Billionaire Bill Ackman’s hedge fund has offered to buy Universal Music Group (UMG) in a deal that values the world’s biggest music company at more than €50bn (£44bn).
Pershing Square, the New-York based hedge fund, has offered to buy the business, which is home to artists including Taylor Swift and Elton John, in a cash and stock deal.
Ackman said in a statement that while the company, which is led by the British-born Sir Lucian Grainge, had done “an excellent job nurturing and continuing to build a world-class artist roster and generating strong business performance”, its share price had lagged owing to issues “unrelated to the performance of its music business”.
Shares in UMG, which have been listed in Amsterdam since 2021, have lost more than a quarter of their value in the past year alone.
The company is one of the “big three” record labels, alongside Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group. Its roster ranges from classical musicians to stars such as Adele, Drake and Ariana Grande.
Ackman blamed its poor share price performance partly on the delay of UMG’s listing in the US, underutilisation of its balance sheet and uncertainty around the French conglomerate Bolloré Group’s 18% stake in the company.
He also cited a “lack of investor credit” in the company’s valuation of its €2.7bn stake in the music streaming service, Spotify.
Pershing Square, which Ackman set up in 2004, controls more than $26bn in assets. The fund bought a 10% stake in UMG in 2021.
While Ackman said Grainge and his management team had done an “excellent job” at the company, as part of the proposed deal the hedge fund would add Michael Ovitz, a veteran talent agent, as chair, as well as two representatives from Pershing Square to the company’s board.
The deal would also be subject to a “new employment contract and compensation arrangement for Sir Lucian Grainge”, Ackman said in a letter to the board of directors at UMG.
Grainge was paid a package of more than €41m last year. That included a €4.4m base salary and more than €30m in bonuses.
Under the proposed deal, UMG would merge with a blank-cheque company set up by Pershing Square, and then list on the New York Stock Exchange. Shareholders would receive a total of €9.4bn in cash and 0.77 shares in the new company for every Universal share they own. Together, that would represent a 78% premium compared with the company’s closing share price on Thursday, Pershing said.
UMG was approached for comment.
