Oasis Capital Management disclosed a position in Vail Resorts and signaled intent to pursue a proxy contest targeting board composition and a potential sale of the company's 18-property North American mountain portfolio. Shares closed up $23.80 to $191.45 on Wednesday, the largest single-day gain since March 2019. The move ends a 22-month slide during which MTN lost 41% from its 2021 peak of $376, underperforming the S&P 500 by 67 percentage points over that span.
Oasis has not filed a 13D, meaning its stake remains under 5% or the filing is pending SEC review. The firm specializes in leisure and hospitality restructuring — it previously forced board changes at SeaWorld Entertainment and ClubCorp Holdings before both were taken private. Vail Resorts operates 42 resorts globally, including Whistler Blackcomb, Park City, and Heavenly, with $2.83B in trailing revenue. The company's Epic Pass business contributed $987M in advance season-pass sales last fiscal year, a high-margin recurring revenue stream that private equity groups have studied since 2020. KKR and Apollo both ran preliminary diligence in late 2022 but walked over valuation gaps and regulatory entanglement with Forest Service land-use permits.
The timing reflects two structural pressures. First, Vail's same-store skier visits dropped 6.2% year-over-year through the 2023-24 season, driven by weak early-season snowfall in the Rockies and middle-income pass-holder churn. Second, the company carries $2.91B in net debt, up $840M since 2019, mostly from acquisition financing for Peak Resorts and Stevens Pass. Interest expense hit $141M last fiscal year, eating 38% of EBITDA. Oasis likely sees a breakup scenario where individual mountains sell to regional operators or family offices at higher multiples than the consolidated enterprise trades today — Aspen Skiing Company, still private, last changed hands at 14x EBITDA in 2010, well above Vail's current 8.7x.
Allocators should track three catalysts over the next 90 days. Oasis will either file a 13D disclosing exact share count and board nominees or quietly accumulate to just under 10% before announcing. Vail's annual meeting is typically held in mid-December, meaning any proxy materials would need to be filed by late October under SEC Rule 14a-8. The company's Q4 earnings call, scheduled for late September, will likely address capital allocation and whether management pre-empts activist pressure with a voluntary asset review or special dividend.
The market already priced $310M in equity value recovery. If Oasis pushes through a sale, the floor is likely $215-$235 per share based on sum-of-parts analysis using comparable resort transactions. The ceiling depends on whether a buyer values the Epic Pass database — 2.3M active accounts — as a subscription moat or a commoditized customer list.