The independent voting adviser ISS has recommended that shareholders vote against activist investor Saba Capital Management’s proposals to replace the board of Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust (EWIT) at the upcoming general meeting on 20 January.

“For a second time within a year, independent voting adviser ISS has recommended that shareholders vote against ALL of Saba’s resolutions,” said Jonathan Simpson-Dent, chair of Edinburgh Worldwide (LON:EWI). “We strongly encourage shareholders not to be complacent and remind everyone that Saba holds a larger shareholding and therefore more voting power this time.”

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On 27 November 2025, Saba announced plans to requisition a general meeting of Edinburgh Worldwide’s shareholders, aimed at replacing the investment trust’s current board with three independent directors of its choosing. This followed similar attempts at seven investment trusts last year.

That attempt was unsuccessful, with shareholders of all seven investment trusts rejecting Saba’s proposals.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk, is targeting an IPO in 2026 that would value the company at $1.5 trillion, according to Bloomberg.

In December, SpaceX sold insiders’ shares at $421, approximately double the $212 per share sale in July which valued it at $400 billion – implying a current value of $800 billion.

It follows that any sale of shares by EWIT during October would have been at a valuation somewhere between $400 billion and $800 billion, substantially below the value that SpaceX is targeting in its IPO.

SpaceX is, for many investors, the greatest appeal of owning EWIT.

Saba maintains that the trust sold off a third of its shareholding at an inopportune moment in order to facilitate a potential merger with Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust (LON:USA), another investment trust that is managed, like EWIT, by Baillie Gifford.

EWIT and USA discussed the merger with Saba, but the activist investor rejected the move. Given the size of Saba’s shareholding in both trusts, the merger cannot take place without its support.

Saba put nine questions to EWIT’s board regarding the sell-down of its stake in SpaceX, which it estimates cost the trust £37 million, and the proposed merger with USA. It requested a response to these questions by 9 January.

“Unless and until we receive satisfactory responses to these questions and concerns, we reserve all of our rights, including to issue proceedings on behalf of EWI,” said Weinstein.

EWIT’s chair, Jonathan Simpson-Dent, is hosting an open Q&A session to respond to shareholder questions on Friday 9 January at 2pm GMT.

A spokesperson for EWIT said: “Saba’s open letter today adds to the numerous inaccurate statements and misleading assertations it is making designed to mislead shareholders as part of this US hedge fund’s aggressive campaign to achieve its ultimate objective – to seize control of the Company to prioritise its own commercial interests to the potential detriment of other shareholders. We look forward to answering shareholders’ questions in an open Q&A session this Friday, where we will also address Saba’s misleading assertations on SpaceX.”

FCA fined HomeServe over £30 million for breaching its Principles of Business between 2006 to 2011. Saba claimed that the FCA’s fine of HomeServe and criticism of HomeServe’s board and senior management – both of which Simpson-Dent was a member of – were not disclosed when he was appointed to EWIT’s board.

In response, a spokesperson for EWIT issued the following statement: “Saba’s presentation contains numerous inaccurate statements designed to mislead shareholders as part of this US hedge fund’s aggressive campaign to achieve its ultimate objective – to seize control of the Company for its own commercial advantage at the expense of other shareholders.

“Saba clearly hasn’t done its homework. Its claim, for example, that FCA rules were breached by not disclosing certain prior roles of the Chair at the time of his appointment to the Board of EWIT is categorically wrong. A simple read of the Company’s announcement made at the time of his appointment shows that no such breach occurred.

“Saba’s reference to the Chair’s role at HomeServe plc 16 years ago and to the FCA’s subsequent investigation, is a deliberate attempt to cast aspersions on his reputation, despite the fact he was never personally criticised by the FCA or any other regulatory authority.

“Saba is clearly seeking to portray a misleading narrative of weak governance through unfounded assertions while simultaneously campaigning for the appointment of its three US-based nominees selected solely by Saba, none of whom has any experience of UK public companies or UK governance standards.

“Saba’s presentation also provides no information regarding its plans should it succeed in taking control. As set out in our open letter issued today, it is essential that Saba offers full transparency and clarity on its intentions so that shareholders can make a properly informed decision.”

Saba’s presentation can be viewed here.

Bloomberg, L&G holds approximately 0.5% of EWIT’s shares.

Shareholders casting their vote through an investment platform may need to vote before the date of the meeting. Deadlines for voting through some of the major platforms are below.

Swipe to scroll horizontallyVoting deadlines for Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust

AJ Bell
voting deadline

Fidelity
voting deadline

Hargreaves Lansdown voting deadline

interactive investor voting deadline

14/01/2026

14/01/2026

14/01/2026

15/01/2026

Source: Association of Investment Companies

“It’s critical that private investors have their say on a decision which will determine the future of Edinburgh Worldwide,” said Stone. “Saba owns 30% of the shares so that requires a huge turnout from other shareholders if they want to make their voice heard.”