Appaloosa LP disclosed a $432 million Whirlpool position in its latest 13F filing, making the beaten-down appliance manufacturer 5.85% of the fund's $7.38 billion in reportable U.S. equity assets. The stake represents Appaloosa's second-largest disclosed U.S. holding after Alibaba, which commands $1.15 billion or 15.6% of the book. David Tepper's fund does not file positions on non-U.S. securities or certain derivatives, so the true denominator is larger, but the Whirlpool concentration still marks a material capital allocation decision.
Whirlpool shares traded below $100 for most of Q4 2024 after a brutal eighteen-month stretch driven by housing-market softness, elevated input costs, and margin compression across major appliance categories. The stock closed the filing period near $105, down roughly 38% from its 2022 peak. Appaloosa entered or materially expanded the position during Q4, though the 13F does not specify whether the shares were acquired via new purchase, option exercise, or conversion. The filing shows Whirlpool as a top-ten holding by dollar weight, a sharp departure from prior quarters when consumer discretionary exposure tilted toward e-commerce and digital platforms.
The timing matters because Whirlpool trades at approximately 0.3x trailing revenue and 6.5x forward earnings, multiples last seen during the 2020 pandemic trough. Management has guided to flat-to-modest unit volume growth in North America for 2025, with margin expansion dependent on raw-material cost stabilization and modest housing-turnover recovery. Appaloosa's entry suggests conviction that either housing activity inflects sooner than consensus expects, or that the company's cost-restructuring program—targeting $400 million in annual savings by end-2025—will restore mid-single-digit operating margins ahead of schedule. The alternative read is a sum-of-parts thesis, given Whirlpool's $6 billion in annual free cash flow generation and a brand portfolio that includes KitchenAid, Maytag, and JennAir.
Allocators should monitor two catalysts. First, existing-home sales data through March will clarify whether the spring selling season delivers the turnover bump that typically drives appliance demand. Whirlpool's North American revenue is 72% correlated to existing-home sales on a six-month lag. Second, Whirlpool's April earnings call will detail progress on the cost-reduction program and any margin guidance revision. If the company raises full-year EBITDA guidance above the current $1.1 billion midpoint, the stock likely re-rates toward 8x forward earnings, implying $140 per share. Tepper has historically exited consumer positions within two to three quarters of initial disclosure, so any subsequent 13F showing a reduced stake would signal either profit-taking or thesis failure.
Appaloosa's Alibaba position remains the portfolio's anchor, but the Whirlpool allocation suggests the fund is rotating into U.S. value plays where earnings visibility is improving and where housing-market stabilization provides a measurable tailwind. The 5.85% weight is large enough to move the needle on fund returns if the stock compounds even modestly, and small enough to absorb a complete writedown without portfolio-level damage. Whirlpool reports Q1 earnings on April 23, 2025.