the market since 2008 by a large margin. Unfortunately, most investors don’t realize that hedge funds are hedged and they also charge an arm and a leg, so they are likely to underperform the market in a bull market. We ignore their short positions and by imitating hedge funds’ stock picks independently, we don’t have to pay them a dime. Our research have shown that hedge funds’ long stock picks generate strong risk adjusted returns. For instance the 15 most popular small-cap stocks outperformed the S&P 500 Index by an average of 95 basis points per month in our back-tests spanning the 1999-2012 period. We have been tracking the performance of these stocks in real-time since the end of August 2012. After all, things change and we need to verify that back-test results aren’t just a statistical fluke. We weren’t proven wrong. These 15 stocks managed to return 118% over the last 36 months and outperformed the S&P 500 Index by over 60 percentage points (see the details here).
Digging a little deeper into the hedge fund sentiment surrounding Solera Holdings Inc (NYSE:SLH), we find that Fir Tree, founded by Jeffrey Tannenbaum, tops our list of the company’s stockholders, having initiated a stake in Solera during the June quarter of about 2.13 million shares valued at $94.78 million. Ken Griffin‘s managed futures fund Citadel Investment Group and Lee Munder‘s Lee Munder Capital Group were the second and third-largest shareholders of the company, and reduced their respective holdings by 18% to 1.68 million shares valued at $74.91 million and by 9% to 634,500 shares valued at $28.27 million respectively. Among the top ten stockholders, Israel Englander‘s Millennium Management hiked its stake the most, by 75% to about 290,100 shares valued at $12.93 million.
Another useful metric in judging a company’s future prospects is insider trading and that is why Insider Monkey keeps a close eye on these transactions as well. While there haven’t been any insider purchases for Solera Holdings Inc (NYSE:SLH) so far this year, prominent insider sales include that by CEO Aquila, who sold some 26,000 shares this year and Director Arthur Kingsbury, who sold 5,000 shares in February. However, it is important to bear in mind that insider sales do not create as strong a signal as insider purchases, since they can occur due to a much wider variety of reasons than just a bearish outlook.
Disclosure: None