William Albert Ackman (born May 11, 1966) is an American hedge fund manager and activist investor who founded Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. in 2003, serving as its CEO and portfolio manager.[1][2] Educated at Harvard College, from which he graduated with a bachelor's degree in social studies in 1988, and Harvard Business School, where he earned an MBA in 1992, Ackman built his career through high-conviction, concentrated bets on public companies, often pushing for operational and governance reforms as an activist shareholder.[2][3]
Ackman's investment record features outsized successes, such as his role in the restructuring of General Growth Properties during the 2008 financial crisis and value-unlocking changes at Canadian Pacific Railway, alongside concentrated positions in firms like Uber and Howard Hughes Holdings, but it has also included significant setbacks, including a multibillion-dollar writedown on Valeant Pharmaceuticals amid revelations of its aggressive pricing and distribution practices, and a $1 billion loss on a short position against Herbalife, which he publicly framed as exposing potential multi-level marketing risks despite the financial outcome.[4][3] Pershing Square's performance rebounded strongly in subsequent years, with the main fund returning about 25% year-to-date as of September 2025, propelled by gains in holdings like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Amazon, elevating Ackman's net worth to approximately $9.2 billion.[5][6]
In addition to his financial pursuits, Ackman has pursued philanthropy through Pershing Square Philanthropies, focusing on public health, education, and poverty alleviation, while serving on boards including Howard Hughes Holdings and Universal Music Group.[1][3] He gained prominence in public discourse for critiquing elite universities' handling of antisemitism after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, demanding accountability from Harvard's leadership for what he described as ideological frameworks enabling campus hostility toward Jews and Israel, actions that correlated with the resignation of Harvard President Claudine Gay amid plagiarism scrutiny and broader institutional reforms.[7] Ackman's vocal opposition to diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives in higher education and corporate settings, rooted in arguments favoring merit-based systems, has positioned him as a contrarian voice challenging prevailing institutional norms.[7]
Background
Early Life and Education
William Albert Ackman was born on May 11, 1966, in Chappaqua, New York, to Lawrence David Ackman, a real estate developer, and Ronnie I. Ackman (née Posner).[8][9] He was raised in a Jewish family in the affluent hamlet of Chappaqua, located in Westchester County.[10][11] Ackman attended Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, from which he graduated before gaining admission to Harvard College.[9]
At Harvard College, Ackman majored in social studies and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude in 1988.[4][12] His undergraduate thesis focused on junk bonds, a topic that foreshadowed his later interest in distressed securities and high-yield investments.[13]
Ackman then pursued graduate studies at Harvard Business School, where he received a Master of Business Administration in 1992.[9][4] During his time at the business school, he partnered with classmate David P. Berkowitz to begin investing personal funds in undervalued stocks, laying the groundwork for his future career in finance.[9]
Investment Career
Gotham Partners
Gotham Partners was founded in March 1993 by Bill Ackman and David P. Berkowitz, both recent Harvard Business School graduates, with initial assets under management of $3 million.[14] The firm initially focused on activist investments in small- to mid-cap public companies, employing value-oriented strategies to unlock shareholder value through operational improvements and corporate governance changes.[15] Over the next several years, the fund grew to approximately $300 million in assets, reflecting early successes in these public market positions.[16]
As Gotham Partners expanded, it increasingly shifted toward illiquid private investments, effectively functioning as a holding company for a portfolio of distressed assets, including real estate and special-purpose vehicles.[17] A notable position involved credit default swaps against bond insurer MBIA, where in December 2002, Ackman published a 66-page report titled "Is MBIA Triple A?" arguing that the company's financial structure was vulnerable due to overreliance on guaranteed investment agreements and inadequate capitalization of its subsidiaries.[18] This short position, exceeding $1 billion in notional value, drew scrutiny amid broader market concerns over monoline insurers.[19]
The MBIA thesis and related advocacy triggered investigations by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer's office, which examined Gotham's research dissemination and potential market manipulation through credit derivatives.[20] Additionally, a proposed merger of Gotham's golf course holdings with a real estate financing entity was blocked by a court in 2002, exacerbating liquidity strains from the firm's private holdings.[21] These pressures culminated in the fund's orderly liquidation in early 2003, with Ackman and Berkowitz returning capital to investors amid an inability to raise new funds or exit illiquid positions.[22] The closure represented a significant setback, though Ackman later reflected on it as a formative experience in risk management.[16]
Pershing Square Capital Management
Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. (PSCM) was established by Bill Ackman on January 1, 2004, as a hedge fund specializing in event-driven and value-oriented investments, initially seeded with $54 million in capital following the wind-down of Ackman's prior firm, Gotham Partners.[23][24] The firm quickly adopted an activist approach, taking concentrated stakes in undervalued public companies—typically 8 to 12 positions—to advocate for operational improvements, strategic changes, or capital allocation reforms aimed at unlocking shareholder value. This strategy emphasizes deep fundamental analysis, long-term holding periods, and direct engagement with corporate management, distinguishing PSCM from more diversified or passive investment vehicles.[25][26]
In December 2012, PSCM launched Pershing Square Holdings, Ltd., a closed-end investment fund providing permanent capital through public listings on the Euronext Amsterdam and London Stock Exchange, which reduced reliance on traditional hedge fund redemption pressures and enabled scaled capital deployment.[27] Managed by PSCM, the Holdings entity has grown to represent a significant portion of the firm's activities, with PSCM overseeing both private limited partnership funds and this public vehicle to execute its high-conviction, low-turnover portfolio strategy. The approach inherently involves elevated risk due to portfolio concentration, leading to annualized returns of approximately 16.5% since inception through mid-2024, though with notable volatility tied to individual position outcomes.[28]
By mid-2025, PSCM's assets under management exceeded $18 billion, reflecting steady expansion driven by performance fees, investor inflows, and reinvested gains, though the firm maintains a selective investor base to align with its long-horizon focus.[29] Recent efforts include the attempted U.S. public listing of a new vehicle, Pershing Square USA, in 2024, which was withdrawn after raising only $2 billion against a $25 billion target, underscoring challenges in broadening access amid market preferences for passive strategies.[30] Despite periodic underperformance relative to benchmarks—such as a 13.5% annualized net return for Holdings through early 2025 versus 14.8% for the S&P 500—PSCM's model prioritizes absolute value creation over relative indexing, with risk managed through rigorous due diligence and hedging when warranted.[27] In February 2026, the firm released its 2025 Annual Report and Investor Presentation, highlighting a 20.9% NAV return for the year, along with board updates.[31]
Key Investment Positions
Ackman's early short position against MBIA Inc., initiated in 2002 through credit default swaps and stock shorts, capitalized on the bond insurer's heavy subprime mortgage exposure and questionable subsidiary capitalization. This trade yielded billions in profits during the 2008 financial crisis as MBIA's credit rating collapsed and shares plummeted.[32][33]
In late 2008, Pershing Square invested $60 million for a 25% stake in General Growth Properties (GGP), a mall operator facing bankruptcy amid the credit crunch. Ackman advocated for debt restructuring that preserved equity holder value, leading to a post-reorganization recovery; the position generated over $1.6 billion in returns, which Ackman has described as his best investment with gains exceeding 9,000%.[34][35]
A prominent activist campaign targeted Canadian Pacific Railway starting in September 2011, where Pershing Square built a substantial stake and nominated directors to oust CEO Fred Green, installing Hunter Harrison to overhaul operations. The stock rose from approximately $43 per share in late 2011 to over $200 by 2015, delivering multibillion-dollar gains and exemplifying Ackman's operational improvement strategy.[36][37]
The 2012 short against Herbalife Ltd., backed by a $1 billion-plus commitment and public allegations of pyramid scheme operations, ended in defeat by 2018 after opposition from Carl Icahn's long position and regulatory scrutiny that failed to dismantle the company, resulting in roughly $1 billion in losses for Pershing Square.[32]
Pershing Square's 2015 acquisition of a 10% stake in Valeant Pharmaceuticals, initially valued at $3.2 billion, collapsed amid exposure of price gouging, channel stuffing, and Philidor-related accounting issues, with the stock falling over 90% from peak and inflicting more than $4 billion in losses on the fund.[38][9]
As of December 31, 2025, Pershing Square's concentrated portfolio featured top holdings in Uber Technologies, Brookfield Corp., and Restaurant Brands International, underscoring a shift toward durable, moat-protected businesses with long-term holding periods. In Q4 2025, the firm initiated a new $2 billion stake in Meta Platforms, representing 10% of capital and its fifth-largest holding, exited its position in Hilton, and increased its investment in Amazon, reflecting Ackman's support for AI-driven tech investments.[39][40]
Investment Philosophy
Activist Approach
Bill Ackman's activist investing at Pershing Square Capital Management involves acquiring significant equity stakes in undervalued public companies—typically 5 to 10 percent—and engaging management to implement operational, strategic, or governance changes aimed at enhancing long-term shareholder value.[41] This approach contrasts with passive investing by prioritizing direct intervention to address perceived inefficiencies, such as suboptimal capital allocation or ineffective leadership, rather than relying solely on market corrections.[42] Ackman has emphasized that activism succeeds when investors identify businesses with strong underlying fundamentals hampered by fixable issues, allowing for predictable cash flow improvements through targeted reforms.[43]
The process typically begins with intensive fundamental analysis to build a detailed thesis on value-unlocking opportunities, followed by private dialogues with company executives to propose collaborative changes.[44] If initial engagement yields insufficient progress, Ackman escalates to public advocacy, including open letters to shareholders, media interviews, and proxy solicitations to rally support for board seats or leadership overhauls.[45] This confrontational escalation, while effective in cases like the 2012 Canadian Pacific Railway campaign where Pershing Square secured a new CEO and operational turnaround, has drawn criticism for its aggressiveness, with detractors arguing it prioritizes short-term stock pops over sustainable growth.[46] Ackman counters that public pressure is a necessary tool when entrenched management resists necessary reforms, citing empirical evidence from successful interventions where stock returns exceeded benchmarks by focusing on high-conviction, concentrated positions limited to 8-12 holdings.[25]
Risk management in Ackman's activism incorporates permanent capital structures, such as Pershing Square Holdings' public listing in 2012, to avoid redemption pressures during prolonged campaigns, enabling multi-year horizons for value realization.[47] He avoids excessive leverage, preferring equity-funded bets to mitigate downside from adversarial responses, and targets "simple and predictable" businesses where causal links between interventions and outcomes are clear, as complex models obscure verifiable improvements.[43] This philosophy, rooted in first-principles evaluation of business economics, has delivered Pershing Square's annualized net returns of approximately 16.5 percent since inception through 2023, though performance variability underscores activism's dependence on accurate thesis validation amid market skepticism.[42]
Portfolio Strategy and Risk Management
Pershing Square Capital Management, under Bill Ackman's leadership, employs a concentrated activist investment strategy focused on acquiring significant stakes in 8 to 12 large-capitalization North American companies.[48] The approach targets high-quality businesses characterized by limited downside risk, predictable cash flows, and opportunities for value enhancement through managerial or operational improvements, often pursued via active engagement with company leadership.[48] Typically, the firm initiates only one to three new core investments annually, emphasizing deep research into companies with strong fundamentals such as high return on invested capital and competitive barriers.[42] This concentrated portfolio construction, where a majority of assets—often 75% in six holdings—reflects high-conviction bets rather than broad diversification, has contributed to the fund's annualized returns of 16.5% since 2004, outperforming the S&P 500's 10.2% over the same period.[42]
Ackman's strategy prioritizes long-term value creation over short-term trading, frequently involving non-controlling stakes in mid- to large-cap firms with identifiable catalysts for unlocking shareholder value, such as strategic restructurings or leadership changes.[47] Holdings are selected for low financial leverage, modest economic sensitivity, and intrinsic qualities like free cash flow generation and asset value, drawing from lessons of past crises like 2008 to favor quality over quantity in positions.[47] The firm maintains flexibility to replace underperforming holdings with superior opportunities, even at a realized loss, underscoring a dynamic yet disciplined allocation process. Ackman has voiced support for AI-driven tech investments, as reflected in recent portfolio allocations to companies leveraging artificial intelligence for growth.[49]
Risk management at Pershing Square centers on prudent portfolio construction and investment selection to mitigate downside exposure, with a general policy against margin leverage to avoid amplified losses during market downturns.[47] Position sizing limits potential losses from any single idea to 5-6% of the portfolio, balancing risk-reward through rigorous analysis of business moats and cash flow predictability.[42] When deemed necessary, the firm deploys hedging instruments, such as credit default swaps or interest rate derivatives, to protect against systemic risks; for instance, a $27 million hedge in early 2020 against market turmoil via credit default swaps on U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds generated $2.6 billion in profits as volatility spiked.[42] Similarly, an interest rate hedge yielded $2.3 billion, demonstrating opportunistic use of derivatives for tail-risk protection without routine reliance on them.[42] This framework, overseen by the investment manager and board, prioritizes capital preservation alongside growth in intrinsic value.[48]
Major Controversies
Herbalife Short Position
In December 2012, Bill Ackman, through his hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management, disclosed a $1 billion short position against Herbalife Ltd., publicly alleging that the multi-level marketing company operated as a pyramid scheme reliant on distributor recruitment rather than genuine product sales.[50] Ackman argued that over 90% of distributors lost money, with evidence drawn from internal company data and distributor testimonies suggesting unsustainable economics where earnings claims exaggerated retail sales potential.[51] He initiated a high-profile campaign, including a three-hour presentation to investors and regulators, lobbying efforts targeting the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), and funding the 2016 documentary Betting on Zero, which amplified claims of fraudulent practices.[52]
The position drew fierce opposition from investors like Carl Icahn, who in early 2013 publicly challenged Ackman on CNBC, acquiring a significant long stake in Herbalife and betting against Ackman's short, escalating into a personal feud that highlighted divisions in activist investing circles.[53] Herbalife defended its model as legitimate direct selling, with retail product sales to end consumers forming the core, and countersued Ackman for market manipulation, though courts dismissed related claims against him.[54] Ackman's campaign cost Pershing Square tens of millions in public relations and legal expenses, while the short position incurred mounting mark-to-market losses as Herbalife shares rose, reaching an estimated $400-500 million by late 2013.[50][55]
In July 2016, the FTC announced a settlement with Herbalife requiring a $200 million consumer redress payment and structural changes, including mandates that at least 80% of sales in the U.S. occur to non-distributors and verifiable tracking of retail transactions to curb deceptive earnings representations.[56] The agency cited misleading income claims but did not classify the company as a pyramid scheme or order its dissolution, prompting Ackman to describe it as a "significant win" for exposing flaws, though critics noted the agreement allowed operations to continue with reforms rather than validating his full allegations.[57][58] Herbalife shares surged nearly 20% immediately post-announcement, exacerbating Ackman's unrealized losses.[59]
Facing persistent stock gains—Herbalife shares climbed over 50% in 2017—Ackman capped losses in November 2017 by closing the direct short and shifting to put options, fully exiting the position by early 2018 with total losses estimated at approximately $760 million against his initial billion-dollar bet.[60][61] The breakeven price for the trade hovered around $48 per share, while Herbalife closed above $92 upon exit, underscoring the financial toll amid unproven claims of imminent collapse.[62] Subsequent developments, such as Herbalife's 2022 $12.5 million settlement of unrelated RICO allegations without admitting wrongdoing, have not reversed the trade's outcome, though Ackman later referenced a "psychological short" in 2024 amid stock declines.[63][64] The saga exemplified risks in high-conviction shorts against resilient businesses, influencing Ackman's subsequent shift toward concentrated long positions.
Valeant Pharmaceuticals Campaign
In 2014, Pershing Square Capital Management, led by Bill Ackman, began evaluating Valeant Pharmaceuticals' acquisition-driven business model, which emphasized buying established drugs, slashing research and development costs, and boosting revenues through price increases and distribution via specialty pharmacies.[65] By early 2015, the fund had built an initial stake valued at approximately $3 billion, representing about 5% of Valeant's shares, with Ackman publicly praising the company's efficiency in contrast to traditional pharmaceutical firms burdened by high R&D spending.[66] Ackman positioned Valeant as a superior alternative, arguing its model generated higher returns for shareholders by focusing on marketing and pricing optimization rather than innovation pipelines that often yielded low success rates.[32]
Ackman's activist campaign intensified in 2015 as Pershing Square increased its holding to nearly 10% by November, making it Valeant's largest shareholder; he joined the board alongside Vice Chairman Stephen Fraidin to influence strategy.[67] [68] The stake's value peaked amid a stock surge to around $260 per share in summer 2015, but scrutiny mounted over Valeant's reliance on Philidor Rx Services, a mail-order pharmacy accounting for up to 7% of revenues, amid allegations of channel stuffing—shipping excess inventory to artificially inflate sales.[69] [70] In October 2015, Valeant severed ties with Philidor following reports of improper practices, including potential fraud, which triggered a congressional probe into drug pricing and a sharp stock decline of over 70% from its highs.[71] [72]
Ackman mounted a vigorous defense, hosting a four-hour conference call on October 30, 2015, to assert that Valeant's issues stemmed primarily from public relations failures and media exaggeration rather than systemic fraud, while downplaying Philidor's role and projecting recovery through operational fixes.[73] [74] He urged patience from investors, emphasizing long-term value and even acquiring additional shares in February 2016 amid the turmoil, bringing holdings to over 30 million shares including options.[75] Internal emails later revealed Ackman's private frustrations with Valeant's leadership, including suggestions for countering critics and concerns over reputational damage, though he publicly maintained optimism.[76] [77] The campaign faltered as ongoing revelations of accounting irregularities and debt burdens—Valeant's leverage exceeded $30 billion—led to CEO J. Michael Pearson's resignation in April 2016; Ackman testified before Congress on pricing but could not stem the stock's collapse to under $10 per share.[78] [79]
By March 2017, Pershing Square fully exited its Valeant position, realizing losses estimated at $3 billion to over $4 billion from an average purchase price near $190 per share, which contributed to the fund's dismal performance: -20.5% in 2015 and -13.5% in 2016, prompting investor redemptions and a strategic pivot away from concentrated bets.[80] [69] [81] Ackman later reflected on the episode as a humbling lesson in risk management, acknowledging deviations from his typical investment principles, such as Valeant's limited emphasis on organic growth, while defending the underlying thesis against what he viewed as overblown short-seller attacks.[82] [83] The Valeant saga damaged Ackman's reputation temporarily but did not end his career, as he shifted toward more diversified, lower-risk strategies at Pershing Square.[84]
COVID-19 Response and Market Bets
In February 2020, anticipating severe economic fallout from the emerging COVID-19 pandemic, Bill Ackman directed Pershing Square Capital Management to purchase around $27 million in credit protection, primarily through credit default swaps on 300 million euros of high-yield European corporate bonds and similar instruments on U.S. investment-grade debt.[85][86] These hedges, initiated after Ackman's personal alarm over the virus's spread following a nightmare and analysis of Italian cases, expanded dramatically as global markets plunged in March amid lockdowns and uncertainty, generating $2.6 billion in profits by March 23, when Pershing Square fully exited the positions.[87][88] Ackman then pivoted aggressively to long equity bets, deploying the proceeds into undervalued stocks including Hilton Worldwide Holdings and Howard Hughes Corporation, which contributed to the fund's broader pandemic-related gains approaching $4 billion by early 2022.[89][90]
Ackman's public response emphasized urgency, including a March 18, 2020, CNBC interview where he warned of an impending "tsunami" of economic destruction—stating "hell is coming"—and urged President Trump to impose a mandatory 30-day nationwide shutdown, coupled with a government-backed "rent, interest, and tax holiday" to avert deeper collapse while containing the virus.[91][92] The appearance preceded a 7% market circuit breaker halt that day, prompting accusations from some market participants that his rhetoric fueled panic selling, though Ackman countered that it aimed to catalyze policy action and that he viewed the lockdown as a pathway to rapid recovery, having entered personal lockdown weeks earlier.[93][94] To support containment, he allocated personal funds to Covaxx, a firm developing antibody testing kits for faster detection beyond PCR methods.[95]
Over time, Ackman's stance evolved amid ongoing policy debates; in January 2021, he decried delays in vaccinating high-risk elderly populations as "genocide," pressing for prioritization based on efficacy data showing strong protection against severe outcomes.[96] By mid-2023, however, he criticized the government's handling of COVID-19 measures, including vaccines, for insufficient scrutiny of skeptics' concerns over safety and long-term effects, amplifying Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s arguments and pledging $150,000 toward a proposed debate between vaccine critics and proponents like Anthony Fauci to foster transparency.[97][98] He clarified his position as pro-vaccination for at-risk groups but advocated open discourse on mandates and boosters, citing empirical questions about transmission prevention and rare adverse events from pharmacovigilance data.[99]
University Scandals and DEI Criticisms
In the aftermath of the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, which killed approximately 1,200 people and took over 250 hostages, student groups at Harvard University and other elite institutions issued statements attributing responsibility to Israel rather than unequivocally condemning the violence. Bill Ackman, a Harvard alumnus and major donor, publicly demanded that Harvard identify and release the names of students involved in these statements, arguing that such actions reflected antisemitic views and that universities failed to protect Jewish students from harassment.[100][101] He also urged corporate donors and alumni to withhold financial contributions until universities addressed the surge in antisemitic incidents, including threats and exclusion of Jewish students from campus events.[100] On November 6, 2023, Ackman published a 3,138-word open letter to Harvard President Claudine Gay, criticizing the university's inadequate response, such as Gay's speech on antisemitism delivered only to Jewish audiences at a Hillel event, and calling for mandatory viewpoint diversity training and the resignation of complicit administrators.[102][103]
Ackman's criticisms intensified following the December 5, 2023, congressional hearing where Gay, along with University of Pennsylvania President Liz Magill and MIT President Sally Kornbluth, testified before the House Education and Workforce Committee on campus antisemitism. When questioned by Representative Elise Stefanik whether calls for the "genocide of Jews" would violate university policies, the presidents gave conditional responses emphasizing context, which Ackman described as morally bankrupt and evasive, arguing it enabled harassment by failing to classify such rhetoric as violations.[104][105] He demanded the immediate resignations of all three presidents, stating they had disqualified themselves from leadership. Magill resigned on December 9, 2023; Gay stepped down on January 2, 2024, after six months in office—the shortest tenure of any Harvard president—amid scrutiny over her handling of antisemitism and subsequent allegations of plagiarism in her scholarly work, which Ackman amplified by hiring investigators to review her publications.[106][107] Following Gay's exit, Ackman called for the resignation of Harvard's governing board, including Chair Penny Pritzker, accusing them of prioritizing ideological loyalty over merit.[108]
Ackman linked these scandals to broader failures in university governance, particularly diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, which he characterized as inherently discriminatory and antithetical to meritocracy. In a January 3, 2024, 4,000-word post on X (formerly Twitter), he argued that DEI programs promote a zero-sum "oppressor-oppressed" worldview, categorizing Jews and Israelis as oppressors, which he claimed fueled antisemitic campus climates by subordinating individual rights to group identities and seeking equality of outcome rather than opportunity.[109][110] He contended that DEI undermines capitalism and free markets by rejecting competence-based advancement, citing examples like the prioritization of racial quotas in admissions and hiring that disadvantage high-achieving Asian and white applicants.[110] Ackman further blamed DEI ideologies for the scale of pro-Palestinian protests in spring 2024, asserting they indoctrinate students to view Western institutions, including Israel, as systemic oppressors, and urged businesses to avoid hiring graduates from campuses tolerant of such views.[111] His stance drew counteraccusations of hypocrisy when his wife, Neri Oxman, faced plagiarism claims in her MIT dissertation shortly after Ackman's campaign against Gay, though Ackman defended her work as properly cited.[112] Despite pushback from academia and media outlets framing his efforts as bullying, Ackman maintained that elite universities' left-leaning biases had eroded standards, evidenced by Gay's appointment despite limited publications and the board's initial defense of her amid evidence of unattributed text in at least four papers.[113][107]
Philanthropy and Non-Profit Efforts
Major Donations and Foundations
Bill Ackman established the Pershing Square Foundation in 2006 as a private grantmaking organization focused on high-impact philanthropy, including support for education, public health, criminal justice reform, and environmental initiatives.[114] The foundation, initially funded by Ackman and his then-wife Karen Annacone, operates as a donor-advised fund and has committed over $930 million in grants and social investments by 2023.[114] Ackman and his current wife, Neri Oxman, serve as co-trustees, and the foundation signed the Giving Pledge in 2011, committing to donate the majority of their wealth to charitable causes.[115] In 2020, the foundation received $12.4 million in contributions, primarily from Ackman, and disbursed $30.6 million to grantees.[116]
A landmark contribution occurred on March 15, 2021, when Ackman donated 26.5 million shares of Coupang Inc., valued at approximately $1.36 billion, to the Pershing Square Foundation and two other charitable entities; the foundation received the bulk, enabling expanded grantmaking.[117] This donation represented Ackman's entire holding in the South Korean e-commerce firm and marked one of the largest single-year philanthropic transfers by an individual investor at the time.[118]
Among targeted grants, the foundation awarded $17 million to Harvard Medical School in April 2014 to establish three Pershing Square Professorships in cancer immunology and therapeutics, along with a research fund aimed at accelerating immunotherapy advancements.[119] In February 2021, it donated £5 million (about $7 million USD) to the University of Oxford's Saïd Business School to complete funding for the Pershing Square Global Leadership Centre, a hub for executive education and leadership development.[120] The foundation has also supported criminal justice efforts, providing over $1 million each to the Innocence Project and Centurion Ministries for wrongful conviction exonerations.[121]
Additional commitments include multimillion-dollar grants to public health organizations during the COVID-19 pandemic and investments in climate resilience projects, reflecting Ackman's emphasis on "risk capital" for innovative, scalable solutions to societal challenges.[122] The foundation's approach prioritizes measurable outcomes over broad distribution, aligning with Ackman's investment philosophy of concentrated, high-conviction bets.[123]
Advocacy Beyond Finance
Through the Pershing Square Foundation, which Ackman co-trustees with his wife Neri Oxman, he has channeled resources to advocate for systemic improvements in criminal justice, public health, education, and economic mobility by funding organizations that pursue evidence-based reforms and innovative solutions.[114] Established in 2006, the foundation has disbursed over $930 million in grants and investments to more than 150 initiatives worldwide, emphasizing high-risk, high-impact philanthropy in areas like health sciences, societal equity, and environmental sustainability.[114]
A key focus of Ackman's non-financial advocacy has been criminal justice reform, particularly addressing wrongful convictions. In 2013, the foundation granted $1 million to the Innocence Project to broaden its efforts beyond individual exonerations toward policy changes in law enforcement practices, such as reducing reliance on unreliable eyewitness testimony and informants.[124] Ackman described wrongful convictions as "shameful to our country and to my own sense of justice," underscoring his commitment to institutional accountability in the legal system.[125] He has continued personal involvement, including covering legal expenses for Innocence Project cases as recently as 2024.[126]
In public health, Ackman has advocated for accelerated medical innovation through targeted funding. The foundation initiated the Pershing Square Sohn Cancer Research Alliance in 2013 with a $25 million commitment to support early-career investigators developing novel therapies, aiming to shorten the timeline from lab discovery to clinical application.[114] More recently, in June 2025, it allocated $5.25 million across seven grants for ovarian cancer research, prioritizing understudied subtypes and precision medicine approaches to improve survival rates.[127] Similar efforts include the 2022 MIND Prize for neurodegenerative disease research, reflecting a strategy of backing transformative science over incremental gains.[114]
Ackman's educational advocacy has involved grants to enhance human behavior and behavioral science programs. In 2014, the foundation provided $17 million to Harvard University's Foundations of Human Behavior Initiative, intended to integrate insights from genetics, neuroscience, and economics to inform policy on poverty alleviation and social mobility.[119] This support aligned with his broader philanthropic emphasis on evidence-driven interventions for disadvantaged communities, where he has invested hundreds of millions to promote opportunity and human rights.[7] Economic development initiatives, such as early grants to organizations like Robin Hood Foundation, further demonstrate his push for scalable solutions to urban poverty and community revitalization.[114]
Environmental advocacy forms part of the foundation's portfolio, with grants targeting sustainability challenges through innovative leadership, though Ackman has framed such efforts within a capitalist framework that leverages market incentives for long-term ecological progress rather than regulatory mandates alone.[114] Overall, these activities represent Ackman's application of activist principles—rigorous due diligence and concentrated bets—to philanthropy, prioritizing measurable outcomes over traditional charitable distribution.[114]
Political and Social Views
Evolution from Democrat Donor to Independent Critic
Ackman, a longtime supporter of Democratic candidates, contributed $2,300 to Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign and identified as a "Bill Clinton Democrat" during the 1990s and 2000s, reflecting alignment with centrist Democratic policies on economic issues.[128][129] His donations historically favored Democrats, including support for figures like Hillary Clinton, though specific totals prior to 2016 remain aggregated in federal records without exhaustive itemization for earlier cycles.[130]
Signs of divergence emerged amid the Democratic Party's leftward shift on cultural and institutional issues, particularly following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel, which Ackman attributed to failures in higher education leadership and tolerance of antisemitism on campuses. In December 2023 and January 2024, he led public campaigns criticizing university presidents at Harvard, MIT, and Penn for equivocal responses to antisemitic incidents during pro-Palestinian protests, culminating in the resignation of Harvard's Claudine Gay on January 2, 2024. To influence the 2024 Democratic primaries, Ackman temporarily reregistered as a Democrat in New York and donated $1 million to Representative Dean Phillips's challenge against President Joe Biden, signaling frustration with Biden's leadership and party orthodoxy.[131][132]
By January 12, 2024, Ackman publicly renounced association with the Democratic Party, citing its embrace of what he termed "racist" diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, institutional biases in academia, and inadequate responses to antisemitism as irreconcilable with his principles. He announced plans for a think tank to investigate higher education's systemic issues, framing the party's evolution as detached from empirical reality and merit-based reasoning. This marked his self-identification as an independent, though he continued critiquing Democratic policies on economic mismanagement, border security, and free speech suppression. In January 2026, Ackman reposted a 2015 video clip of Bernie Sanders criticizing open borders as a policy that would undermine the United States, impoverish Americans, and benefit interests seeking cheap labor, highlighting perceived shifts in Democratic positions on immigration.[131][129][133]
Ackman's shift culminated in his July 14, 2024, endorsement of Donald Trump for president, breaking from decades of Democratic giving, as he argued the party's actions—enumerated in a October 13, 2024, X post listing 33 specific failures including inflation handling, foreign policy debacles, and cultural authoritarianism—necessitated opposition to prevent national decline. Despite acknowledging Trump's flaws, Ackman positioned his support as pragmatic realism over ideological loyalty, extending to 2025 efforts like $1 million donations to super PACs opposing socialist candidates in New York City mayoral races. This evolution reflects a broader pattern among finance-sector independents prioritizing causal accountability over partisan affiliation.[134][135][136]
Support for Israel and Antisemitism Concerns
Ackman, who identifies as Jewish, publicly condemned the Hamas attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023, describing them as barbaric acts of terrorism and affirming Israel's right to defend itself, comparing a potential U.S. response to an analogous border incursion by Mexican terrorists.[137][138] He signed a statement with over 250 U.S. financial managers pledging support for Israel's self-defense against Hamas and vowing not to hire recent graduates who promote antisemitism or threaten Israel.[139][140]
In response to statements by over 30 Harvard student groups on October 8, 2023, holding Israel "entirely responsible" for the violence before any Israeli military action in Gaza, Ackman urged Harvard to release the names of signers, arguing that CEOs should not inadvertently hire individuals excusing terrorism, which contributed to subsequent doxxing efforts including trucks displaying student names around campus.[141][142] On November 4, 2023, he sent an open letter to Harvard President Claudine Gay, faulting the university's initial silence on condemning the October 7 attacks as enabling a wave of anti-Israel rhetoric and antisemitic harassment, while asserting that antisemitism stemmed from a minority of activists rather than widespread faculty or student bias.[103][100]
Ackman's concerns escalated after the December 5, 2023, congressional hearing where Gay, along with University of Pennsylvania President Liz Magill and MIT President Sally Kornbluth, equivocated on whether calls for the genocide of Jews violated campus policies, prompting him to demand their resignations for failing to unequivocally denounce antisemitism.[143] He linked rising campus antisemitism to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) frameworks, arguing in a January 3, 2024, X thread that such programs foster racial stereotyping and moral hierarchies that treat Jews as oppressors, enabling unchecked hostility toward Israel and Jewish students.[144][142] Ackman announced plans to form an activist organization to combat antisemitism and reform higher education, emphasizing accountability for institutional leaders.[145]
Demonstrating ongoing support for Israel amid the conflict, Ackman acquired a stake in the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, visited Israel in September 2025 to ring its opening bell, and expressed bullishness on the economy's 65% rise since October 7, 2023, attributing resilience to national unity and innovation potential despite threats.[146][147] He has cited the attacks as unifying global Jewish communities and intensifying his advocacy against antisemitism, rejecting narratives framing Israel's defense as disproportionate while stressing Hamas's use of civilian shields.[148][138]
In response to the December 2025 ISIS-inspired terrorist attack at a Chabad Hanukkah event in Bondi Beach, Sydney, targeting the Jewish community, Ackman made a significant donation to the GoFundMe campaign supporting Ahmed al-Ahmed, a Muslim bystander injured while disarming an attacker, and promoted the fundraiser.[149] In January 2026, he honored al-Ahmed at a Colel Chabad gala in New York, presenting him with a menorah inscribed "Light will win," announcing a $180,000 donation to the organization, and emotionally praising his heroism.[150] In January 2026, amid protests in Iran, Ackman posted on X his belief that the United States and President Trump would soon aid the Iranian people, potentially involving actions against regime security forces, consistent with his view of Iran as an existential threat to Israel.[151]
Critiques of Higher Education and Institutional Bias
Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, Ackman publicly condemned elite universities including Harvard, where he is an alumnus and donor, for failing to adequately address antisemitic incidents and rhetoric on campuses. He argued that university leadership tolerated or inadequately punished calls for violence against Jews, linking this to a broader institutional culture that prioritizes ideological conformity over safety and free inquiry. Ackman withdrew a $26 million donation pledge to Harvard and urged donors to pause contributions until reforms were enacted.[152]
On December 5, 2023, during a congressional hearing on campus antisemitism, presidents Claudine Gay of Harvard, Liz Magill of the University of Pennsylvania, and Sally Kornbluth of MIT equivocated when asked if advocating the genocide of Jews violated their harassment policies, responding that it depended on context. Ackman described their testimony as "morally bankrupt" and demanded their immediate resignations, asserting it revealed a profound ethical failure in higher education leadership. Magill resigned two days later on December 7, 2023.[104][153][105]
Ackman intensified scrutiny on Harvard's Gay, amplifying reports of plagiarism in her academic publications and dissertation, which he claimed demonstrated lax standards in academia exacerbated by ideological biases favoring certain demographics. After Gay's resignation on January 2, 2024, amid these allegations and backlash over her antisemitism response, Ackman called for the Harvard Corporation board's ouster, arguing it had prioritized protecting Gay due to her alignment with diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) imperatives over merit and integrity. He extended plagiarism investigations to MIT faculty, including Kornbluth, warning of systemic citation improprieties in fields influenced by progressive orthodoxies.[108][154][155]
Ackman characterized DEI programs as inherently discriminatory, reverse-racist frameworks that enforce equality of outcome rather than opportunity, subordinating competence to racial and identity-based quotas. He contended that DEI ideology fosters antisemitism by framing Jews and Israel as oppressors in an oppressor-oppressed binary, eroding meritocracy and enabling biased hiring in academia. In a January 3, 2024, social media post, he advocated abolishing DEI at universities, positing it as antithetical to capitalism and free speech.[110][109][142]
In January 2026, Ackman posted on X criticizing Harvard's apparent lack of student protests over the Iranian regime's reported killing of thousands of protesters, contrasting an image of empty Harvard Yard with massive protests in solidarity with Iranians elsewhere, as part of his pattern of highlighting selective activism on campus.[156]
Ackman has maintained that higher education institutions resist internal reform due to entrenched progressive biases, necessitating external pressures from donors, alumni, and regulators to restore viewpoint diversity and empirical rigor. He has linked these institutional failings to declining public trust, with surveys showing American confidence in universities at historic lows by 2024.[157][158]
Personal Life
Family and Relationships
Ackman married landscape architect Karen Ann Herskovitz on July 10, 1994, at the St. Regis Hotel in New York City.[159] The couple had three daughters together.[9] They separated in December 2016 after 22 years of marriage, describing the split as amicable and prioritizing their children's well-being.[160] The divorce proceedings, which concluded around 2018, involved significant asset division, including transfers of New York co-op apartments to Herskovitz, amid Ackman's reported nine-figure settlement obligations.[161][162]
In late 2018, Ackman became engaged to Neri Oxman, an Israeli-born architect, designer, and former MIT professor known for her work in computational design and biomimicry.[163] The pair married on January 19, 2019, at Central Synagogue in New York, officiated by Rabbi Angela Buchdahl.[164] Their daughter was born later that year.[165] Ackman has publicly credited his relationship with Oxman for providing personal stability during professional challenges, including the turnaround of his hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management.[165]
Lifestyle and Interests
Ackman maintains an affluent lifestyle consistent with his billionaire status, owning multiple high-end properties including a $91 million condominium on Billionaires' Row at 157 West 57th Street in Manhattan, several Upper West Side co-ops such as units in the Beresford building sold for $9.43 million in August 2025, and a $22 million estate in Bridgehampton, New York.[166][167][168] Despite this, he has expressed aversion to unnecessary spending, citing a relatively modest upbringing in Chappaqua, New York, and drawing inspiration from Warren Buffett's frugality in personal finance habits.[169]
His daily routine emphasizes physical fitness and health optimization, incorporating intense workouts with a personal trainer and nutritionist, intermittent fasting, and prioritizing eight hours of sleep nightly to manage stress from high-stakes investing.[170][171] Ackman holds internal records at Pershing Square Capital Management's gym for treadmill and ergometer performance, reflecting a disciplined approach to exercise that he credits for resilience during professional setbacks.[170]
Tennis serves as a primary interest and outlet for mental clarity, functioning as a meditative escape from work demands.[172] In July 2025, he made a professional debut in a pro-am tournament but lost to opponent Christopher Eubanks, attributing the defeat to breathing difficulties rather than conditioning, an event that drew both inspiration claims and criticism as publicity-seeking.[173][174] He also owns a Ferrari, infrequently driven and stored at an upstate New York property, indicating a selective interest in luxury automobiles.[170] Ackman applies investment principles like compounding to self-improvement, focusing on incremental daily progress in personal habits.