Connecticut-based Iridian Asset Management bought 190,909 shares of Hilton Grand Vacations; the estimated trade size $8.11 million based on quarterly average price.
Meanwhile, the quarter-end position value rose by $9.35 million, reflecting both share additions and price movement.
The fund now holds 464,964 HGV shares valued at $20.81 million as of December 31.
On January 23, Connecticut-based Iridian Asset Management disclosed a buy of 190,909 Hilton Grand Vacations (NYSE:HGV) shares, with an estimated transaction value of $8.11 million based on quarterly average pricing.
According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dated January 23, Iridian Asset Management increased its position in Hilton Grand Vacations (NYSE:HGV) by 190,909 shares during the fourth quarter. The estimated transaction value is $8.11 million, based on average closing prices for the quarter. Meanwhile, the quarter-end position value increased by $9.35 million, which includes both trading and price effects.
The purchase brought the Hilton Grand Vacations stake to 7.66% of Iridian’s reportable assets under management.
Top holdings after the filing:
As of January 22, shares of Hilton Grand Vacations were priced at $46.65, up 14.17% over the past year and roughly in line with the S&P 500’s 14% gain in the same period.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue (TTM) | $5.00 billion |
| Net Income (TTM) | $53.00 million |
| Price (as of 2026-01-22) | $46.65 |
| 1-Year Price Change | 14.17% |
Hilton Grand Vacations Inc. is a leading timeshare company with a diversified revenue base, operating across real estate sales, consumer financing, and resort management. Its scale, with nearly 200 properties and a substantial membership base, provides recurring revenue streams and operational leverage.
Iridian’s addition to HGV lifts the stake to nearly 8% of assets, placing it alongside the fund’s highest-conviction ideas and ahead of many more liquid, index-like exposures elsewhere in the book. That’s important to note, and recent operating results help explain why. In the third quarter, the company posted $907 million in contract sales, up nearly 17% year over year, while adjusted EBITDA reached $245 million despite construction-related revenue deferrals. Management reaffirmed full-year adjusted EBITDA guidance of $1.125 billion to $1.165 billion, signaling confidence in cash generation even as reported earnings remain noisy.
CEO Mark Wang framed the quarter as “broad-based operational and financial performance,” pointing to execution across channels and geographies as the foundation for long-term cash flow and shareholder returns. That matters in a portfolio where other top holdings skew toward steadier compounders rather than cyclical rebounds. So the takeaway? When a fund leans in this hard, it’s usually because it believes the business model is proving resilient where others aren’t.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.