Sony and Third Point Meet Again

In a June 2019 letter to Sony (NYSE: SNE), hedge fund Third Point disclosed a $1.5 billion investment and called for the company to break up. If reading this feels like déjà vu, that's probably because Third Point made a similar call for Sony to break up in a 2013 activist campaign. Third Point's first bout with Sony was bittersweet; Sony did not make any of the changes the hedge fund called for but the company's stock still ran higher -- providing the hedge fund with a tidy profit. What is likely to happen with Third Point's renewed effort?

Third Point's first activist encounter with Sony

This move marks Third Point's second attempted intervention effort at Sony in six years. In 2013, Third Point accumulated a 7% stake in Sony worth roughly $1.4 billion and called for the company to spin off or sell its movie and music businesses.

At the time, Third Point argued that it made no sense for Sony to operate its technology and media businesses under the same corporate umbrella. Third Point believed the two business units did not benefit each other to operate within the same company and may have hindered each other due to lack of management focus and resulting business underinvestment.

Ultimately, Sony ignored Third Point's demands, and the hedge fund sold its Sony stock in 2014. Despite the failed attempt to enact change at the company, Sony's stock performed well, and Third Point ended up making a 20% profit on its 2013 investment.

Sony's conglomerate discount

This time around, Third Point is making similar demands for a break up but has taken a different tack. In Third Point's most recent letter to Sony, the hedge fund is more complimentary to the company and congratulates management on its success in growing Sony over the past several years. The letter notes that despite fostering four "crown jewel" businesses, Sony's stock trades at a significant discount to its fair value because of the company's complex corporate structure.

As exhibited in the table below, Sony generates more than 75% of its earnings from four businesses: gaming, music, film, and semiconductors. These businesses are large and span several industries. Because of the company's size and diversity, it's hard for most investors to comprehend the scale and depth of the company as a whole, which in turn causes investors to apply a "conglomerate discount," to Sony. This mode of thinking creates what many believe is an undervalued stock.

Sony's "crown jewel" businesses

Description

Contribution to earnings

Gaming

World's leading video game platform under the PlayStation brand

43%

Music

One of the world's three largest music labels

16%

Pictures

Fifth largest Hollywood film studio

8%

Semiconductors

World's leading image sensor semiconductor manufacturer

20%

Data sources: Third Point letter and presentation to Sony.