Universal Music Group has told billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman to take a hike. Sources close to the board confirm the company unanimously rejected his audacious takeover proposal, citing the UK’s strengthened national security and investment regime. This isn’t just a snub. It’s a statement.
Ackman, known for his aggressive activist campaigns, had quietly amassed a stake and pitched a deal worth a reported £40bn. His plan: strip out costs, sell off assets, and pocket the cash. But Universal, the world’s biggest music label, isn’t some distressed asset. It’s a crown jewel. And the government now has teeth to stop predators.
Remember the 2021 National Security and Investment Act? It gave ministers the power to block takeovers that threaten national security. Music might not scream ‘critical infrastructure’, but consider this: Universal controls a third of the global music market. Its catalogue includes The Beatles, Taylor Swift, and Drake. That cultural and economic leverage makes it a strategic asset. Whitehall sources tell me the Business Secretary had already signalled interest in scrutinising any deal.
Ackman’s camp spun the rejection as ‘routine’ and said he remains a ‘long-term supporter’. Don’t buy it. Emails leaked to this desk show Ackman’s team prepared a break-up plan for the company’s publishing and recorded music divisions. They even lined up bankers at Goldman to finance the split.
Meanwhile, inside Universal, the mood is defiant. One senior executive told me: ‘We aren’t some cheap vinyl collection to be flipped. This company is the thread of modern culture. Ackman sees numbers. We see history.’
The rejection sends a signal to other circling vultures. Private equity firms have been eyeing UK assets like pubs, water companies, and even the Meteorological Office. The Ackman bid is the first high-profile test of the new rules. And the message is clear: UK plc is not for sale at a discount.
But make no mistake. This isn’t over. Ackman’s Pershing Square has a reputation for persistence. They may try a hostile tender offer, though that faces even higher regulatory hurdles. Or they could lobby for a softer stance at the forthcoming election. A change in government might roll back the rules. That’s why the current administration’s resolve matters.
I’ve spent two decades watching money men try to carve up British institutions. Sometimes they win. Sometimes the blood on the carpet is their own. Today, Ackman tastes his own blood. But the banks are still lending, and the lobbyists are still paid. Watch this space.
For now, Universal remains independent. The catalogue stays whole. And a billionaire goes home empty-handed. Not bad for a Tuesday.








