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Some BDC management teams refuse to buy back their stock at massive discounts to net asset value (NAV). This preserves the fund's asset size, on which their fees are calculated, prioritizing compensation over creating significant shareholder value.

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To capitalize on its deep discount to NAV, Exor employed a sophisticated reverse Dutch auction for share buybacks. This allowed the company to repurchase €1 billion in shares at the lowest prices offered by shareholders, maximizing value accretion.

The traditional PE model—GPs exit assets and LPs reinvest—is breaking down. GPs no longer trust that overallocated LPs will "round trip" capital into their next fund. This creates a powerful incentive to use continuation vehicles to retain assets, grow fee-related earnings, and avoid the fundraising market.

Companies often announce and execute buybacks to appease the market, not because their stock is undervalued. This programmatic repurchasing, especially at cyclical peaks, destroys value. Truly value-accretive buybacks are rare because most managers lack the capital allocation skill to time them effectively.

Unlike other sectors, share buybacks are rare for REITs because management prioritizes maintaining low leverage to please debt rating agencies. When a conservative REIT does initiate a buyback, it's a strong signal that management believes the stock is significantly undervalued, as they are willing to risk a negative watch from those agencies.

Exposing the enormous fees paid to external managers forces asset owner boards to ask, "Is there another way?" This transparency is the key driver that prompts them to consider the strategic benefits of building internal investment teams.

Companies termed "share cannibals" aggressively repurchase their own shares, especially when undervalued. This capital allocation strategy is often superior to dividends because it transfers value from sellers to long-term shareholders and acts as a high-return, low-risk investment in the company's own business.

Profitable, self-funded public companies that consistently use surplus cash for share repurchases are effectively executing a slow-motion management buyout. This process systematically increases the ownership percentage for the remaining long-term shareholders who, alongside management, will eventually "own the whole company."

When a company's stock trades at a significant discount to tangible assets, the market signals that every new dollar invested is immediately devalued. The correct capital allocation is returning capital to shareholders via buybacks or dividends, not pursuing growth projects that the market refuses to credit.

A tender offer, where a company buys a large block of its stock in a set price range, signals higher conviction than a typical buyback program. It forces management to put a stake in the ground, indicating they believe the shares are significantly undervalued at a specific price.

Instead of complaining that its stock trades at a steep discount to its net asset value (NAV), Exor's management pragmatically views this as a chance to invest in themselves. They trimmed their highly appreciated Ferrari stake specifically to fund share buybacks at this significant discount.