Headline: Tepper’s Appaloosa Takes Big Swing at Whirlpool in Contrarian Value Bet
Introduction: Hedge fund titan David Tepper has made a surprising move in his latest 13F filing, elevating Whirlpool to one of Appaloosa Management’s largest holdings. The near-10% stake signals a high-conviction view on the appliance maker’s ability to navigate a tough housing market, aggressive competition, and shifting trade policy—while potentially benefiting from domestic manufacturing strength and a multi-year product refresh.
Tepper’s filing, which reflects positions as of September 30, shows Whirlpool as his third-largest position. The 114-year-old company behind KitchenAid, Maytag and its namesake brand has been pressured by weak discretionary spending and slow existing home sales amid elevated mortgage rates. While the stock sold off earlier this year on housing concerns, it isn’t obviously cheap across the board: Whirlpool trades around 10x forward earnings, about 1.5x book, and roughly 9.5–10x EV/EBITDA versus a long-term average near 7.9x. The dividend yield sits near 5.5% after a cut, underscoring how management has prioritized financial flexibility.
What Tepper may be betting on is operating leverage if margins recover. Whirlpool says it manufactures roughly eight of every ten appliances it sells in the U.S., positioning it to gain from tariff and trade rules that favor domestic production. Management has also pointed to market-share gains in North America and plans an unusually large product refresh in 2025, with more than 30% of the regional lineup transitioning to new models—an effort that could support pricing and mix as connected-home features become table stakes. The company is also deleveraging, including planned asset sales, with India flagged as a potential near-term catalyst.
Risks remain front and center. Whirlpool’s balance sheet carries meaningful leverage (around 6x debt/EBITDA), and recent free cash flow has been negative, making its earlier 2026 target of generating FCF equal to 7% of sales look increasingly ambitious. Competitive intensity from global brands—particularly those leaning into smart, AI-enabled appliances—continues to pressure margins, while any change or legal challenge to tariff structures could alter the domestic advantage. Short interest of about 17% of the float adds volatility, even as it raises the prospect of a squeeze if sentiment turns. For Tepper—known for finding value in distressed or out-of-favor assets—Whirlpool is a classic contrarian setup, but one that likely requires patience and execution to pay off.
Key Points: – Appaloosa’s latest 13F shows a near-10% stake in Whirlpool, making it Tepper’s third-largest position. – Whirlpool’s valuation sits around 10x forward P/E, 1.5x P/B, and 9.5–10x EV/EBITDA, with a dividend yield near 5.5% post-cut. – Management is banking on a 2025 product refresh (30% of North America lineup), share gains, and domestic manufacturing scale. – Free cash flow turned negative recently; leverage near 6x debt/EBITDA remains a key risk. – Trade policy could be a tailwind given Whirlpool’s U.S. footprint, but tariff changes or evasion could dilute the advantage. – Short interest near 17% of float could amplify moves as sentiment shifts.






