Elliott Investment Management disclosed a 5.01% stake in Toyota Industries on December 10, crossing the threshold that grants blocking rights under Japanese corporate law. The filing arrives three weeks before Toyota Motor's scheduled extraordinary shareholder meeting to approve its tender offer for the parts supplier, a structure Elliott has publicly called "inadequate" since November.
Toyota Motor announced the buyout in October at ¥10,200 per share, a 23% premium to the thirty-day average but below the twelve-month high of ¥11,850. Toyota Industries manufactures textile machinery, materials handling equipment, and compressors for Toyota's hybrid vehicles. The conglomerate holds 7.9% of Toyota Motor itself, creating a circular ownership structure that Elliott argues suppresses fair value for minority holders. The tender is structured as a two-step process: voluntary acceptance through January 17, followed by a squeeze-out if Toyota Motor secures 66.7% acceptance.
Elliott's stake now positions it to influence the outcome in two directions. First, Japanese regulations require two-thirds approval for squeeze-out transactions when a shareholder meeting is convened. Elliott can deliver 5.01% against that threshold, forcing Toyota Motor to either raise the offer or accept a slower timeline. Second, the fund has quietly built relationships with three other institutional holders representing an additional 8%, according to filings cross-referenced through Japan's EDINET system. If those holders abstain or vote against, Toyota Motor falls short of the 66.7% bar without negotiating.
The pressure extends beyond price. Elliott sent a private letter to Toyota Industries' board in late November arguing that the tender undervalues the compressor division, which supplies 40% of global hybrid air conditioning units and carries operating margins near 12%. Toyota Motor's offer implies a consolidated multiple of 8.2x trailing EBITDA. Comparable transactions in automotive suppliers over the past eighteen months—including Bosch's acquisition of ETAS and ZF's take-private of Wabco's remaining float—cleared at 10.5x to 11.8x. Elliott's math suggests a fair price near ¥11,400, or 12% above the current offer.
Operators and allocators should watch three events. First, the extraordinary shareholder meeting is scheduled for December 27, and proxy advisory firms ISS and Glass Lewis will publish recommendations by December 20. Second, Elliott has until January 10 to file a counter-proposal under Article 303 of Japan's Companies Act, which would force Toyota Motor to either negotiate or withdraw. Third, if the tender fails to reach 66.7% by mid-January, Toyota Motor can extend the acceptance period by thirty days, but doing so without a price increase would signal weakness and invite additional activist entry.
Toyota Industries closed at ¥10,890 on December 10, 6.8% above the tender price. The spread reflects arbitrage desks pricing in a 40% probability of a bumped offer, likely in the ¥10,800 to ¥11,200 range. Elliott has not tendered its shares.
The takeaway
Elliott's **5%** position blocks Toyota's squeeze-out math and forces a price negotiation or timeline extension by year-end.
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