Bill Ackman's Pershing Square Eyes $64B Universal Music Group Bid

Bill Ackman wants to own the house that Drake, Taylor Swift, and Billie Eilish built — and he's willing to pay $64 billion for it.
Pershing Square, Ackman's hedge fund, has reportedly mounted a colossal bid for Universal Music Group, the largest recorded music company on the planet. If the deal materializes, it would rank among the biggest acquisitions in entertainment history and fundamentally reshape who controls the music industry's most valuable catalog of artists and intellectual property.
This isn't Ackman's first dance with UMG. Back in 2021, Pershing Square initially attempted to acquire a 10% stake in the company before the deal fell apart over regulatory complications with his SPAC vehicle. He eventually took a different route, buying shares on the open market after UMG went public on the Amsterdam stock exchange. The $64 billion figure suggests a significant premium over UMG's current market valuation, signaling that Ackman sees long-term upside that the public markets haven't fully priced in.
And honestly, the math tracks. UMG controls roughly a third of the global recorded music market. Its roster spans generations — from The Beatles and The Rolling Stones to Bad Bunny and Kendrick Lamar. More importantly, its catalog generates massive recurring revenue through streaming, sync licensing, and publishing. In an era where interest rates have made reliable cash flows more attractive than speculative bets, owning music rights is essentially owning a toll booth on culture.
“More importantly, its catalog generates massive recurring revenue through streaming, sync licensing, and publishing.”
The bigger question is what happens to artists and the creative side if a Wall Street heavyweight takes full control. Hedge funds optimize for margins. Labels — at least in theory — invest in artist development, marketing rollouts, and long-term career building. Those priorities don't always align. The tension between financial engineering and creative risk is already a sore spot across the industry, and a deal of this magnitude would only amplify it.
There's also the regulatory hurdle. A transaction this size would face intense antitrust scrutiny in the EU and likely in the U.S. as well, especially given ongoing debates about market concentration in music.
Watch for Vivendi — UMG's largest shareholder — to respond in the coming weeks. Whether they entertain the bid, reject it, or use it as leverage for a higher valuation play will tell us a lot about where this goes next.
Sources
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