Bill Ackman


Bill Ackman Biography

William A. "Bill" Ackman (born May 11, 1966) is an American hedge fund manager. He is the founder and CEO of hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management LP.

Early life

Ackman was raised in Chappaqua, New York, and is the son of Ronnie I. (née Posner) and Lawrence David Ackman, the chairman of a New York real estate financing firm, Ackman-Ziff Real Estate Group. His family is Jewish. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude from Harvard College in 1988, and an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1992.

Career

In 1992, Ackman founded with a fellow Harvard graduate the investment firm Gotham Partners, which made small investments in public companies. In 1995, Ackman's reputation was enhanced when he partnered with the insurance and real estate firm Leucadia National to bid for Rockefeller Center. Although they did not win the deal, the high profile nature of the bid caused investors to flock to Gotham Partners growing it to $500 million in assets by 1998. In 2002, Ackman began winding down Gotham Partners which had become entrenched in litigation with various outside shareholders who also owned an interest in the same companies which Gotham invested. A 2003 investigation of Gotham's trading practices by New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer found no wrongdoing.

In August 2013, Ackman's two year campaign to transform the department store J.C. Penney came to a sudden end after he decided to step down from the board following an argument with fellow board members.

MBIA activities

In 2002 Ackman began research challenging MBIA's AAA rating despite an ongoing probe of his trading by New York State and federal authorities. He was charged the fees for copying 725,000 pages of statements regarding the financial services company in his law firm's compliance with a subpoena. Ackman has called for a division between MBIA's bond insurers' structured finance business and their municipal bond insurance side despite statements from the insurance companies that this would not be a viable option.

He argued that the billions of dollars of CDS protection MBIA had sold against various mortgage backed CDOs was going to be a problem. He also argued that it was not proper for MBIA, which was legally restricted from trading in CDS, to instead do it through a second corporation, LaCrosse Financial Products, which MBIA described as an "orphaned transformer". Ackman bought credit default swaps against MBIA corporate debt as a way to bet that it would crash. When MBIA did, in fact, crash as the financial crisis of 2008 came to a head, he sold the swaps for a large profit. Ackman reportedly attempted to warn regulators, rating agencies and investors about the bond insurers' high risk business models. The story of Ackman's battle with MBIA was turned into a book called Confidence Game (Wiley, 2010) by Bloomberg News reporter Christine Richard. He reported covering his short position on MBIA on January 16, 2009 according to the 13D filed with the SEC.

Pershing Square Capital Management

In 2004, with $54 million in funding from his personal funds and from his former business partner Leucadia National, Ackman started Pershing Square Capital Management. In 2005, Pershing bought a significant share in the fast food chain, Wendy's International and successfully pressured them to sell its Tim Horton's doughnut chain. Wendy's spun off Tim Horton through an IPO in 2006 and raised $670 million for Wendy's investors. After Ackman sold his shares at a substantial profit after a dispute over executive succession, the stock price collapsed, raising criticism that the sale of Wendy's fastest growing unit left the company in a weaker market position. Ackman blamed the poor performance on their new CEO.

In December 2007 his funds owned a 10% stake in Target Corporation, valued at $4.2 billion through the purchase of stock and derivatives. His funds now own a 7.8% stake. In December 2010, his funds held a 38% stake in Borders Group and on December 6, 2010, Ackman indicated he would finance a buyout of Barnes & Noble for . He most recently won a shareholder proxy battle for Canadian Pacific Railway. Ackman is known to occasionally hire people outside of non-traditional finance backgrounds, for instance, his professionals have included a former fly fishing guide, a former tennis pro and "a man whom he met in a cab."

Defense of J. Ezra Merkin

At a panel meeting discussing Bernie Madoff in January 2009, Ackman defended his long time friend J. Ezra Merkin stating, "Has Ezra committed a crime? I don't think so," "I think [Merkin] is an honest person, an intelligent person, an interesting person, a smart investor." On April 6, 2009, Merkin was charged with civil fraud by the State of New York, for "secretly steering $2.4 billion in client money into Bernard Madoff's Ponzi fraud without their permission." A settlement was reached on June 2012 requiring Merkin to pay $405 million to victims including the Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty.

Herbalife criticism

In December 2012, Ackman issued and presented a research report that is critical of Herbalife's multi-level marketing business model, calling it a pyramid scheme. Ackman's has disclosed that his hedge fund, Pershing Square Capital Management, has sold short the company's shares directly (not with derivatives) starting in May 2012. Ackman stated that he will donate all of his profits from the trade to charity, taking the financial incentive out of the equation. Also he said that he's not daytrading the stock, he is for the long term. Herbalife's management disputes the premise and ensuing conclusion of the report, i.e. that the stock is worth $0. He said on CNBC that millions of low income people around the world, hoping to become millionaires are been duped with this scheme and if they knew that to make hundred thousand dollars, what Herbalife calls the "millionaires team" there is a fraction of less than 1% no one will sign up for it.

Ackman's position on Herbalife led to a discussion on live television with an Herbalife supporter, Carl Icahn, for nearly half an hour on CNBC, January 25, 2013.

Philanthropy

Ackman has given to charitable causes such as the Center for Jewish History to preserve Jewish genealogy where he spearheaded a successful effort to retire their $30 million in debt personally contributing $6.8 million. In a press release, the Ackman family stated, "We want our children to know, not only their living relatives, but those representing past generations for a greater connection to their family and ancestral origin and heritage." This donation made with that of Bruce Berkowitz, founder of Fairholme Capital Management, and Joseph Steinberg, president of Leucadia National, were the three largest individual gifts that the center has ever received.

Ackman's foundation donated $1.1 million to the Innocence Project in New York City and Centurion Ministries in Princeton, N.J. The two groups are dedicated to investigating the cases of people who have been wrongfully convicted.

Ackman is a signatory of The Giving Pledge committing himself to give away at least 50% of his wealth to charitable causes.

Bill and Karen Ackman founded The Pershing Square Foundation in 2006 to support innovation in the areas of economic development, education, healthcare, human rights, arts and urban development. Since it was founded, the Foundation has committed over $160 million in grants and social investments. In 2011, the Ackmans were among The Chronicle of Philanthropy's "Philanthropy 50" list of the most generous donors.

Recent Pershing Square Foundation's grants include:

  • A $25 million gift to Signature Theatre to fund the innovative Signature Ticket Initiative.
  • A five-year, $10 million grant to Human Rights Watch in support of the advocacy organization's strategic plan and new initiatives in its Africa and Women's Rights divisions.
  • $25-million to help improve the public-school system in Newark, N.J. When Newark Mayor Cory Booker was seeking additional donors to match a $100-million pledge the Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg was making to Newark's school system, the Ackmans' foundation came forward with the biggest commitment yet, next to Mr. Zuckerberg's. Employees from Pershing Square Capital Management and The Pershing Square Foundation also helped build and pay for a brand a new playground on an empty lot in Newark, New Jersey in partnership with the Greater Newark Housing Partnership, the Urban League of Essex County, organizers from the non-profit KaBOOM! and residents of the Fairmount Heights neighborhood.
  • Grants totaling $6.5-million to the One Acre Fund since 2008, including a partnership with USAID. One Acre Fund is an NGO in Kenya, Rwanda, and Burundi that invests in farmers to generate a permanent gain in farm income to reduce poverty and hunger. Unlike most interventions designed to improve farming incomes in poor settings, One Acre Fund facilitates activities and transactions at each level of the farming value chain, from organizing farmer groups to negotiating with export markets.
  • $1.5-million, three-year grant to Social Finance to introduce social impact bonds to the United States, with Pershing Square acting as a founding partner of Social Finance US.
  • $160,000 to the Temple Mount Sifting Project. An archaeological project that is dedicated to archaeological research of debris that came out of an illicit dig on Jerusalem's Temple Mount in Nov. 1999. The project is managed by Bar-Ilan University archaeologists and operated by the Ir-David Foundation.

Personal life

He married Karen Ann Herskovitz, a landscape architect, on July 10, 1994. She is a trustee of Human Rights Watch and serves on the board of Friends of the High Line, a charity that transformed a stretch of an old elevated railroad line in New York City into a public park. They have three children.




This webpage uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bill_Ackman" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. Reality TV World is not responsible for any errors or omissions the Wikipedia article may contain.
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