Cooper Energy Limited (ASX:COE) is a favorite amongst institutional investors who own 53%

In This Article:

Key Insights

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

  • The top 10 shareholders own 51% of the company

  • Insiders have been buying lately

If you want to know who really controls Cooper Energy Limited (ASX:COE), then you'll have to look at the makeup of its share registry. We can see that institutions own the lion's share in the company with 53% ownership. Put another way, the group faces the maximum upside potential (or downside risk).

Given the vast amount of money and research capacities at their disposal, institutional ownership tends to carry a lot of weight, especially with individual investors. Hence, having a considerable amount of institutional money invested in a company is often regarded as a desirable trait.

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

View our latest analysis for Cooper Energy

ownership-breakdown
ASX:COE Ownership Breakdown October 13th 2024

What Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About Cooper Energy?

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.

We can see that Cooper Energy does have institutional investors; and they hold a good portion of the company's stock. 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. It is not uncommon to see a big share price drop if two large institutional investors try to sell out of a stock at the same time. So it is worth checking the past earnings trajectory of Cooper Energy, (below). Of course, keep in mind that there are other factors to consider, too.

earnings-and-revenue-growth
ASX:COE Earnings and Revenue Growth October 13th 2024

Investors should note that institutions actually own more than half the company, so they can collectively wield significant power. We note that hedge funds don't have a meaningful investment in Cooper Energy. L1 Capital Pty. Limited is currently the largest shareholder, with 16% of shares outstanding. For context, the second largest shareholder holds about 6.7% of the shares outstanding, followed by an ownership of 5.1% by the third-largest shareholder.

We also observed that the top 10 shareholders account for more than half of the share register, with a few smaller shareholders to balance the interests of the larger ones to a certain extent.

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. Quite a few analysts cover the stock, so you could look into forecast growth quite easily.