The offering, backed by $2.8 billion in private placement commitments, comes as Ackman simultaneously pursues a $64 billion bid for Universal Music Group.
Outspoken billionaire investor Bill Ackman launched the roadshow Monday for a combined initial public offering of his hedge fund management company and a new closed-end fund, setting the stage for what could be one of the larger alternative asset listings in recent years.
The dual offering covers Pershing Square Capital Management, the hedge fund Ackman founded in 2004, and Pershing Square USA, a new closed-end fund targeting between $5 billion and $10 billion through a combination of public shares and a concurrent private placement.
Shares in the new fund, plans for which were first telegraphed last month, are priced at $50 apiece, with pricing expected on April 28. Both entities will trade on the New York Stock Exchange – the closed-end fund under the ticker “PSUS” and the management company under “PS.”
The roadshow is getting underway against a difficult market backdrop. Weekend negotiations between the US and Iran failed to produce an agreement to end the ongoing conflict, now in its seventh week, contributing to broader market unease. Following the failed talks, President Donald Trump said the US would be deploying navy vessels to create its own blockade on Iranian ports within the Strait of Hormuz.
The offering structure for Ackman’s new investment vehicle is designed in part to soften the risk calculus for prospective investors: those participating in the $2.8 billion private placement – which has already secured commitments from family offices, pension funds, and insurance companies – will receive 30 shares of Pershing Square for every 100 shares purchased in the new fund, according to Reuters.
Pershing Square USA is designed to mirror Ackman’s existing high-conviction hedge fund strategy, targeting 12 to 15 undervalued North American-listed companies. The new fund will not charge performance fees, a structural difference aimed at broadening its appeal beyond institutional investors. It will also offer investors faster access to capital than a traditional hedge fund – a meaningful distinction for advisors and wealth managers evaluating its suitability for client portfolios.
In a letter sent last month to existing Pershing Square investors announcing the combined offering, Ackman pointed to the longer-term strategic rationale for the structure. “A large and successful PSUS IPO will also likely contribute to our success in launching other closed-end investment companies,” he wrote.
This is not Ackman’s first attempt to bring Pershing Square USA to market. He pulled a similar offering in mid-2024, just days before its scheduled debut, after a series of setbacks including a fundraising target that was cut from $25 billion to $2 billion before being scrapped altogether. The revived effort reflects a recalibrated approach: the current fundraising target is significantly more modest, and the combined structure – linking the closed-end fund offering to a simultaneous listing of the management company – is intended to give investors multiple ways to gain exposure to the Pershing Square platform.
For advisors who have been tracking Ackman’s moves, the roadshow comes after Pershing Square’s $64 billion cash-and-stock bid last week to acquire Universal Music Group, the world’s largest music label. The proposal, which values the Amsterdam-listed company at a 78% premium to its recent share price, argues that the stock has underperformed despite strong operating results.
“UMG’s stock price has languished due to a combination of issues that are unrelated to the performance of its music business and importantly, all of them can be addressed with this transaction,” Ackman said in a statement. Universal’s board confirmed it received the unsolicited, non-binding bid and said it would review the proposal in accordance with its fiduciary duties.
Whether the UMG deal ultimately materializes or not, the combined IPO roadshow places Ackman squarely back in the public markets spotlight. Citigroup, UBS Investment Bank, BofA Securities, Jefferies, and Wells Fargo Securities are acting as global coordinators and bookrunners for that offering.