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Universal Music Just Rejected Bill Ackman's $65 Billion Buyout Offer

Published Jun 1, 2026
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A vinyl record sits on a wooden conference table in a modern office meeting room with two black chairs.
Summary:
  • Pershing Square offered $65 billion to take Universal Music Group private, valuing it above where the stock had been trading before the news broke.
  • UMG's board rejected the bid from Ackman, who owns roughly 6% of the label and served as a board member until last year.
  • The offer sets a public floor on UMG's valuation and leaves the door open for Ackman to return with a higher number or for rival bidders to step in.

Bill Ackman is already one of Universal Music Group's biggest shareholders. He just tried to buy the rest of it, and the board said no.

An Insider's Bid Gets Turned Down

Pershing Square offered $65 billion to take the world's largest music label private, but UMG's board passed on the deal.

Ackman isn't a hostile outsider knocking on the door. He's been one of UMG's biggest shareholders since 2021, when his fund took a stake ahead of the label's Amsterdam IPO.

This wasn't a takeover attempt - it was an insider trying to walk the company off the public market and getting turned down by the same board he served on until last year.

Pershing Square owns roughly 6% of UMG after trimming its position earlier this year, and the bid valued the label well above where the stock had been trading before the news broke. Ackman has spent years pushing UMG to list shares in the U.S., arguing the Amsterdam listing has held the stock back.

Going private would have let Ackman push his playbook - a U.S. listing, more catalog deals, deeper bets on AI licensing - without quarterly earnings pressure or public-market noise.

Why? Ackman has called UMG one of his highest-conviction positions, and Pershing Square's stake reflects that view.

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Why Music Catalogs Are Suddenly Worth A Fortune

Streaming changed what a song is worth. A track from 1995 used to sit in a vault, but now it pays a royalty every time someone plays it on Spotify, syncs it to a TikTok, or hears it at the gym.

That turns old music into something Wall Street loves: steady, recurring cash flow.

UMG owns one of the deepest catalogs in the world - Taylor Swift, Drake, and Olivia Rodrigo on the current side, plus rights tied to The Beatles, Bob Marley, and decades of legacy artists. Every stream sends a tiny royalty check, and there are billions of them every month.

Spotify alone pays out more than $10 billion a year to rights holders, and UMG collects the biggest slice of that pie.

Music has essentially turned into an annuity business. The hits keep paying, and the catalog itself becomes more valuable as new platforms emerge.

The catalog gold rush is already in full swing. Bruce Springsteen sold his to Sony for around $500 million, and Bob Dylan's went to Universal for roughly $300 million.

Sony Music and Warner Music have watched their valuations climb for the same reason. The vault is the asset now.

What To Watch

Ackman could come back with a higher number, which is how Pershing Square usually plays it - public, patient, and willing to raise.

The $65 billion offer also sets a floor. Now that the market knows what an insider thinks UMG is worth, other bidders may take a look.

UMG's board just bet it can do better on its own.

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