Starboard Value disclosed positions in both Autodesk and Wix this week, confirming a coordinated push into underperforming software infrastructure. The $31 billion market-cap Autodesk stake comes with a formal board dialogue already underway and potential litigation over delayed governance probe disclosure. The Wix stake, first reported Tuesday, targets operational bloat at the Tel Aviv-based website builder, whose shares trade 28% below their 2021 peak despite stable subscription revenue.
Jeff Smith's firm acquired meaningful equity in Wix without filing a 13D, suggesting the position sits below 5% but large enough to command management attention. Starboard presented the Wix board with a performance improvement framework focused on margin expansion and product rationalization. Autodesk's engagement began weeks earlier, with Starboard citing concerns over board governance lapses tied to an internal financial misconduct investigation that delayed 10-K filings. The firm has not ruled out derivative litigation if Autodesk does not address disclosure timeline failures. Both companies share a profile: high gross margins, sticky customer bases, and capital allocation that has lagged peer software multiples.
The dual activation matters because Starboard rarely deploys capital without a defined operational roadmap and a 12-to-18-month exit window. Wix generates $1.6 billion in annual revenue but carries SG&A expense ratios 12 points above comparable SaaS platforms. Starboard's historical playbook at Darden Restaurants and Box involved board refreshment, CFO replacement, and divestitures of non-core segments. Wix operates a partnership ecosystem and small-business marketing tools that have delivered negligible incremental margin despite 22% cumulative user growth since 2020. Autodesk's governance friction offers a faster catalyst: if the company settles the internal probe and refreshes audit committee leadership, Starboard can claim a governance win without a proxy fight. If not, Smith has a public litigation lever that institutional holders will support.
Operators should monitor Wix's Q1 2025 earnings call in late April for any mention of cost structure reviews or asset sales. Autodesk's delayed 10-K is due by March 31; any further postponement triggers automatic Nasdaq delisting procedures. Starboard will file updated 13F disclosures by May 15, revealing whether the Wix stake was added in Q4 2024 or Q1 2025, which determines whether this is a fresh build or a patient accumulation. Family offices with exposure to Israeli tech via direct co-investment should revisit Wix's 2023 convertible notes, which mature in 2028 and carry a 0.25% coupon—those bonds now trade with elevated vol as activists historically force buybacks or early redemption.
The operational review demand at Wix will likely surface a CFO or COO transition by summer. Starboard does not leave senior management intact when margin gaps exceed 10 points versus public comps.