Share Prices & Company Research

Market News

30 Apr 2026 | 12:23

Edinburgh Worldwide board 'disappointed' as it expects votes to go Saba's way

(Sharecast News) - Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust said on Thursday that it expected shareholders to vote against the reappointment of its five independent directors and approve three nominees proposed by Saba Capital Management at its annual general meeting. The FTSE 250 investment trust said final voting results would be announced later on Thursday after verification by an independent assessor.

Based on the latest voting information, it expected there would be insufficient votes in favour of the resolutions to reappoint the independent directors standing for re-election.

Mungo Wilson did not stand for re-election after completing his nine-year tenure.

Subject to confirmation of the vote, Jonathan Simpson-Dent, Mary Gunn, Jane McCracken, Caroline Roxburgh, Gregory Eckersley and Wilson would cease to be directors at the end of the AGM.

The trust said Saba's three nominees, Gabriel Gliksberg, Jassen Trenkow and Michael Joseph, were expected to be appointed to the board by the required majority.

Edinburgh Worldwide said the expected outcome primarily reflected a material reduction in ownership by private wealth and retail shareholders, which it said followed "the reality of Saba's likely effective control of the company".

It said recent selling by those groups had largely come from previously engaged shareholders who had historically supported the board, reducing votes in favour of the incumbent directors.

The company also said a further US investment fund with a material holding had voted against the board, taking the number of US investment fund shareholders not supporting the board to four, including Saba.

Together, those shareholders represented more than 40% of the company's issued share capital.

Chair Jonathan Simpson-Dent described the expected outcome as "a disappointing day" for long-standing shareholders.

"This is a disappointing day for our long-standing shareholders who are set to lose exposure to this exciting mandate focused on next-generation technology, seemingly in favour of Saba's plan to invest in other UK investment trusts," he said.

Simpson-Dent said retail and private wealth shareholders had been "ground down by Saba's repeated attacks", adding that many had already sold their shares and been replaced by institutions seeking exposure to the trust's holding in SpaceX.

"This should represent a wake-up call for the investment trust sector and its regulators," he said.

He said the board had remained focused on governance and performance since implementing its "path to growth" strategy 18 months ago, delivering net asset value returns of 44% and outperformance of 21% relative to its benchmark.

"I would like to thank shareholders for their engagement and support, as well as my fellow board members and the many other stakeholders, including the media, who have worked to highlight the risks associated with Saba's proposals and to encourage retail shareholder participation," Simpson-Dent said.

At 1039 BST, shares in Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust were up 0.86% at 234p.

Reporting by Josh White for Sharecast.com.

See latest RNS on Investegate
Get in touch today
Join Redmayne Bentley
Talk to us now about opening a new portfolio or transferring your portfolio from another provider
0113 243 6941
Get in touch today
Contact your local office
Contact your local office to find out more
The value of your investments and the income from them may go down as well as up, and you could get back less than you invested.