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To buy a piece of Bill Ackman's hedge fund, you'll have to buy something else first
Bill Ackman’s hedge fund is going public. Sort of.
Pershing Square $SQ NaN% Capital Management filed on Tuesday for a combined IPO that pairs a stake in Ackman’s hedge fund with shares of a new closed-end fund, Pershing Square USA Ltd. The structure is worth slowing down on: for every 100 shares of the closed-end fund you buy at $50 apiece, you receive 20 shares in the hedge fund itself. Early institutional backers — family offices, pension funds, insurers — will get a slightly sweeter deal at 30 hedge fund shares per 100. Ackman is apparently targeting $5 billion to $10 billion in the raise, with $2.8 billion in commitments already secured.
The bundled structure is somewhat unusual
By tying hedge fund equity to closed-end fund purchases, Ackman makes sure that anyone who wants a piece of Pershing Square the management company has to put capital to work in Pershing Square the fund. Why? This structure limits dilution of the management entity while nevertheless monetizing it — a way of going public without exactly going public. Ackman has tried a version of this before, with a $25 billion closed-end fund listing on the NYSE that collapsed in 2024, before he pivoted to building out his Howard Hughes Holdings position as an acquisition vehicle instead.
If plans work out this time, he and his team will land with majority control of a potentially highly liquid public company that they can use to make acquisitions and other deals, without losing control of the firm or running into the NAV problems with closed-end funds that have plagued their business in the European market.
Another clever adaptation? Even as the S-1 deliberately recalls elements of Berkshire Hathaway $BRK.B -0.84%'s positioning, Ackman reveals that Pershing is an “emerging growth company” under the JOBS Act, a handy designation for a firm decades old with tens of billions under management.
Public hedge fund managers aren’t unheard of
Publicly traded hedge fund managers are rare, but not unheard of, so Ackman won’t be breaking new ground. Man Group has been around for years, with AUM around $200 billion, although they operate outside most U.S. retail investors’ radar. A number of publicly traded U.S. companies like BlackRock $BLK +1.45% operate hedge funds, or hedge-fund-like investments, as part of their larger businesses.
Ackman’s offering is being led by Citigroup $C +2.56%, UBS, Bank of America $BAC +0.86%, Jefferies, and Wells Fargo $WFC +0.12%.
The timing is complicated
With the U.S. war on Iran and euphemistically referred to “uncertainty” causing widespread market volatility, 2026 is a nervy time to float an S-1. SpaceX is believed to be still eyeing a June IPO. OpenAI is known to be weighing its options, possibly targeting the last quarter of 2026, with nothing certain yet. Ackman, a self-styled heir to Warren Buffett, seems to be betting the window is open, at least for now — but he’s never been one to hide his light under a bushel.
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