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    Gabriel Radzyminski says activism is a tool to unlock value

    Any company will ultimately bend to the will of the majority of shareholders, says the market-beating fund manager.

    Tom Richardson
    Tom RichardsonJournalist

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    Since founding Sandon Capital in 2009, Gabriel Radzyminski has built the asset manager and its market-beating returns on a mix of value investing and shareholder activism.

    Radzyminski’s flagship Sandon Capital Activist Fund has returned 13.2 per cent a year after fees over the past five years, versus 10.2 per cent for the benchmark, the S&P/ASX 200 Index. In more than 11 years since its launch the fund has posted only one negative year, when hit by COVID-19, with a subsequent 49 per cent gain over the year to March 31 as it lapped the COVID-19 trough.

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