Iridian Asset Management sold a large chunk of DigitalBridge Group stock in the first quarter, trimming 360,253 shares worth roughly $5.54 million, according to an April 23, 2026 SEC filing. That move comes as DigitalBridge is headed toward a SoftBank acquisition at $16 per share, and it leaves investors asking whether there’s any reason to buy, hold, or sell. This article breaks down the numbers, the company’s business, and what the sale likely signals about timing and risk for shareholders.
The filing shows Iridian’s trade was executed during Q1 and valued using the mean unadjusted closing price for that period, producing an estimated transaction value of $5.54 million. The quarter-end value of Iridian’s position fell by about $5.52 million when accounting for trading and price movement, which suggests most of the change came from the disposition itself. The raw count — 360,253 shares sold — is the clearest fact investors have to start from.
After the sale, the remaining stake still represented a small sliver of Iridian’s reportable assets, approximately 0.25% of 13F AUM, and the fund retained nearly 40,000 shares. That tells you Iridian didn’t exit entirely, but it did move the bulk of its exposure into cash. Hedge funds often rebalance like this when a takeover is imminent, preferring liquidity over a marginally higher final payout.
Iridian’s portfolio composition after the filing highlights where it put the proceeds and where it still sees opportunity. Top reported holdings included HLF at about $23.87 million (roughly 9.7% of AUM), ACVA at about $22.05 million (8.9%), HGV at about $18.98 million (7.7%), POST at about $17.99 million (7.3%), and LAD at about $16.38 million (6.6%). Those positions show a fairly concentrated book where trimming a smaller position can free capital for larger moves.
On the market side, DigitalBridge shares closed at $15.61 as of April 23, 2026, a roughly 92.2% gain over the prior year and about 60 percentage points better performance than the S&P 500 over the same span. The company’s market capitalization sits near $2.85 billion, with trailing twelve-month revenue of about $93.96 million and a TTM net loss near $27.07 million. Those figures sketch a growth-infrastructure business that’s scaling but not yet consistently profitable.
DigitalBridge operates and invests in digital infrastructure assets across cell towers, data centers, fiber networks, small cells, edge infrastructure, and related real estate. The firm owns, manages, and develops these assets worldwide and serves a broad client base across multiple geographies and asset types. That mix is exactly the kind of footprint private capital and strategic buyers prize for AI and connectivity plays.
The timing of Iridian’s sale is telling because SoftBank announced a takeover at $16 per share back in late December, and the stock has spent much of the interim period trading slightly below that level. By selling most of its stake near current market prices, Iridian effectively locked in gains and freed cash for other bets rather than waiting for the formal deal close and final payout. Keeping a smaller residual stake preserves upside if the deal tweaks higher or complications emerge.
SoftBank’s interest in DigitalBridge is tied to infrastructure that supports artificial intelligence, a demand-driven area requiring massive computing and networking capacity. The strategic rationale is straightforward: owning more of the physical backbone that powers AI gives a buyer scale and control over an expanding end market. For hands-on investors, that makes the company interesting at a strategic level even if the near-term trading opportunity is limited.
For most retail investors, buying DigitalBridge right now carries limited appeal because a $16-per-share cash takeover is the obvious endpoint for the stock in a straightforward closing. Current shareholders face a choice: sell now and realize near-current market value like Iridian did, or hold through to the formal deal close later in 2026 to receive the agreed cash consideration. If you prefer deploying capital elsewhere or avoiding deal risk, trimming or selling is the conservative option; if you want to ride the merger through and accept the timeline, holding is reasonable but offers little upside beyond the agreed takeover price.
