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After a year of 1.6% returns, Hiscox Ltd's (LON:HSX) share price drop last week may have less of an impact on institutional investors

In This Article:

Key Insights

  • Institutions' substantial holdings in Hiscox implies that they have significant influence over the company's share price

  • The top 9 shareholders own 51% of the company

  • Insiders have been selling lately

Every investor in Hiscox Ltd (LON:HSX) should be aware of the most powerful shareholder groups. The group holding the most number of shares in the company, around 74% to be precise, is institutions. Put another way, the group faces the maximum upside potential (or downside risk).

Institutional investors endured the highest losses after the company's market cap fell by UK£278m last week. However, the 1.6% one-year returns may have helped alleviate their overall losses. We would assume however, that they would be on the lookout for weakness in the future.

In the chart below, we zoom in on the different ownership groups of Hiscox.

View our latest analysis for Hiscox

ownership-breakdown
LSE:HSX Ownership Breakdown May 8th 2024

What Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About Hiscox?

Institutions typically measure themselves against a benchmark when reporting to their own investors, so they often become more enthusiastic about a stock once it's included in a major index. We would expect most companies to have some institutions on the register, especially if they are growing.

Hiscox already has institutions on the share registry. Indeed, they own a respectable stake in the company. This implies the analysts working for those institutions have looked at the stock and they like it. But just like anyone else, they could be wrong. If multiple institutions change their view on a stock at the same time, you could see the share price drop fast. It's therefore worth looking at Hiscox's earnings history below. Of course, the future is what really matters.

earnings-and-revenue-growth
LSE:HSX Earnings and Revenue Growth May 8th 2024

Investors should note that institutions actually own more than half the company, so they can collectively wield significant power. Hiscox is not owned by hedge funds. Looking at our data, we can see that the largest shareholder is Fidelity International Ltd with 9.6% of shares outstanding. Capital Research and Management Company is the second largest shareholder owning 7.5% of common stock, and FMR LLC holds about 7.0% of the company stock.

We did some more digging and found that 9 of the top shareholders account for roughly 51% of the register, implying that along with larger shareholders, there are a few smaller shareholders, thereby balancing out each others interests somewhat.

While it makes sense to study institutional ownership data for a company, it also makes sense to study analyst sentiments to know which way the wind is blowing. There are a reasonable number of analysts covering the stock, so it might be useful to find out their aggregate view on the future.