Long Corridor Hedge Fund filed a 13F on May 14 disclosing a 3.79% portfolio weight in Pitney Bowes as of March 31, 2026. The position represents approximately $28 million assuming the fund manages roughly $740 million in reportable assets, consistent with prior regulatory filings. Long Corridor had zero exposure to Pitney Bowes in the previous quarter.
Pitney Bowes has spent three years restructuring away from mail metering hardware toward third-party logistics and cross-border e-commerce shipping. The company's SendTech division still generates 62% of revenue, but operating margin contracted 340 basis points year-over-year through Q4 2025. The Global Ecommerce segment grew revenue 19% in the same period, though it remains subscale at roughly $1.1 billion annual run rate. Long Corridor's entry follows Pitney's January 2026 announcement of a $150 million sale-leaseback on five sorting facilities, redeploying proceeds to pay down revolver debt that carried a 7.2% floating rate.
The timing matters because Pitney Bowes trades at 0.42x trailing sales, a 68% discount to peers like Stamps.com and Sendle, despite comparable gross margins in the low-30s range. Long Corridor specializes in distressed pivots: the fund took a similar 4.1% position in Xerox in Q2 2023 six months before activist involvement forced asset sales. Pitney's board authorized a $300 million buyback in March 2026 but has executed only $41 million as of the last 10-Q, suggesting management discipline or limited cash conversion. The company's net debt sat at $2.1 billion against $480 million trailing EBITDA, a leverage ratio of 4.4x that constrains optionality but creates asymmetry if freight volume rebounds or if SendTech divestiture rumors materialize.
Allocators should monitor Pitney's Q2 2026 earnings in mid-August for any commentary on parcel volume trends and whether the company refinances its $500 million term loan due April 2027. Long Corridor typically builds positions over two quarters before filing Schedule 13D if ownership crosses 5%, so watch for a June 30 filing window. The fund's portfolio turnover historically runs 240% annually, meaning this is either a six-month trade on restructuring catalysts or the opening leg of activist engagement. Pitney's next board election is October 2026; proxy advisory firms flagged governance concerns in the 2025 cycle when three directors received sub-70% votes.
Pitney Bowes closed May 13 at $4.83 per share, up 11% since the sale-leaseback announcement but still 29% below its pre-COVID trading range. Long Corridor's cost basis likely sits between $4.60 and $4.90 based on Q1 average pricing, leaving little margin captured yet. The real tell arrives in 90 days when the next 13F reveals whether the fund added during April-May volatility or began trimming into strength.