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Utah-based Grandeur Peak Global Advisors acquired 945,929 shares of Accelerant in the third quarter.
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The shares were valued at about $14.08 million as of September 30.
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The move marked a new position for Grandeur Peak, with Accelerant only going public in July.
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Utah-based Grandeur Peak Global Advisors initiated a new position in Accelerant Holdings (NYSE:ARX), acquiring 945,929 shares valued at $14.08 million, according to a November 13 SEC filing.
According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission dated November 13, Grandeur Peak Global Advisors disclosed a new stake in Accelerant Holdings (NYSE:ARX). The fund reported holding 945,929 shares with a market value of roughly $14.08 million, as of September 30. This addition brings the fund’s total reportable U.S. equity positions to 104.
This new position represents 1.89% of Grandeur Peak Global Advisors’ 13F reportable assets under management.
Top holdings after the filing:
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NASDAQ:MPWR: $60.00 million (8.05% of AUM)
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NASDAQ:FROG: $59.54 million (7.99% of AUM)
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NASDAQ:MRX: $58.96 million (7.91% of AUM)
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NYSE:TBBB: $40.28 million (5.40% of AUM)
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NASDAQ:DSGX: $39.10 million (5.25% of AUM)
As of Friday, shares of Accelerant Holdings were priced at $16.77, down about 20% from a July IPO price of $21 per share.
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Metric
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Value
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Price (as of Friday)
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$16.77
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Market Capitalization
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$3.72 billion
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Revenue (TTM)
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$839.64 million
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Net Income (TTM)
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($1.33 billion)
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Accelerant Holdings provides a data-driven risk exchange platform, specialty insurance underwriting, and reinsurance services, with revenue primarily from exchange fees and underwriting income.
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The company operates a fee-based model by connecting specialty insurance underwriters with risk capital partners, generating income through fixed-percentage, volume-based fees and policy underwriting.
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It targets small-to-medium-sized commercial clients in the United States, Europe, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
Accelerant Holdings is a specialty insurance platform leveraging technology and data analytics to connect underwriters and risk capital partners. The company’s integrated risk exchange and underwriting capabilities enable efficient policy origination and portfolio management for commercial clients across multiple regions. Its strategic focus on small and medium-sized enterprises, combined with a scalable, fee-based business model, positions Accelerant Holdings to capitalize on evolving needs within the insurance sector.
Accelerant only became public in July, meaning this position was built right as or almost immediately after the IPO window opened. For long-term investors, that signals conviction in the underlying business rather than a reaction to short-term price action.
That conviction is easier to understand once you look past the headline GAAP loss. Accelerant’s $1.4 billion third-quarter net loss was driven almost entirely by a one-time, non-cash profits interest distribution tied to the IPO. Strip that out, and the operating picture looks very different. Adjusted net income jumped to $79.8 million in the quarter, more than quadrupling year over year, while adjusted EBITDA surged 302% to $105 million, with margins expanding to 39%.
Within the portfolio, this isn’t a core position yet. At just under 2% of reportable assets, it sits well below the fund’s largest technology and software holdings. That suggests this is an early, thesis-building stake rather than a full endorsement. Ultimately, Accelerant’s post-IPO volatility may matter less than whether its fee-based model and underwriting discipline continue to scale the way recent results suggest.
13F: A quarterly SEC filing required for institutional investment managers to disclose their equity holdings.
Assets under management (AUM): The total market value of investments managed on behalf of clients by a fund or firm.
Position: The amount of a particular security or asset held by an investor or fund.
Stake: The ownership interest or share held in a company by an investor or fund.
Underwriting: The process of evaluating and assuming risk in exchange for a fee, often in insurance or securities issuance.
Reinsurance: Insurance purchased by insurance companies to transfer portions of risk to other parties.
Risk capital partners: Entities that provide financial backing to assume insurance or investment risks in exchange for potential returns.
Fee-based model: A business model where revenue is generated through fixed or percentage-based service fees, not commissions.
Policy origination: The process of creating and issuing new insurance policies to clients.
Portfolio management: The ongoing process of selecting and overseeing a collection of investments to meet specific objectives.
Alpha: A measure of an investment’s performance relative to a benchmark, indicating value added or lost.
TTM: The 12-month period ending with the most recent quarterly report.
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Jonathan Ponciano has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends BBB Foods and Descartes Systems Group. The Motley Fool recommends JFrog and Monolithic Power Systems. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
What a $14 Million Accelerant Bet Signals to Long-Term Investors After the Firm’s July IPO was originally published by The Motley Fool