Universal Music, home to Taylor Swift and Drake, receives €55bn takeover offer

A picture


Billionaire Bill Ackman’s hedge fund has offered to buy Universal Music Group (UMG) in a deal that values the world’s biggest music company at around €55bn (£48bn).Pershing Square, the New-York based hedge fund, has offered to buy the business, which is home to artists including Taylor Swift and Elton John, in a cash and stock deal.Ackman said in a statement that while the company, which is led by the British-born Sir Lucian Grainge, had done “an excellent job nurturing and continuing to build a world-class artist roster and generating strong business performance”, its share price had lagged owing to issues “unrelated to the performance of its music business”.Shares in UMG, which have been listed in Amsterdam since 2021, had lost more than a quarter of their value in the past year alone.The shares jumped by 11% on Tuesday after news of Pershing’s proposal.

The company is one of the “big three” record labels, alongside Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group.Its roster ranges from classical musicians to stars such as Adele, Drake and Ariana Grande.Ackman blamed its previous poor share price performance partly on the delay of UMG’s listing in the US, underutilisation of its balance sheet and uncertainty around the French conglomerate Bolloré Group’s 18% stake in the company.Bolloré, which is controlled by the French billionaire Vincent Bolloré, is the biggest single shareholder in the business.Vivendi, an investment company which is also controlled by the Bolloré family, owns another 10%.

Ackman also cited a “lack of investor credit” in the company’s valuation of its €2.7bn stake in the music streaming service Spotify.Pershing Square, which Ackman set up in 2004, controls more than $26bn in assets.The fund bought a 10% stake in UMG in 2021, though Ackman resigned from its board of directors last year, citing other commitments.Dan Coatsworth, the head of markets at AJ Bell, said Ackman would need “a full-on charm offensive” to win over UMG’s major shareholders.

“Bill Ackman has long admired Warren Buffett’s style of finding good companies going cheap and buying them outright.Ackman has now gone full-on Buffett with a takeover offer for Universal Music Group (UMG) via one of his Pershing Square investment vehicles,” Coatsworth said.While Ackman said Grainge and his management team had done an “excellent job” at the company, as part of the proposed deal the hedge fund would add Michael Ovitz, a veteran talent agent, as chair, as well as two representatives from Pershing Square to the company’s board.The deal would also be subject to a “new employment contract and compensation arrangement for Sir Lucian Grainge”, Ackman said in a letter to the board of directors at UMG.Grainge was paid a package of more than €41m last year.

That included a €4.4m base salary and more than €30m in bonuses.Under the proposed deal, UMG would merge with a blank-cheque company set up by Pershing Square, and then list on the New York Stock Exchange.Shareholders would receive a total of €9.4bn in cash and 0.

77 shares in the new company for every Universal share they own,Together, that would represent a 78% premium compared with the company’s closing share price on Thursday, Pershing said,UMG was approached for comment,
businessSee all
A picture

UK City firms report fastest turnaround in fortunes in 30 years

Britain’s financial services companies have reported a strong recovery in activity at the start of the year, in a surprise boost to the government after a gloomy end to 2025.Banks, insurers and investment managers said their businesses were growing, with a positive balance of nearly two-thirds noting an expansion, according to a long-running survey by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), a lobby group. That contrasted with the negative balance of 38% in December, despite the start of the US-Israel war on Iran.It was the fastest turnaround in the sector’s fortunes in 30 years, since December 1996, the group said.Financial services companies such as banks, insurers and investors have been performing well in recent quarters

A picture

UK manufacturers ‘will pay £940m a year more in business rates due to Reeves changes’

British manufacturers have said they will have to pay an extra £940m a year in business rates because of changes by Rachel Reeves that come into effect this month.Manufacturers face a disproportionate business rates bill because they often have large factory floors, according to analysis by MakeUK, an industry lobby group. It said that factories accounted for a fifth of England and Wales’s property by rateable value, despite manufacturers only accounting for a 10th of economic output.The chancellor increased business rates at the budget in November. That included companies paying an additional surcharge on buildings of a rateable value of more than £500,000

A picture

‘Italy has the best benefits’: Milan takes on Dubai as home for the super-rich

Just over a month ago, Dubai was the obvious destination for wealthy Britons in search of a new home. Few cities allow you to earn vast sums tax-free and spend them across any number of luxury hotels, restaurants and shops.But as the United Arab Emirates comes under Iranian fire, Dubai’s reputation – in part created by emigrant influencers – as a haven for the global elite is eroding. Super-rich UK nationals are now looking for a route back to Europe; and Milan, the financial centre of Italy, is climbing to the top of the list.“Italy has the best benefits: a flat tax and good quality of life,” says Armand Arton, a consultant who helps multimillionaire and billionaire families to relocate through investment citizenship schemes

A picture

Waitrose under pressure to reinstate worker sacked after stopping shoplifter

Waitrose is under growing pressure to reinstate an employee of 17 years who was sacked after tackling a shoplifter who was trying to steal Lindt Gold Bunny Easter eggs.The retailer has faced public outcry over its treatment of Walker Smith, who was fired two days after he stopped the shoplifter taking items from the Easter egg display.After Smith told the Guardian he had lost his job after the incident, a fundraiser was launched on his behalf and has since raised more than £4,000, with the organiser claiming he had “simply tried to do the right and noble thing”.On Sunday, Smith explained that a customer alerted him to someone filling a bag with Lindt chocolate eggs.The 54-year-old, who worked in the Clapham Junction branch in south London, said the shoplifter was a repeat offender

A picture

Jamie Dimon says US should strengthen allies economically, in veiled criticism of Trump

The head of the US’s largest bank has pressed the White House to strengthen Washington’s allies economically in order to “avoid truly adverse consequences”, in the latest intervention in an increasingly testy relationship with the Trump administration.As the Middle East conflict sparked by US and Israeli attacks on Iran enters its sixth week, Jamie Dimon, the chair and chief executive of JP Morgan Chase, said in his annual letter to shareholders that good US foreign policy should put America first “though not alone”.His remarks appear certain to be viewed as critical of Donald Trump, who in January announced he was suing the banker and the Wall Street institution for at least $5bn (£3.8bn) after accusing them of debanking him.The comments also come five days after Trump told governments to “go get your own oil” by force from the Gulf, as transatlantic relations further soured over soaring energy prices as a result of the war

A picture

Dozens of firms risk losing B Corp status after standards overhaul

Dozens of companies may be at risk of losing their coveted B Corp ethical status after the organisation behind the corporate kite-marking system raised the standards required to qualify.B Lab, which oversees B Corp certification, launched the biggest overhaul in its 19-year history earlier this month, scrapping a system under which companies must gather enough points across multiple categories to qualify.Previously, businesses that performed poorly in one of five areas, such as their environmental record, could make up for it by scoring highly in another category, such as corporate governance or their treatment of staff.The criteria required for B Corp status came under the spotlight in 2022, when the Scottish brewer BrewDog lost its certification after high-profile allegations about a “toxic” workplace culture.The organisation has also faced criticism for certifying the coffee company Nespresso, in an open letter from the Oregon-based non-profit Fair World Project, sent the same year