Institutional investors may overlook Merus N.V.'s (NASDAQ:MRUS) recent US$113m market cap drop as long-term gains remain positive

In This Article:

Key Insights

  • Significantly high institutional ownership implies Merus' stock price is sensitive to their trading actions

  • The top 11 shareholders own 52% of the company

  • Ownership research along with analyst forecasts data help provide a good understanding of opportunities in a stock

If you want to know who really controls Merus N.V. (NASDAQ:MRUS), then you'll have to look at the makeup of its share registry. With 68% stake, institutions possess the maximum shares in the company. That is, the group stands to benefit the most if the stock rises (or lose the most if there is a downturn).

Institutional investors was the group most impacted after the company's market cap fell to US$1.2b last week. However, the 14% 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.

Let's take a closer look to see what the different types of shareholders can tell us about Merus.

Check out our latest analysis for Merus

ownership-breakdown
NasdaqGM:MRUS Ownership Breakdown June 28th 2023

What Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About Merus?

Institutional investors commonly compare their own returns to the returns of a commonly followed index. So they generally do consider buying larger companies that are included in the relevant benchmark index.

We can see that Merus 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. When multiple institutions own a stock, there's always a risk that they are in a 'crowded trade'. When such a trade goes wrong, multiple parties may compete to sell stock fast. This risk is higher in a company without a history of growth. You can see Merus' historic earnings and revenue below, but keep in mind there's always more to the story.

earnings-and-revenue-growth
NasdaqGM:MRUS Earnings and Revenue Growth June 28th 2023

Institutional investors own over 50% of the company, so together than can probably strongly influence board decisions. It would appear that 12% of Merus shares are controlled by hedge funds. That's interesting, because hedge funds can be quite active and activist. Many look for medium term catalysts that will drive the share price higher. Our data shows that Incyte Corporation is the largest shareholder with 7.1% of shares outstanding. For context, the second largest shareholder holds about 6.3% of the shares outstanding, followed by an ownership of 6.0% by the third-largest shareholder.

After doing some more digging, we found that the top 11 have the combined ownership of 52% in the company, suggesting that no single shareholder has significant control over the company.