Markets

Activist short seller explains bet against Church & Dwight as due to 'extreme overvaluation'

Key Points
  • Spruce Point Capital founder Ben Axler told CNBC that Church & Dwight is in a state of "extreme overvaluation."
  • Axler's fund published a report last week expressing "significant concerns" about the company.
  • Spruce Point is an activist investment fund that short sells stock of companies that it believes are trading at higher values than they should.
Short seller bets against consumer products company Church & Dwight
VIDEO8:1008:10
Short seller bets against consumer products company Church & Dwight

An activist investor with a penchant for bold calls about companies losing value spoke to CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Monday about his latest position, which bets that household products company Church & Dwight will lose half its value.

Spruce Point Capital founder Ben Axler published a report last week expressing "significant concerns" about Church & Dwight. He says the company is in a state of "extreme overvaluation," citing concerns with its acquisitions, corporate management and company insiders selling stock in recent weeks.

"Of the 19 analysts that cover the stock, only four are a buy – and it's trading above the average analyst price target," Axler told CNBC. "We could see this stock down 50%."

Spruce Point is an activist investment fund that short sells stock of companies that it believes are trading at higher values than they should. Short selling is a means of betting that a company's stock will fall.

Shares of Church & Dwight have slid over 8% since Spruce Point released its report, trading as low as $72.84 a share on Monday. The company issued a statement to CNBC, denouncing Axler's report.

"We have confidence in our long-term plan to deliver superior returns based on our 'evergreen business model,' and our strong second-quarter results demonstrate our continued momentum. This report contains a number of false and misleading statements and is simply an attempt by a short-seller to negatively impact Church & Dwight's share price for its own benefit," Church & Dwight said.

Axler acknowledged the company's response to CNBC and countered that Church & Dwight can call them if the company wants to identify and explain what those "false and misleading statements" are.

"We're happy to correct [any issues in our report] if they can prove us wrong," Axler said.