Institutional owners may consider drastic measures as Downer EDI Limited's (ASX:DOW) recent AU$107m drop adds to long-term losses

In This Article:

Key Insights

  • Institutions' substantial holdings in Downer EDI implies that they have significant influence over the company's share price

  • The top 8 shareholders own 51% of the company

  • Insiders have been buying lately

Every investor in Downer EDI Limited (ASX:DOW) should be aware of the most powerful shareholder groups. We can see that institutions own the lion's share in the company with 75% ownership. Put another way, the group faces the maximum upside potential (or downside risk).

And so it follows that institutional investors was the group most impacted after the company's market cap fell to AU$2.4b last week after a 4.3% drop in the share price. This set of investors may especially be concerned about the current loss, which adds to a one-year loss of 36% for shareholders. Institutions or "liquidity providers" control large sums of money and therefore, these types of investors usually have a lot of influence over stock price movements. As a result, if the decline continues, institutional investors may be pressured to sell Downer EDI which might hurt individual investors.

Let's delve deeper into each type of owner of Downer EDI, beginning with the chart below.

Check out our latest analysis for Downer EDI

ownership-breakdown
ASX:DOW Ownership Breakdown May 29th 2023

What Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About Downer EDI?

Institutional investors commonly compare their own returns to the returns of a commonly followed index. So they generally do consider buying larger companies that are included in the relevant benchmark index.

We can see that Downer EDI does have institutional investors; and they hold a good portion of the company's stock. This implies the analysts working for those institutions have looked at the stock and they like it. But just like anyone else, they could be wrong. It is not uncommon to see a big share price drop if two large institutional investors try to sell out of a stock at the same time. So it is worth checking the past earnings trajectory of Downer EDI, (below). Of course, keep in mind that there are other factors to consider, too.

earnings-and-revenue-growth
ASX:DOW Earnings and Revenue Growth May 29th 2023

Since institutional investors own more than half the issued stock, the board will likely have to pay attention to their preferences. Downer EDI is not owned by hedge funds. Our data shows that L1 Capital Pty. Limited is the largest shareholder with 11% of shares outstanding. In comparison, the second and third largest shareholders hold about 9.1% and 6.0% of the stock.

We also observed that the top 8 shareholders account for more than half of the share register, with a few smaller shareholders to balance the interests of the larger ones to a certain extent.