Institutional investors have a lot riding on Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE:BRO) with 67% ownership

Institutional investors have a lot riding on Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE:BRO) with 67% ownership

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Key Insights

  • Institutions' substantial holdings in Brown & Brown implies that they have significant influence over the company's share price

  • A total of 10 investors have a majority stake in the company with 51% ownership

  • Insiders own 17% of Brown & Brown

If you want to know who really controls Brown & Brown, Inc. (NYSE:BRO), then you'll have to look at the makeup of its share registry. We can see that institutions own the lion's share in the company with 67% ownership. In other words, the group stands to gain the most (or lose the most) from their investment into the company.

And things are looking up for institutional investors after the company gained US$720m in market cap last week. The gains from last week would have further boosted the one-year return to shareholders which currently stand at 42%.

Let's take a closer look to see what the different types of shareholders can tell us about Brown & Brown.

View our latest analysis for Brown & Brown

ownership-breakdown
NYSE:BRO Ownership Breakdown February 13th 2024

What Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About Brown & Brown?

Institutional investors commonly compare their own returns to the returns of a commonly followed index. So they generally do consider buying larger companies that are included in the relevant benchmark index.

We can see that Brown & Brown does have institutional investors; and they hold a good portion of the company's stock. This suggests some credibility amongst professional investors. But we can't rely on that fact alone since institutions make bad investments sometimes, just like everyone does. If multiple institutions change their view on a stock at the same time, you could see the share price drop fast. It's therefore worth looking at Brown & Brown's earnings history below. Of course, the future is what really matters.

earnings-and-revenue-growth
NYSE:BRO Earnings and Revenue Growth February 13th 2024

Institutional investors own over 50% of the company, so together than can probably strongly influence board decisions. It would appear that 5.2% of Brown & Brown shares are controlled by hedge funds. That catches my attention because hedge funds sometimes try to influence management, or bring about changes that will create near term value for shareholders. Looking at our data, we can see that the largest shareholder is the CEO J. Brown with 14% of shares outstanding. In comparison, the second and third largest shareholders hold about 9.8% and 5.7% of the stock.

We did some more digging and found that 10 of the top shareholders account for roughly 51% of the register, implying that along with larger shareholders, there are a few smaller shareholders, thereby balancing out each others interests somewhat.