I’d say on average activism is a good check on management. However, there are some problems associated with it (short-termism, maybe too much focus on cost cutting?). Also, it looks like Elliott is “walking the line” in terms of what is acceptable behavior.
The Elliot activism looks like blackmail to me. They don’t win by arguments, they win by blackmailing and discrediting people. It’s a pretty lowlife way of making a living. Also potential harmful for him and his employers, friends or family, if he ever gets into issues with the wrong people who pay back in his own currency and up it a notch.
I agree. The private investigator stuff is crossing the line in my opinion, particularly as it sometimes relates to people's families. It's a fine line... if you think a CEO isn't 100% engaged in the company that's fair game, but they always seem to take it too far. Using private investigators to threaten people with sensitive personal information seems borderline illegal, but I don't know the laws on such things. I'm not sure any Detroit automaker would actually be offended that someone in their circle drives an Aston Martin. That's a different breed of cars than Detroit makes.
Their developing economy debt antics are pretty devastating to the citizens of those countries. I agree the countries shouldn't be financing themselves off of debt, but that's how the system works.