Billionaire David Tepper sends furious letter to Whirlpool: here’s why
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Billionaire David Tepper sends furious letter to Whirlpool: here’s why

Billionaire hedge fund manager David Tepper has taken his frustration with Whirlpool public after the appliance maker moved to raise fresh equity, a step that dilutes existing shareholders.

Tepper’s Appaloosa disclosed a near 10% Whirlpool stake last fall, but more recent filings show that position is smaller, highlighting how quickly the trade has shifted from a “housing recovery” bet into a balance-sheet fight.

“Over the years this management team has destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars of shareholder value. Enough is enough. There can be no more excuses,” Tepper said in the letter first obtained by CNBC.

A big stake, now under pressure

In a Schedule 13G filed in November 2025, Appaloosa reported beneficial ownership of 5.5 million Whirlpool shares, or 9.8% of the class as of Sept. 30, 2025.

In an amended Schedule 13G/A filed Feb. 16, Appaloosa reported 3.91 million shares, or about 7.0%, based on 56,148,646 shares outstanding as of Oct. 24, 2025.

Tepper’s letter drew attention because he rarely goes to war in public with a board.

He accused Whirlpool of “destroying shareholder value” and pushed for changes to strategy and management.

As per Verity data, Whirlpool was Appaloosa’s eighth-largest holding at the end of the fourth quarter, valued at about $282 million.​

Whirlpool’s operating backdrop has been rocky, and investors have been primed to scrutinize any capital allocation move.

In July 2025, Whirlpool cut its annual dividend from $7 to $3.60 per share and reduced its earnings outlook, citing competitive pressure from increased imports ahead of tariffs.

More recently, Whirlpool’s Q4 results showed the company still isn’t cleanly out of the woods with revenue of $4.10 billion for Q4 CY2025 versus analyst expectations of about $4.26 billion.

The offering that triggered the backlash

Whirlpool said it priced “upsized concurrent” offerings of 6,884,057 common shares at $69 each and 10,500,000 depositary shares at $50 each.

The depositary shares each represent a 1/20th interest in a share of newly issued 8.50% Series A Mandatory Convertible Preferred Stock, the company said.

Whirlpool said net proceeds are expected to be about $454.9 million from the common stock offering and about $508.1 million from the depositary share offering or roughly $963 million combined.​

The company said it expects to use the proceeds to pay down amounts under its revolving credit facility and for general corporate purposes.

The offerings are expected to close Feb. 27, Whirlpool said.​

For shareholders, the immediate concern is dilution at a time when leverage remains a key narrative.

Investing.com balance-sheet data lists Whirlpool’s total debt at roughly $7.48 billion in its most recent column shown, with prior periods also in the roughly $6.0–$8.2 billion range.

That’s why the “use of proceeds” language matters: Whirlpool is explicitly telling investors the raise is about shoring up the capital structure.

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