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Asset Management

This startup wants to do for activist investing what GameStop did for stocks

Tulipshare touts itself as the world’s first activist investment platform, 'collectivising' retail investors and extending voting rights to fractional shares

The startup's shareholder campaigns target JPMorgan, Apple and Johnson & Johnson
The startup's shareholder campaigns target JPMorgan, Apple and Johnson & Johnson Photo: Tulipshare

Alasdair Hardie wanted his money to make a difference. After months of research at the beginning of the year, the 32-year-old Edinburgh obstetrician-gynaecologist found Tulipshare.

Tulipshare, launched last year, is an investing platform that wants to change corporate practices. It enables investors to join forces and pool shares in order to meet the threshold to submit resolutions for shareholder votes at annual general meetings.

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