Janus Henderson (NYSE:JHG) shares declined 1.7% to $50.51 in early Friday trading after Trian Fund Management formally opposed a revised bid from Victory Capital (NASDAQ:VCTR). Trian, which holds a 20.7% stake and is the asset manager's largest investor, said it will not support Victory Capital's sweetened offer, which competes with Trian's own take-private proposal.
In a statement rejecting Victory Capital's approach, Trian said it does not see a clear path to completing a transaction with Victory Capital given attrition risks. That concern reflects Trian's view that shareholder and stakeholder turnover could impede closing a deal led by Victory Capital rather than its own plan.
Victory Capital earlier this week augmented its bid for Janus Henderson with a revised $8.6 billion cash-and-stock proposal, intensifying a bidding contest with Nelson Peltz's Trian. The competing offers have kept Janus Henderson shares trading at a premium to Trian's existing take-private price.
Market pricing has continued to sit above Trian's $49-per-share offer, a dynamic that market participants interpret as an expectation that any final outcome will top that figure. Analysts have pointed to the persistent premium as evidence that investors anticipate further developments in the contest.
"Given the stock continues to trade above the $49 Trian offer with less than a month to go to the vote, it would seem more news is yet to follow. We expect elevated headlines over the coming weeks," TD Cowen analyst Bill Katz said.
The current situation leaves a number of moving parts unresolved: which bid will secure sufficient shareholder support, whether attrition concerns will pose a material obstacle to Victory Capital's proposal, and how the vote will unfold in the coming weeks. For now, Janus Henderson shares remain priced above the $49 benchmark put forward by Trian while trading below the level that would represent a decisive premium over that offer.
Investors and market observers will be watching shareholder communications, vote timing, and any further revisions to bids as the situation evolves. The immediate market reaction to Trian's rejection of Victory Capital's revised offer was a moderate share-price decline, reflecting both the uncertainty and the ongoing expectation that a resolution could exceed the $49 proposal.
Sectors affected: Asset management, broader financials and capital markets activity tied to M&A in the asset-management industry.