- Two Seas Capital, holding approximately 6.3% of Core Scientific, called the all-stock, uncollared offer “materially undervaluing”
- Core Scientific’s stock rose about 3%, while CoreWeave’s shares surged nearly 9% intraday, signaling investor support for stronger deal terms.
- Two Seas and other shareholder groups are demanding enhancements, such as a collar to shield against volatility.
Two Seas Capital, the largest shareholder in Core Scientific, has formally written a letter opposing the company’s proposed $9 billion all-stock sale to CoreWeave. The investor, which holds approximately 6% of Core Scientific, deems the offer undervalued and argues it exposes shareholders to undue risk. While not outright rejecting a merger, Two Seas insists on improved deal terms.
Letter condemns deal as undervaluing and risky
Two Seas wants a “collar” agreement, which will protect it against CoreWeave’s fluctuating stock price. Ever since the agreement, the stock has dropped significantly, reducing the implied valuation from $9 billion to around $6.7 billion.
Without a revamped proposal, the deal may falter ahead of a shareholder vote expected later this year. Failure of the merger could leave CoreWeave scrambling to reduce its $10 billion lease expense, while Core Scientific would remain an independent infrastructure provider, potentially vulnerable to market volatility or reduced investor confidence.
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Positive share price uptick after opposition
Since the letter came to public knowledge, Core Scientific’s shares popped about 3% to $14.38, while CoreWeave’s stock rose intraday by nearly 9%. Earlier, the mere resurgence of acquisition talks in June had propelled Core Scientific’s stock to surge over 23 % in a single day before retracing.
Such shareholder resistance is not unprecedented. In the UK, Anglo American turned down a £31 billion unsolicited bid from BHP, with major investors calling it opportunistic and undervalued. In another case, hedge fund-backed investors in Third Point’s reverse takeover structure triggered rebellion over governance concerns and discounted exit terms.
Two Seas Capital’s decisive pushback casts significant doubt over the future of the $9 billion all-stock merger between CoreWeave and Core Scientific. CoreWeave now faces pressure to sweeten the terms, perhaps through a valuation bump or value-preserving mechanisms like collars, or risk losing out entirely.