Bill Ackman 'sSPAC is close to buying 10% of Universal Music, the Financial Times reported.Pershing Square Tontine Holdings ' investment could value the music group at $40 billion.- Universal Music, a division of
Vivendi , raked in $9 billion of revenue last year.
Billionaire investor Bill Ackman's special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) is close to buying 10% of
Ackman's Pershing Square Tontine Holdings could finalize the megadeal within days or weeks, although it could still fall through, sources told the Financial Times. Ackman beat out a rival suitor, private equity group Hellman & Friedman, by raising his offer this week, the newspaper reported.
Ackman's pending deal with Universal Music was first reported by The Wall Street Journal. PSTH shares fell as much as 8% in aftermarket trading after the news broke.
Universal Music, which works with artists including Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish, is currently owned by Vivendi, a French media conglomerate. The segment grew constant-currency revenue by 5% to 7.4 billion euros ($9 billion) last year, and operating income by 20% to 1.4 billion euros, Vivendi's latest annual report shows.
The Financial Times, citing a source briefed on the situation, said that Vivendi sees a SPAC listing as a way to value Universal Music before it floats the business on the Euronext exchange later this year.
Vivendi disclosed in mid-May that it was considering selling 10% of Universal Music to an "American investor" - which may be Ackman - or pursuing a public offering of 5% to 10% of the segment's shares. Tencent, a Chinese technology conglomerate, doubled its stake in Universal Music to 20% last year, valuing the business at 30 billion euros.
Ackman, the boss of
The hedge fund manager took PSTH public last summer with the goal of spending around $5 billion for a minority stake in a private business. Ackman's reputation as a top investor - boosted by his lucrative pandemic hedge and his fund's 70% gain last year - and the size of his SPAC fueled intense speculation about his possible target.
Pershing Square Capital Management declined a request for comment from Insider.