Tracking Stock

A Tracking Stock (also known as a 'letter stock') is a special class of common stock issued by a parent company. Its unique feature is that its market value is intended to track the performance of a specific business segment or subsidiary within the larger corporation. Think of a big, diversified company—let's call it “MegaCorp”—that owns both a steady, old-school manufacturing division and a flashy, high-growth software division. Instead of selling off the software unit, MegaCorp could issue a tracking stock for it. This allows investors to buy shares that are supposed to rise and fall with the software division's fortunes, all while the division remains legally part of MegaCorp. However, and this is the crucial part, shareholders of a tracking stock are still legally shareholders of the parent company, MegaCorp. They do not have a direct claim on the assets or cash flows of the specific division they are “tracking,” which creates some interesting and often problematic dynamics for investors.

Corporate managers don't create these complex securities for fun. Tracking stocks are tools designed to solve specific problems or unlock perceived value. The main motivations usually fall into a few key categories:

  • Highlighting a Hidden Gem: A large, diversified company (a conglomerate) might feel that the market isn't fully appreciating one of its fast-growing divisions. By issuing a tracking stock, the company shines a spotlight on that division's financial performance, hoping to attract a different set of investors and achieve a higher valuation than what's being assigned to it as part of the parent company.
  • Raising Capital without a Full Breakup: It's a way to raise money directly for a specific business unit. The cash raised from selling the tracking stock can be used to fund that unit's growth, all without the parent company having to issue more of its own shares (diluting existing shareholders) or taking on debt. It's often seen as a less permanent and complex alternative to a spin-off.
  • Employee Incentives: A parent company can use stock options tied to the tracking stock to attract, motivate, and retain key employees within that specific division. This links their compensation directly to the performance of the unit they work for, which can be a powerful tool, especially in competitive industries like tech.

For an ordinary investor, tracking stocks offer a tempting proposition but come with significant risks hidden in the fine print.

  • “Pure-Play” Investment: The biggest draw is the ability to invest in a specific, often high-growth, segment of a larger business without having to buy the whole company. If you love MegaCorp's software business but are lukewarm on its manufacturing arm, the tracking stock seems like the perfect solution.
  • Greater Transparency: To support the tracking stock, companies usually have to provide separate financial statements for the tracked division. This can give investors a clearer view of the division's revenues, profits, and growth than they would otherwise get.
  • No Real Ownership: This is the most critical drawback. You do not own a piece of the division. You own a piece of the parent company that has promised to pay you based on the division's performance. In a bankruptcy scenario, the assets of the tracked division are pooled with all other assets of the parent company to pay off creditors. Tracking stockholders are just another group of equity holders of the parent and have no special claim.
  • Weak or No Voting Rights: Tracking stockholders typically have very limited or no voting rights. All the power remains with the parent company's board of directors and its primary shareholders. You're a passenger, not in the driver's seat.
  • Major Conflicts of Interest: The parent company's management is serving two masters: the parent shareholders and the tracking stockholders. Their interests can easily conflict. The board can make decisions that benefit the parent at the expense of the division. For example, it could load up the tracked division with excessive corporate overhead costs, have it “lend” money to the parent on unfavorable terms, or sell assets between the two at prices that aren't fair.

Value investors, who view buying a stock as buying a piece of a business, are deeply skeptical of tracking stocks. Legendary investor Warren Buffett has famously called them “an abomination,” arguing that they obscure accountability and create messy conflicts of interest. The core problem from a value perspective is the violation of a clear governance structure. As an owner, you want management's fiduciary duty to be clear and undivided: to act in the best interests of you, the shareholder. With a tracking stock, management's duty is split. Whose interests come first when a decision benefits the parent company but hurts the tracked division? The answer is almost always the parent company. Furthermore, the lack of a direct claim on assets and the absence of voting rights mean you aren't truly an owner in the way a value investor understands the term. You are holding a derivative-like contract whose value depends not only on the performance of a business unit but also on the whims and integrity of the parent company's board. For these reasons, most value investors steer clear. While the idea of isolating a great business sounds appealing, the structural flaws are often too great to overcome. A full, clean spin-off, where the division becomes a truly independent company with its own assets, board, and shareholder base, is a far superior and more investor-friendly structure.