Lex Fridman Podcast - #413 – Bill Ackman: Investing, Financial Battles, Harvard, DEI, X & Free Speech
Episode Date: February 20, 2024Bill Ackman is an investor who has led some of the biggest and controversial financial trades in history. He is founder and CEO of Pershing Square Capital Management. Please support this podcast by ch...ecking out our sponsors: - LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - Policygenius: https://policygenius.com/lex - AG1: https://drinkag1.com/lex to get 1 month supply of fish oil - Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/bill-ackman-transcript EPISODE LINKS: Bill's X: https://twitter.com/BillAckman Pershing Square Holdings: https://pershingsquareholdings.com/ Pershing Square Foundation: https://pershingsquarefoundation.org Neri Oxman conversation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbPHojL_61U Books mentioned: The Intelligent Investor: https://amzn.to/3ONnaZy America's Cultural Revolution: https://amzn.to/3SDz1dY PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (08:55) - Investing basics (13:47) - Investing in music (22:08) - Process of researching companies (26:47) - Investing in restaurants (32:16) - Investing in Google (37:58) - AI (43:13) - Warren Buffet (45:22) - Psychology of investing (54:53) - Activist investing (1:04:41) - General Growth Properties (1:20:57) - Canadian Pacific Railway (1:28:21) - OpenAI (1:32:32) - Biggest loss and lowest point (1:47:21) - Herbalife and Carl Icahn (2:04:11) - Oct 7 (2:10:42) - College campus protests (2:29:09) - DEI in universities (2:50:00) - Neri Oxman (3:15:30) - X and free speech (3:19:54) - Trump (3:27:30) - Dean Phillips (3:34:36) - Future
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The following is a conversation with Bill Ackman, a legendary activist investor who has been
part of some of the biggest and at times controversial trades in history.
Also, he is fearlessly vocal on X, FKA Twitter, and uses the platform to fight for ideas he
believes in.
For example, he was a central figure in the resignation of the president of Harvard University,
Claudine Gay, the saga of which we discuss in this episode.
And now a quick few second mention of each sponsor. Check them out in the description.
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out our sponsors in the description. And now dear friends, here's Bill Ackman. In your lecture on the basics of finance and investing, you mentioned a book, Intelligent
Investor by Benjamin Graham as being formative in your life.
What key lesson do you take away from that book
that informs your own investing?
Sure, actually it was the first investment book I read.
And as such, it was kind of the inspiration
for my career and a lot of my life.
So important book, bear in mind this is sort of
after the Great Depression, people lost confidence
in investing in markets, World War II.
And then he writes this book.
It's for the average man.
Basically, he says that you have to understand the difference between price and value.
Price is what you pay, value is what you get.
He said, the stock market is here to serve you.
It's a bit like the neighbor that comes by every day and makes you an offer for your house.
Makes you a stupid offer, you ignore it. Makes you a great offer, you can take it. And that's the stock market.
And the key is to figure out what something's worth and you have to kind of weigh it.
He talked about the difference between, you know, the stock market in the short term is a voting machine.
It represents speculative interests, you know, supply and demand of people in the short term is a voting machine. It represents speculative interests, supply and demand of people in the short term.
But in the long term, the stock market's a weighing machine, much more accurate.
It's going to tell you what something's worth.
And so if you can divine what something's worth, then you can really take advantage of
the market because it's really here to help you.
And that's kind of the message of the book.
In that same way, there's a kind of difference between speculation and investing.
Yeah. Speculation is just a bit like buying trading crypto, right? Your strong words.
Well, short-term trading crypto. Maybe in the long run, there's intrinsic value. But
You know, it's many investors, you know, in a bubble going into the, you know, the crash, we're really just pure speculators.
They didn't know what things were worth.
They just knew they were going up, right?
That's speculation.
And investing is, you know, doing your homework, digging down, understanding a business, understanding
the competitive dynamics of an industry, understanding
what management is going to do, understanding what price you're going to pay.
The value of anything, I would say, other than love, let's say, is the present value
of the cash you can take out of it over its life.
Now, some people think about love that way, but it's not the right way to think about
love.
But yeah, so investing is about basically building a model of what this business is going to produce
over its lifetime.
So how do you get to that?
This idea of called value investing, how do you get to the value of a thing?
Even like philosophically, value of anything really, but we can just talk about the things
that are on the stock market, companies.
The value of a security, the value is the present value of
the cash you can take out of it over its life.
So if you think about a bond, you know, bond, you know,
pays a 5% coupon interest rate, you get that, you know,
let's say every year or twice a year, split in half.
And it's very predictable.
And if it's a US government bond, you know, you're going to get it.
So that's a pretty easy thing to value.
A stock is an interest in a business.
It's like owning a piece of a company.
And a business, a profitable one, is like a bond
in that it generates these coupons or these earnings
or cash flow every year.
The difference with a stock and a bond
is that the bond, it's a contract.
You know what you're going to get
as long as they don't go bankrupt and default. With a stock, you have to make predictions
about the business. How many widgets are going to sell this year? How many are going to sell next
year? What are the costs going to be? How much of the money that they generate do they need to
reinvest in the business to keep the business going? That's more complicated. But what we do is we try to find businesses where with a very high
degree of confidence, we know what those cash flows are going to be for a very long time.
And there are a few businesses that you can have really high degree of certainty about. And as a
result, many investments are speculations because it's really very difficult to predict the future.
So what we do for a living, what I do for a living is find
those rare companies that you can kind of predict what they're going to look like over a very long
period of time. So what are the factors that indicate that a company is something, is going to
be something that's going to make a lot of money, is going to have a lot of value, and it's going to
be reliable over a long period of time? And what is your process of figuring out
whether a company is or isn't that?
So every consumer has a view on different brands
and different companies.
And what we look for are these non-disruptible businesses,
a business where you can close your eyes,
stock market shuts for a decade.
And you know that 10 years from now, it's going to be a more
valuable, more profitable company. So we own a business called Universal Music Group. It's in
the business of helping artists become global artists, sort of recorded music business. And
it's in the business of owning rights to the music publishing rights of songwriters. And I think music is forever.
Music is a many thousand year old part of the human experience.
And I think it will be thousands of years from now.
And so that's a pretty good backdrop to invest in a company.
And the company basically owns a third of the global recorded music.
That's the most dominant sort of market share in the business.
They're the best at taking an artist who's 18 years old, has got a great voice and has
started to get a presence on YouTube and Instagram and helping that artist become
a superstar.
And that's a unique talent.
And the result is the best artists in the world
want to come work for them. But they also have this incredible library of the Beatles,
the Rolling Stones, U2, etc.
So then if you think about what music has become, used to be about records and CDs and
eight track tapes for those of whom, and it was about a new format and that's how they
drive sales. And it's become a business format and that's how they drive sales.
It's become a business which is like the podcast business about streaming.
Streaming is a lot more predictable than selling records.
You can say, okay, how many people have smartphones?
How many people are going to have smartphones next year?
There's a global penetration over time of smartphones.
You pay, call it $10, $11 a month for a subscription or last for a family plan.
You can kind of build a model of what the world looks like and predict the growth of
the streaming business.
You predict what kind of market share universal is going to have over time.
You can't get to a precise view of value.
You can get to an approximation.
The key is to buy at a price that represents
a big discount to that approximation. And that gets back to Ben Graham. Ben Graham was
about what he called invented this concept of margin of safety. You want to buy a company
at a price that if you're wrong about what you think it's worth, and it turns out to
be worth 30% less, you paid a deep enough discount to your estimate
that you're still okay. It's about investing. A big part of investing is not losing money.
If you can avoid losing money and then have a few great hits, you can do very, very well over time.
Well, music is interesting because, yes, music's been around for a very long time,
but the way to make money from music has been evolving. Like you mentioned streaming, there's a big transition initiated by I guess Napster that
creates Spotify of how you make money on music with Apple and with all of this.
And the question is how well are companies like UMG able to adjust to transformations?
One I could ask you about the future,
which is artificial intelligence,
being able to generate music, for example.
There have been a lot of amazing advancements with.
So do you have to also think about that?
Like when you close your eyes,
all the things you think about,
are you imagining the possible ways that
the future is completely different from the present,
and how well this company will be able to like surf the wave ways that the future is completely different from the present and how well this
company will be able to surf the wave of that.
Sure.
And they've had to surf a lot of waves.
And actually, the music business peaked the last time in the late 90s, 2000 timeframe.
And then really innovation, Napster, digitization of music almost killed the industry.
And Universal really led an effort to save the industry and actually made an early
deal with Spotify that enabled the industry to really recover. By virtue of their market
position and their credibility and their willingness to adopt new technologies, they've
kept their position. Now, they of course had this huge advantage because I think the Beatles
are forever. I think U2 is forever. I think Rolling Stones are forever.
So they had a nice base of assets that were important and I think will forever be. And the forever is a long time. But again, there's enormous, there are all kinds of risks in every
business. This is one that I think is a very high degree of persistence. And I can't envision a world
where beyond streaming in a sense.
Now you may have a neural link chip in your head that instead of a phone, but the music
can come in a digitized format.
You're going to want to have an infinite library that you can walk around in your pocket or
in your brain.
It's not going to matter that much of the form factor.
The device changes.
Not really that important whether it's Spotify or Apple
or Amazon that are the so-called DSPs or the providers. I think the values really can reside
in the content owners, and that's really the artists and the label.
And I actually think AI is not going to be the primary creator of music.
I think we're going to actually face the reality that it's not that music has been around for
thousands of years, but musicians and music has been around.
We actually care to know who's the musician that created it.
Just want to know who's the artist, human artist
that created a piece of art.
I totally agree. And I think if you think about it, there's lots of other technologies
and computers that have been used to generate music over time. But no one falls in love
with a computer-generated track, right? And Taylor Swift, incredible music, but it's also about the artist and her story and
her physical presence and the live experience. I don't think you're going to sit there. And someone's
going to put computer up on stage and then it's going to play and people are going to get excited
around it. So I think AI is really going to be a tool to make artists better artists. And I think,
like a synthesizer, right, really created the opportunity for one man to have an orchestra.
Maybe a bit of a threat to a percussionist, but maybe not. Maybe it drove even more demand for the live experience.
Unless that computer has human-like sentience, which I believe is a real possibility, but
then it's really from a business perspective, no different than a human.
If it has an identity that's basically fame and influence, and there'll be a robot Taylor
Swift and it doesn't really matter.
That's a copyrightable asset, I would think.
Right. Yeah. And then there'll be... Not That's a copyrightable asset, I would think.
Right, yeah.
And then there'll be-
Not sure that's the world I want to make that.
That's a different discussion.
The world is not gonna ask you permission
to become what it's becoming.
So, but you can still make money on it.
Presumably there'd be a capital system
and there'd be some laws under which AI,
which I believe AI systems will have rights
that are akin to human rights.
And we're gonna have to contend with what that means.
Well, there's sort of name and likeness rights.
Yes. Right.
That have to be protected.
Now, can a name be attributed to a Tesla robot?
I don't know.
I think so.
I think it's quite obvious to me.
Okay, so there's more potential artists
for us to represent at Universal.
Exactly, exactly.
All right, that's sort of one example. Another example could be just, you know, the restaurant industry, right? Okay, so there's more potential artists for us to represent at university. Exactly. Exactly.
All right.
That's sort of one example.
Another example could be just the restaurant industry, right?
If you can look at businesses like McDonald's, right?
So whatever the company's like a 1950 vintage business, and here we are, it's 75 years later.
And you can kind of predict what it's going to look like over time.
And the menu's going to adjust over time to consumer taste. And I think the hamburger and fries is probably forever.
The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the hamburger and fries are forever. I was eating at Chipotle
last night as I was preparing these notes.
Excellent.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And yeah, it is one of my favorite places to eat. You said it is a place that you eat. You obviously also invest in it.
What do you get at your bowl there?
I tend to get a double chicken.
Bowl or burrito?
I like the burrito, but I generally try to order the bowl.
Yeah.
Cut the carb in part.
For health reasons.
And double chicken, guac, lettuce, black beans.
And I'm more of a steak guy, just putting that on the record.
What's the actual process you go through?
Like, literally, like the process of figuring out
what the value of a company is.
Like, how do you do the research?
Is it reading documents?
Is it talking to people?
How do you do it?
It's all about, so Chipotle, what attracted us initially is the stock price dropped by about 50%.
Great company, great concept.
Athletes love it, consumers love it.
Healthy, sustainable, fresh food made in front of your eyes. And great Steve Ells, the founder did an amazing job.
But ultimately the company's lacking some of the systems and had a food safety issue.
Consumers got sick, almost killed the rent.
But the reality of the fast food quick service industry is almost every fast food company
has had a food safety issue over time and the vast majority have survived.
And we said, look, such a great
concept. But they, you know, their approach was not as far from ideal. But we start with usually
reading the SEC filing. So companies file a 10K or an annual report, and they file these quarterly
reports called 10Qs. They have a proxy statement which describes kind of the governance, the board
structure. Conference call transcripts are publicly available. It's very helpful to go back five years and learn the story.
Here's how management describes their business.
Here's what they say they're going to do, and then you can follow along to see what
they do.
It's like a historical record of how competent and truthful they are.
It's a very useful device.
Then of course, looking at competitors and
thinking about what could dislodge this company. And then we'll talk to, if it's an industry we
don't know well, we know the restaurant industry really well. Music industry, we'll talk to people
in the industry. We'll try to understand the difference in publishing and recorded music.
We'll look at the competitors.
We'll read books. I read a book about the music industry or a couple books about the
industry. It's a bit like a big research project. These so-called expert networks now, and
you can get pretty much anyone on the phone. They'll talk to you about an aspect of the
industry that you don't
understand and want to learn more about.
Try to get a sense.
Public filings of companies generally give you a lot of information, but not everything
you want to know.
You can learn more by talking to experts about some of the industry dynamics, the personalities.
You want to get a sense of management.
I like watching podcasts.
If a CEO were to do a podcast or a YouTube interview,
you get a sense of the people.
So in the case of Chipotle, for example,
by the way, I could talk about Chipotle all day.
I just love it.
I love it.
I wish there was a sponsor.
I'll mention it to the CEO.
Don't make promises you can't keep, Bill.
I'm not making it.
All right.
Brian Nichols, a fantastic CEO.
He's not gonna spend $1 that doesn't think it's the company's best interest. All right. All I want is for Chipotle. Come it, Ken. Brian Nichols, a fantastic CEO. He's not gonna spend $1. He doesn't think it's the company's best interest.
All I want is for Chipotle, come on now.
What was I saying?
And so you look at a company like Chipotle
and then you see there's a difficult moment in its history,
like you said that there was a food safety issue.
And then you say, okay, well, I see a path
where we can fix this.
And therefore, even
though the price is low, we can get it to where the price goes up to its value.
So the kind of business we're looking for is sort of the kind of business everyone should
be looking for, right? A great business. It's got a long term trajectory of growth out into the
force, you know, even beyond the foreseeable distance. Those are the
kind of businesses you want to own. You want businesses that generate a lot of cash. You want
businesses you can easily understand. You want businesses with these huge barriers to entry
where it's difficult for others to compete. You want companies that don't have to constantly
raise capital. And these are some of the great business of the world. But people have figured
out that those are the great businesses. So the problem is those companies tend to have very high stock prices and the value is generally built
into the price you have to pay for the business. So we can't earn the kind of returns we want
to earn for investors by paying a really high price. Price matters a lot. You can buy the
best business in the world and if you overpay, you're not going to earn particularly attractive
returns. So we get involved in cases where a great business has made a big mistake or you've
a company that's lost its way, but it's recoverable. And that's, we buy from shareholders who are
disappointed, who've lost confidence, selling at a low price relative to what it's worth,
if fixed, and then we try to be helpful in fixing the company.
You said that barriers to entry, you said a lot of really interesting qualities of companies
very quickly in a sequence of statements that took like less than 10 seconds to say. But some of
them were fascinating, all of them were fascinating. So you said barriers to entry. How do you know
of them were fascinating, all of them were fascinating. So you said barriers to entry. How do you know if there's a type of moat protecting the competitors from stepping up to the plate?
The most difficult analysis to do as an investor is that, is kind of figuring out how wide is the
moat, how much at risk is the business to disruption? And we're, I would say, the greatest
period of disruptibility in history, right? Technology, you know, a couple of 19-year-olds can,
you know, leave whatever university or maybe they didn't go in the first place.
They can raise, you know, millions of dollars. They can get access to infinite bandwidth storage.
They can get access to infinite bandwidth storage. They can contract with engineers in low-cost markets around the world.
They can build a virtual company, and they can disrupt businesses that seem super-established
over time.
And then on top of that, you have major companies with multi-trillion-dollar market caps working
to find profits wherever they can.
And so that's a dangerous world in a way to be an investor.
And so you have to find businesses
that it's hard to foresee a world
in which they get disrupted.
And the beauty of the restaurant business,
we've actually, our best track record is in restaurants.
We've never lost money.
We've only made a fortune, interestingly,
investing in restaurants.
A big part of it's a really simple business.
And if you get your totally right and you're at 100 stores,
it's not so hard to envision getting to 200 stores
and then getting to 500 stores.
And the key is maintaining the brand image,
growing intelligently, having the right systems.
Now, when you go from 100 stores to 3,500 stores,
you have to know what you're doing.
There's a lot of complexity.
If you think about your local restaurant, the family's working in the business, they're
watching the cash register, and you can probably open another restaurant across town.
But there are very few restaurant operators that own more than a few restaurants and operate
them successfully. And the quick service business is about systems and building a model that a stranger who doesn't
know the restaurant industry can come in and enter the business and build a successful franchise.
Now, Tripoli is not a franchise company. They actually own all their own stores.
But many of the most successful restaurant companies are franchise models like a Burger
King, a McDonald's, Tim Hortons, all these various brands, Popeyes.
And there it's about systems, but the same systems apply whether you own all the stores
and it's run by a big corporation or whether the owners of the restaurants are sort of
franchisees, local entrepreneurs.
So if the restaurant has scaled to a certain number, that means they've figured out some
kind of system that works.
It's very difficult to develop that kind of system.
So that's a mode.
A mode is you get to a certain scale and you do it successfully and the brand is now in
the understood by the consumer.
And what's interesting about Chipotle is what they've achieved is difficult, right?
They're not buying frozen hamburgers, getting shipped in.
They're buying fresh, sustainably sourced ingredients. They're preparing food in the store.
That was the first. The quality of the product at Chipotle is incredible. It's the highest quality
food you can get. You can get a serious dinner for under $20 and eat really healthfully and very
high quality ingredients.
And that's just not available anywhere else.
And it's very hard to replicate
and to build those relationships
with farmers around the country.
It's a lot easier to make a deal
with one of the big massive food producers
and buy your pork from them
than to buy it from a whole bunch of farmers
around the country.
And so that is a big moat for Chipotle,
very difficult to replicate. And by the way, another moat for Chipotle, very difficult to replicate.
And by the way, another company I think you have a stake in is McDonald's?
No. We own a company called Restaurant Brands. Restaurant Brands owns a number of quick service
companies, one of which is Burger King. Burger King. Okay. Wow. It's been a meme for a while, but
Burger King is great too, Wendy's, whatever. But usually they go McDonald's.
I'll just eat Burger Patties.
I don't know if you knew you could do this,
but a Burger Patty at Burger King can do this.
McDonald's, it's actually way cheaper.
They'll just sell you the patty.
The patty, and it's cheap.
It's like $1.50 or $2 per patty.
And it's about 250 calories, and it's just me.
And despite the criticism and memes out there, that's pretty healthy stuff.
It's healthy stuff.
And so when I do, when I go, my, the healthiest I feel is when I do carnivore,
it doesn't sound healthy, but if I eat only meat, I feel really good.
I lose weight.
I have all this energy.
It's crazy.
And the, when I'm traveling, the easiest way to get me is that
you got a McDonald's, you order six patties.
So there's this sad meme of me just sitting alone in a car
when I'm traveling, just eating beef patties at McDonald's.
But I love it.
And you gotta do what you love, what makes you happy,
and that's what makes me happy.
Okay, we should maybe have Burger King featuring in it.
What about Flamed World?
What's with these fried burgers?
We gotta get you to Burger King, you know, grilled burgers.
Wait, is this like fast with trash?
I didn't know, I don't know the details this like fast food trash? I didn't know.
I don't know the details of how they're made.
I'm not, I don't have allegiance to Dom.
I think we got a chance to switch you to Burger King.
Great.
We'll see.
I'm making so many deals today.
It's wonderful.
Okay.
You were talking about most and this kind of reminds me of Alphabet, the parent company.
Sure.
We're, it's the big position for us. So it's interesting that you think that maybe Alphabet fits some of these characteristics.
It's tricky to know with everything that's happening in AI and I'm interviewing Senator
Parchaisu.
It's interesting that you think that there's a moat.
And it's also interesting to analyze that because the consumer is just a fan of technology.
Why is Google still around?
Like, it's not just the search engine is doing all the basics of the business of search
really well, but they're doing all these other stuff.
So what's your analysis of Alphabet?
Why are you still positive about it?
Sure.
So it's a business we've admired as a firm for whatever, 15 years.
But rarely got to a price that we felt we could own it because, again, the expectations were so
high and price really matters. And really the sort of AI scare, I would call it. Microsoft comes
out with ChatGPT. They do an amazing demonstration. People like this most incredible product.
And Google, which had been working on AI even earlier,
obviously the Microsoft was behind in AI.
It was really their chat GPT deal
that gave them a kind of a market presence.
And then Google does this fairly disastrous
demonstration of BART.
And the world says, oh my God,
Google's falling behind in AI.
AI is the future, stock gets crushed. Google gets to a price around 15 times earnings, which for a business
of this quality is an extremely, extremely low price. And our view on Google, one way
to think about it, when a business becomes a verb, that's usually a pretty good sign
about the mode around the business. So,. So, you open your computer and you open your search and very high percentage of the world
starts with a Google page in one line.
We type in your search.
The Google advertising search YouTube franchise is one of the most dominant franchises in
the world.
Very difficult to disrupt, extremely profitable. The world is moving from
offline advertising to online advertising and that trend I think continues. Why? Because you can
actually see with your ads work. You know, they used to say about advertising, you know, spend a
fortune and you just don't know which 50% of its works, but you just sort of spend the money because
you know, ultimately, that's going to bring in the customer. And now with online advertising, you can see with
granularity which dollars I'm spending. When people click on the search term and end up
buying something and I pay, it's a very high return on investment for the advertiser. And
they really dominate that business. Now, AI, of course, is a risk. All of a sudden, people start searching or asking
questions of chat GPT and don't start with the Google search bar. That's a risk to the company.
And so our view, based on work we had done and talked to industry experts, is that Google,
if anything, by virtue of the investment they've made, the time, the energy that people put into
it, we felt their AI capabilities were, if anything, potentially greater than Microsoft Chat GPT and that the market had
overreacted.
Because Google is a big company, global business regulators scrutinize it incredibly carefully,
they couldn't take some of the same liberties.
Startup like OpenAI did in releasing a product. I think Google took a more cautious approach in releasing an early version of Bard in terms
of its capabilities.
And that let the world to believe that they were behind.
And we ultimately concluded, if they're tied or ahead and you're paying nothing for that
potential business, and they also have huge advantages by virtue.
You think of all the data Google has, like the search data, all the various applications, email and otherwise, the Google suite of products,
it's an incredible data set. So they have more training data than pretty much any company
in the world. They have incredible engineers, they have enormous financial resources. So
that was kind of the bet. And we still think it's probably the cheapest of the big seven companies in terms of the
price you're paying for the business relative to its current earnings.
It also is a business that has a lot of potential for efficiency.
You know, sometimes when you have this enormously profitable dominant company, all of the technology
companies in the post-March 20 world grew enormously in terms of their
teams and they probably overhired. And so you've seen some, you know, the Facebooks of the world
and now even Google starting to get a little more efficient in terms of their operation. So
we paid a low multiple for the business. One way to think about the value of the business is the
price you pay for the earnings or alternatively, what's the yield?
If you flip over the price over the earnings, it gives you kind of the yield of the business.
So 15 multiples, about almost a 7.5% yield and that earnings yield is growing over time
as the business grows.
That's a, you know, compared to what you can earn lending your money to the government,
you know, 4%, that's a very attractive going
in yield.
And then there's all kinds of what we call optionality in all the various businesses
and investments they've made that are losing money.
They've got a cloud business that's growing very rapidly, but they're investing basically
100% of the profits from that business and growth.
In that earnings number, you're not seeing any earnings from the cloud business.
And they're one of the top cloud players. So very interesting, generally well-managed company with incredible
assets and resources and dominance, and has no debt, it's got a ton of cash. So pretty
good story.
Is there something fundamentally different about AI that makes all of this more complicated, which
is the sort of the exponential possibilities of the kinds of products and impact that AI
could create when you're looking at Meta, Microsoft, Alphabet, Google, all these companies,
XAI, or maybe startups.
Is there some more risk introduced by the possibilities of AI?
Absolutely. That's a great question. Business investing is about finding companies that
can't be disrupted. AI is the ultimate disruptible asset or technology. That's what makes investing
treacherous is that you own a business that's enormously profitable, management gets, if you will, fat and happy, and then a new technology emerges
that just takes away all their profitability. And AI is this incredibly powerful tool, which is why
every business is saying, how can I use AI in my business to make us more profitable,
more successful, grow faster, and also disrupt or protect ourselves from the
grow faster and also disrupt or protect ourselves from the incomings. It's a bit like Buffett talks about a great business like a castle surrounded by this really wide moat, but you
have all these barbarians trying to get in and steal the princess. And it happens, Kodak,
for example, was an amazing, incredibly dominant company until
it disappeared.
Polaroid, this incredible technology.
And that's why we have tended to stay away from companies that are technology companies
because technology companies generally, the world is such a dynamic place that someone's
always working on a better version.
And Kodak was caught up in the analog film world and then the world
changed.
Well, Google was pretty fat and happy until Chagipati came out.
Yes.
How would you rate their ability to wake up, lose weight and be less happy and aggressively
rediscover their search for happiness?
I think you've seen a lot of that in the last year.
And I would say some combination of embarrassment and pride
are huge motivators for everyone from Sergey Brin
to the management of the company.
And Demis Kassab has thrown them into the picture
and all of DeepMind teams and the unification of teams
and all the shake-ups. It was unification of teams and all the shakeups.
It was interesting to watch the chaos.
I love it.
I love it when everybody freaks out,
like you said, partly embarrassment
and partly that competitive drive
that drives engineers is great.
I can't wait to see what,
there's been just a lot of improvement in the product.
Let's see what it goes.
You mentioned management.
How do you analyze the governance
structure and the individual humans that are the managers of a company?
So as I like to say, incentives drive all human behavior and that certainly applies
in the business world. So understanding the people and what drives them and what the actual
financial and other incentives of a business are very important part of the analysis for investing in a company. And you can learn a lot. I mentioned
before one great way to learn about a business is go back a decade and read everything that
management has written about the business and see what they've done over time. See what they've said.
Conference calls are actually relatively recent. When I started in the business, there weren't conference call transcripts.
Now you have a written record of everything management has said and response to questions
from analysts at conferences and otherwise.
And so just you learn a lot about people by listening to what they say, how they answer
questions, and ultimately their track record for doing what they say they're going to do.
Do they under promise and over deliver? Do they over promise and under deliver? Do what they say they're going to do. Do they under promise and over deliver?
Do they over promise and under deliver?
Do they say what they're going to do?
Do they admit mistakes?
Do they build great teams?
Do people want to come work for them?
Are they able to retain their talent?
And then part of it is, how much are they running the business for the benefit of the
business? How much are they running the business for the benefit of the business, how much are they running the business for the benefit of themselves?
And that's kind of the analysis you do.
Are we talking about CEO, COO? What does management mean? How deep does it go?
Sure. So this very senior management matters enormously. We use the Chipotle example.
Steve Elles, great entrepreneur, business got
to a scale he really couldn't. Run it. We recruited a guy named Brian, helped the company recruit
a guy named Brian Nickel. And he was considered the best person in the quick service industry.
He came in and completely rebuilt the company. Actually, we moved the company. Chipotle was
moved to California. And sometimes one way to redo the culture of a company is just to move it geographically.
And then you can kind of reboot the business.
But a great leader has great followership, you know, well, over the course of their
career, they'll have a team they've built that will come follow them into the next
opportunity.
Uh, but the key is, you know, really the top person matters enormously, uh, because,
and then it's who they recruit.
Uh, you know, you recruit an A plus leader and they're going to recruit other A type
people, you grew a B leader, you're not going to recruit any great talent beneath
them.
Uh, you mentioned Warren Buffett.
You said you admire him as an investor.
What do you find most interesting and powerful about his approach?
What aspects of his approach to investing do you also practice?
Sure. So most of what I've learned in the investment business I've learned from Warren Buffett. He's
been my great professor of this business. My first book I read in the business was the Ben Graham
Intelligent Investor. But fairly quickly you get to learn about Warren Buffett and I started by
reading the Berkshire Hathaway and the reports. And then I
eventually got the Buffett partnership letters that you could see, which are an amazing read to go
back to the mid-1950s and read what he wrote to his limited partners when he first started out and
just follow that trajectory over a long period of time. So what's remarkable about him is one
duration, right? He's still at it at 93. You know, two, you know, it takes a very long-term view.
But a big thing that you learn from him, investing requires this incredible,
dispassionate, unemotional quality. You have to be extremely economically rational,
which is not a basic, it's not something you learn in the jungle. I don't think it's something that, if you think about the,
surviving the jungle, the lion shows up,
and everyone starts running, you run with them.
That does not work well in markets.
In fact, you generally have to do the opposite, right?
When the lemmings are running over the cliff,
that's the time where you're facing the other direction and you're running the other direction, i.e.,
you're stepping in, you're buying stocks at really low prices. Buffett's been great at
that and great at teaching about what he calls temperament, which is this sort of emotional
or unemotional quality that you need to be able to dispassionately look at the world
and say, okay, is this a real risk?
Are people overreacting?
People tend to get excited about investments when stocks are going up and they get depressed
when they're going down.
I think that's just inherently human.
You have to reverse that.
You have to get excited when things get cheaper and you got to get concerned when things get
more expensive.
You've been a part of some big battles,
some big losses, some big wins.
So it's been a roller coaster.
So in terms of temperament, psychologically,
how do you not let that break you?
How do you maintain a calm demeanor
and avoid running with the lemmings?
I think it's something you kind of learn over time.
A key success factor is you want to have enough money in the bank that you're going to survive,
regardless of what's going on with volatility in markets.
People who, one, you shouldn't borrow money.
So if you borrow money, you own stocks on margin, markers are going down, and you have
your livelihood at risk, it's very difficult to be rational.
So a key is getting yourself to a place where you're financially secure, you're not going
to lose your house.
That's a kind of a key thing.
And then also doing your homework.
Stock prices, stocks can trade at any price in the short term. And if you
know what a business is worth and you understand the management, you know it extremely well.
It's not nearly as... It doesn't bother you when a stock price goes down or it has much
less impact on you because you know, again, as Mr. Graham said, the short term, the market's
a voting machine. You have a bunch of lemmings voting one direction, that's concerning.
But if it's a great business, that's not a lot of debt, and people are going to just
listen to more music next year than this year, you know you're going to do well.
So it's a bit, some combination of being personally secure and also just knowing what you own.
And over time, you build calluses, I would say.
So psychologically, just as a human being, speaking of lines and gazelles and all this
kind of stuff, is there some, is it as simple as just being financially secure?
Is there some just human qualities that you have to be born with slash develop?
I think so.
I think, now, I'm a pretty emotional person, I would say, or feel pretty strong emotions,
but not in investing.
I'm remarkably immune to kind of volatility.
And that's a big advantage.
And it took some time for me to develop that.
So you weren't born without, you think?
No.
So being emotional, do you want to respond to volatility?
Yeah. And you just, it's a bit, again, I, you can learn a lot from other people's experience.
It's one of the few businesses where you can learn an enormous amount by reading about other
periods in history, you know, watch, you know, following Buffett's career, the mistakes he made. If you're investing a lot of
capital, every one of your mistakes can be big. So we've made big mistakes. The good news is that
the vast majority of things we've done have worked out really well. And so that also gives you
confidence over time. But because we make very few investments, we own eight things today or seven companies of that matter
If we get one wrong it's gonna be big news
And so the other nature of our business you have to be comfortable with is a lot of public scrutiny a lot of public criticism
and that requires some
Experience
experience, I'm calling that. I think we'll talk about some of that.
Financial secure is something I believe also recommend for even just everyday investors.
Is there some general advice from the things you've been talking about that applies to
everyday investors?
Sure.
So, never invest money you can't afford to lose.
If you lost this money, you lose your house you etc. So having
Being in a place where you're investing money that you don't care about the price in the short term
It's money for your retirement and you take a really long-term view. I think that's key
Never investing we borrow money against your securities.
The markets offer you the opportunity to leverage your investment.
In most worlds, you'll be okay, except if there's a financial crisis or a nuclear device
gets detonated, God forbid, somewhere in the world, or there's an unexpected war.
Someone kills a leader unexpectedly. Things happen that can change the course of history, and markets react very negatively to those kinds of events. And you can own the greatest
business in the world, trading for $100 a share, and next moment it could be $50. So as long as you
don't borrow against securities, you own really high quality businesses and it's not money that
you need in the short term, then you can actually be thoughtful about it and that is a huge advantage.
The vast majority of investors, it seems, tend to be the ones that panic and the downturns
get over elated when markets are doing well. So be able to think long-term and be sufficiently financially secure such that you can afford
to think long-term.
Now, Buffett is the ultimate long-term thinker and just the decisions he makes, the consistency
of the decisions he's made over time and fitting into that sort of long-term framework is a very educational, let's put it that way,
for learning about this business.
So, you mentioned eight companies, but what do you think about mutual funds for everyday investors
that diversify across a larger number of companies?
I think there are very few mutual funds. There are thousands are thousands of mutual funds. There are very few that earn
their keep in terms of the fees they charge. They tend to be too diversified and too short-term.
You're often much better off just buying an index fund. And many of them perform, if you look carefully at their portfolios, they're not so different
from the underlying index itself, and you tend to pay a much higher fee.
Now, all of that being said, there's some very talented mutual fund managers, a guy
named Will Danoff at Fidelity's had a great record over a long period of time.
The famous Peter Lynch, Ron Barron, another great long-term growth stock
investor. So there's some great mutual funds. But I put them in the handful versus the thousands.
If you're in the thousands, I'd rather someone bought just an index fund basically.
Yeah, index funds. But what would be the leap for an everyday
investor to go to investing in a small number of companies, like two, three, four, five companies?
I even recommend for individual investors to invest in a dozen companies. You don't get that much
more benefit of diversification going from a dozen to 25 or even 50.
Most of the benefits of diversification come in the first, call it 10 or 12.
If you're investing in businesses that don't have a lot of debt, they're businesses that
you can understand yourself.
You understand, actually individual investors did a much better job analyzing Tesla than
the so-called professional investors are analysts, the vast majority
of them. So if it's a business you understand, if you bought a Tesla, you understand the
product and its appeal to consumers, it's a good place to start when you're analyzing
a company. So I would invest in things you can understand. That's kind of a key. You
like Chipotle, you understand why they're successful. You can go there every week and you can monitor,
is anything changing?
How are these new kind of, how's chicken El Pastore?
Is that a good upgrade from the basic chicken?
The drink offerings improving, the store is clean.
I think you should invest in companies
you really understand, simple businesses
where you can predict with a high degree of confidence what it's going
to look like over time.
And if you do that in a not particularly concentrated fashion and you don't borrow money against
your securities, you'll probably do much better than your typical mutual fund.
Yeah, it's interesting.
Consumers that love a thing are actually good analysts of that thing, or I guess a good
starting point.
By the way, there's much more information available today.
When I was first investing, literally we had people faxing us documents from the SEC filings
in Washington, DC.
Now, everything's available online.
Conference call transcripts are free.
You have AI, you have unlimited data, and all kinds of message boards and Reddit forums and things where people are sharing
advice.
Everyone has their own, by virtue of their career or experience, they'll know about
an industry or a business.
And that gives them, I would take advantage of your own competitive advantages.
I'm just afraid if I invest in Chipotle I'll be like analyzing every little change of menu
from a financial perspective and just be very critical.
If it's gonna affect your experience,
I wouldn't buy the stock.
Yeah, I mean, I should also say that I am somebody
that emotionally does respond to volatility,
which is why I've never bought index funds.
And I just noticed myself psychologically being affected
by the ups and downs
of the market and I wanted to tune out
because if I'm at all tuned in,
it has a negative impact on my life.
Yeah, that's really important.
Can you explain what activist investing is?
You've been talking about investing
and then looking at companies when they're struggling,
stepping in and reconfiguring things within that company,
and helping it become great.
So that's part of it.
But let's just zoom out.
What's this idea of activist investing?
I think recently, in the last couple of days,
I read an article saying that more than 50% of the capital
in the world today invest in the stock markets,
passive, indexed money.
And that's the most passive form.
So if you think about an index fund,
a machine buys a fixed set of securities
in certain proportion.
There's no human judgment at all.
And there's no real person behind it in a way.
They never take steps to improve a business.
They just quietly own securities.
What we do is we invest our capital in a handful of things. We get to know them really, really
well because you're going to put 20% of your assets in something, you need to know it really
well. But once you become a big holder and if you've got some thoughts on how to make
a business more valuable, you can do more than just be
a passive investor.
So our strategy is built upon finding great companies in some cases that have lost their
way and then helping them succeed.
And we can do that with ideas from outside the boardroom.
Sometimes we take a seat on a board or more than one.
And we work with the best management teams in the world to help
these businesses succeed. So when I first went into this business, no one knew who we were.
And we didn't have that much money. And so to influence what was to us a big company,
we had to make a fair bit more noise, right? So we would buy a stake, we'd announce it publicly,
we'd attempt to engage with management'd announce it publicly, we'd
attempt to engage with management. The first activist investment we made at Pershing Square
was Wendy's. I couldn't get the CEO to ever return my call. He didn't return my call.
So we actually, in that case, our idea was Wendy's own a company called Tim Hortons,
which was this coffee donut chain. And you could buy Wendy's for basically $5 billion, and
they owned 100% of Tim Hortons, which itself was worth more than $5 billion. So you could
literally buy Wendy's, separate Tim Hortons, and get Wendy's for negative value. That seemed
like a pretty good opportunity, even though the business wasn't doing that well.
So we bought the steak, called the CEO, couldn't get a meeting, nothing. So we hired actually Blackstone, which was at that time had an investment bank.
And we hired them to do what's called a fairness opinion of what Wendy's would be
worth if they followed our advice.
And they agreed to do it, paid them a fee for it.
And then we mailed in a letter with a copy of the fairness opinion saying
Wendy's would basically be worth 80% more if they did what we said.
And six weeks later, they did what we said. So that's activism, at least an early form of activism.
With that under our belt, we had a little more credibility. And now we started to take
things and stakes in companies. The media would pay attention. So the media became
kind of an important partner. And some combination of shame, embarrassment, and opportunity
motivated management teams to do the right thing.
And then beyond that, there are certain steps
you can take if management is recalcitrant
and the shareholders are on your side.
But it's a bit like running for office.
You've got to get all the constituents to support you
and your ideas.
And if they support you and your ideas,
you can overthrow, if you will, the board of a company,
bring in new talent and then take over the management of a business.
That's the most extreme form of activism.
That's kind of the early days and what we did.
A lot of the early things that we did were, what we call investment banking activism,
where we'd go in and recommend something a good investment bank would have recommended.
If they do it, we make a bunch of money, and then we moved on to
the next one. And then we realized an investment in a company called General Growth was the first
time we took a board seat on a company. And there was some financial restructuring and also an
opportunity to improve the operations of the business, sit on the board of a company. And
that was one of the best investments we ever made. And we said, okay, we can do more than just be an outside the
boardroom investor, and we can get involved in helping select the right management teams
and helping guide the right management teams. And then we've done that over years. And then
I would say the last seven years, we haven't had to be an activist. An activist is generally
someone who's outside, banging on the
door, trying to get in. We've sort of built enough credibility that they open the door.
And they say, hey, Bill, what ideas do you have? So welcome. Would you like to join the board?
We're treated differently today than we were in the beginning. And that is, I would say,
some people might just call it being an engaged owner.
By the way, that's the way investing was done in the Andrew Carnegie JPMorgan days 150 years
ago.
You had these iconic business leaders that would own 20% of US Steel.
When things would go wrong, they'd replace the board and the management and fix them.
Over time, we went to a world where mutual funds were
created like in the 1920s, 30s, index funds with Vanguard
and others.
And that all these controlling shareholders
would kind of gave their stock to society or their children
in multiple generations.
And there were no longer kind of controlling owners
of businesses or very few.
And that led to underperformance and the opportunity for activists over time.
And what activism has done, and I think we've helped lead this movement, is it restored
the balance of power between the owners of the business and the management of the company.
And that's been a very good thing for the performance of the US stock market, actually.
So the owners meaning the shareholders.
Yes.
And so there's a more direct channel of communication with activists investing between the shareholders
and the people running the company.
Yes.
So activists generally never own more than 5% or 10% of a business.
So they don't have control.
So the way they get influence is they have to convince the other, you know, but they
have to get to the sort of majority of the other, you know, but they have to get to a sort of a majority of the other shareholders to
support them and
If they can get that kind of support they can behave almost like a controlling shareholder and that's how it works
So the running of companies
According to Bill Ackman is more democratic now
It is it is but you need some thought leaders so activists are kind of thought leaders because they can spend the time and the money.
Retail investor that owns a thousand shares doesn't have the resources or the time.
They got a day job.
Whereas an activist day job is finding the handful of things where there are opportunities.
So on average, is it good to have such an engaged powerful influential investor helping control direct
the direction of a company?
Depends what that investor is, but generally I think it's a good thing.
One of the problems with being CEO of a company today and having a very diversified shareholder
base is the kind of short-term, long-term balance.
And you have investors who have all different interests in terms of what they want to achieve
and when they want it achieved.
And CEO of a new company, a new CEO of an old company, let's say, hasn't had the chance
to develop the credibility to make the kind of longer-term decisions and can be stuck in a cycle of being judged on a quarterly basis.
A business, the best businesses are forever assets, and decisions you make now have impact three,
four, or five years from now. Sometimes, their decisions we make that have the effect of reducing
the earnings of a company in the short term because in the long term, it's going to make the
business much more valuable. But sometimes, it's going to make the business much more valuable.
But sometimes it's hard to have that kind of credibility when you're a new CEO of a
company.
So when you have a major owner that's respected by other shareholders sitting on the board
saying, hey, the CEO is doing the right thing in making this expensive investment in a new
factory or spending more money on R&D because we're developing something that's going to pay off over time, that large owner on the board can help buy the time necessary
for management to behave in a longer-term way.
That's, I think, good for all the shareholders.
So that's the good story, but can it get bad?
Can you have a CEO who is a visionary and sees the long-term future of a company and
an investor come in and have very selfish
interest in just making more money in the short term and therefore destroy and
and
manipulate the opinions of the shareholders and other people on the board in order to
sink the company
maybe increase the increase the price
the company maybe increase the price but destroy the possibility of long-term value. It could theoretically happen.
But again, the activist in your example, which only goes into a lot of stock, the shareholder
basis today, the biggest shareholders are these index funds that are forever, right?
The BlackRock Vanguard, State Street, their ownership stakes are just at this point only growing because of the inflows of capital they have from shareholders. So
they have to think or they should think very long-term and they're going to be very skeptical
of someone coming in with a short-term idea that drives the stock price up in the next
six months but impairs the company's long-term ability to compete. And basically that ownership
group prevents this kind of activity from really happening.
So people are generally skeptical short-term activist investors?
Yes.
And they're very few.
I don't really know any short-term activist investors.
That's a hopeful message.
Not ones with credibility.
You mentioned general growth. I read somewhere called arguably one of the best
hedge fund trades of all time. So I guess it went from $60 million to over $3 billion.
It was a good one. All right. But it wasn't a trade. I wouldn't describe it as a trade.
A trade is something you buy and you flip. This is something where we made the investment initially in November of 2008.
And we still own a company we spun off of general growth and it's now 15 years later.
Can you describe what went into making that decision to actually increase the value of the
company? Sure. So this was at the time of the financial crisis, circa November 2008.
What real estate's always
been a kind of sector that I've been interested in.
I began my career in the real estate business working for my dad, actually, ranging mortgages
for real estate developers.
So I have kind of deep ties and interest in the business.
And general growth was the second largest shopping mall company in the country.
Simon Properties, many people have heard of.
General growth was number two. They owned some of the best malls in the country. Simon Properties, many people have heard of general growth is number two. They own some of the best malls in the country. And at that time,
people thought of shopping malls as these non-disruptible things. Again, we talk about
disruption, malls have been disrupted in many ways. And general growth stock, general growth,
the company, the CFO in particular was very aggressive in the way that he borrowed money. And he borrowed money from a kind of Wall Street, not long-term mortgages, but generally
relatively short-term mortgages. It was pretty aggressive. As the value went up,
he would borrow more and more against the assets, and that helped the short-term results of the
business. The problem was during the financial crisis, the market for what's called CNBS, commercial
mortgage backed securities basically shut.
And the company, because its debt was relatively short-term, had a lot of big maturities coming
up that they had no ability to refinance.
And the market said, oh my God, the lenders are going to foreclose and the shareholders
are going to get wiped.
The company's going to go bankrupt and they're going to get wiped out.
The stock went from $63 a share to 34 cents.
There was a family, the Bucksbound family owned, I think about 25% of the company and
they had a $5 billion stock that was worth $25 million or something by the time we bought
a stake in the business.
What interested me was I thought the assets were worth substantially more than the liabilities.
The company had $27 billion of debt and had $100 million value of the equity down from
like $20 billion.
And one that's sort of an interesting place to start with a stock down 99%.
But the fundamental drivers, the mall business are occupancy, how occupied are the malls?
Occupancy was up year on year between
07 and 08 interestingly. Net operating income, which is kind of a measure of cash flow from the
malls, that was up year on year. So kind of the underlying fundamentals were doing fine.
The only problem they had is they had billions of dollars of debt that they had to repay,
they couldn't repay. And if you kind of examine the bankruptcy code,
couldn't repay. And if you kind of examine the bankruptcy code, it's precisely designed for a situation like this, where it's kind of this resting place you can go to kind of
restructure your business. Now, the problem was that every other company that had gone
bankrupt, the shareholders got wiped out. And so the market seeing every previous example,
the shareholders get wiped out, the assumptions is the stock is going to go to zero.
But that's not what the bankruptcy code says. What the bankruptcy code says is that the value
gets apportioned based on value. And if you could prove to a judge that there was the assets
worth more than the liabilities, then the shareholders actually get to keep their investment
in the company. And that was the bet we made.
And so we stepped into the market and we bought 25% of the company in the open market for,
we had to pay up.
It started out at 34 cents.
I think there were 300 million shares.
So it was at $100 million value.
By the time we were done, we paid an average of, we paid $60 million for 25% of the business.
So about $240 million for the equity of the
company.
And then we had to get on the board to convince the directors the right thing to do.
The board was in complete panic, didn't know what to do, spending a ton of money on advisors.
And I was a shareholder activist four years into Pershing Square, and no one had any idea
what we were doing. They thought we were crazy.
Every day we'd go into the market and we'd buy this penny stock and we'd file what's
called a 13D, every 1% increase in our stake and people just thought we were crazy.
We're buying stock in a company that's going to go bankrupt.
Bill, you're going to lose all your money.
Run.
And I said, well, bankruptcy code says that it was more asset value than liabilities.
We should be fine.
And the key moment, if you're looking for fun moments
is there's a woman named Maddie Bucksbaum
who was from the Bucksbaum family
and her cousin, John was chairman of the board,
CEO of the company.
And I said, as she calls me
after we disclose our stake in the company, she's like, Billy Ackman, I'm really glad to see you here. And I said, as she called me after we disclosed our stake in the company,
she's like, Billy Ackman, I'm really glad to see you here. And I met her like,
I don't think it was a date, but I kind of met her in a social context when I was like 25 or
something. And she said, look, I'm really glad to see you here. And it's just anything I can do
to help you call me. I said, sure. We kept trying to get on the board of the company. They wouldn't
invite us on. Couldn't
really run a proxy contest, not with a company going bankrupt. And their advisors actually were
Goldman Sachs and they're like, you don't want the Fox in the henhouse. And they were listening
to their advisors. So I called Maddie up and I said, Maddie, I need to get on the board of the
company to help. And she says, you know what? I will call my cousin and I'll get a ton.
And she says, you know what? I will call my cousin and I'll get it done.
Like, you know, she calls back a few hours later, you'll be going on to the board.
I don't know what she said to her cousin.
Which she was convincing.
Next thing you know, I'm invited to on the board of the company and the board is talking
about the old equity of general growth.
Old equity is what you talk about, the shareholders are getting wiped out.
I said, no, no, no, this board represents the current equity of the company. And I'm a major shareholder,
John's a major shareholder. There's plenty of asset value here. This company should be
able to be restructured for the benefit of shareholders. And we led a restructuring for
the benefit of shareholders. And it took, let's say, eight months. And the company emerged from
chapter 11. We made an incremental investment into the company.
And the shareholders kept the vast majority of their investment.
All the creditors got their face amount of their investment,
par plus acute, crude interest.
And it was a great outcome.
All the employees kept their jobs, the mall stayed open.
There was no liquidation in the bankruptcy system, worked the way it should.
You know, I was in court all the time. At first meeting with the judge, the judge was like,
look, this would never have happened were it not for a financial crisis.
And once the judge said, I knew we were going to be fine, because the company really
not done anything fundamentally wrong, maybe a little too aggressive in how they barred money.
Stock went from $0.34 to $31 a share.
And actually, a fun little anecdote. We made a lot of people a lot of money who followed us into it.
I got a lot of nice thank you notes, which you get on occasion in this business, believe it or not.
And then one day I got a voicemail. This is when there was something called voicemail,
probably a few years later. And it's a guy with a very thick Jamaican accent,
leaving a message for Bill Ackman. So I return all my calls, call the guy back.
He's like, hi, it's Bill Ackman. I'm just returning your call. And he's like, oh, Mr. Ackman,
thank you so much for calling me. And I said, oh, how can I help? He says, I wanted to thank you.
I said, what do you mean? He said, I saw you on CNBC a couple years ago,
and you were talking about this general growth.
And the stock, I said, where was the stock at the time?
He said, it's 60 cents or something like this.
And I bought a lot of stock.
And I'm like, well, how much did you invest?
Oh, I invest all of my money in the company.
And he was a New York City taxi driver.
And he invested like $50,000 or something like this
at 60 cents a share.
And he was still holding it.
And he went into retirement and he made, you know,
50 times his money.
And, you know, those are the moments
that you feel pretty good about investing.
What gave you confidence through that?
Once at Penny's Talk, and I'm sure you were getting a lot of naysayers
and people saying that this is crazy.
It's the same thing.
You just do the work.
Like we got a lot of pushback from our investors actually,
because we had never invested in a bankrupt company before.
It's a field called distressed investing.
And they're dedicated distressed investors.
And we weren't considered one of them.
So Bill, what are you doing? You don't know anything about distressed investing. You don't considered one of them. So Bill, what are you doing? You don't
know anything about distressed investing. You don't know anything about bankruptcy investing.
But I can read. I can learn. And I learned. And it sometimes is very helpful not to be a practitioner,
an expert in something, because you get used to the conventional wisdom. And so we just,
abstractly read the step back and look at the facts.
And it was just a really interesting setup for one of the best investments we ever made.
How hard is it to learn some of the legal aspects of this, like you mentioned bankruptcy
code? Like I imagine it's very sort of dense language and dense ideas and the loopholes
and all that kind of stuff. Like if you're just stepping in and you've never done distressed investing,
how hard is it to figure out?
It's not that hard. No, it's not that hard.
Okay.
I mean, I literally read a book on distressed investing.
Okay.
Ben Branch or something, something on distressed investing.
So you were able to pick up the intuition from that,
just all the basic skills involved, the basic facts
to know, all that kind of stuff.
Most of the world's knowledge has already been written somewhere.
You just got to read the right books.
And also had great lawyers, built up some great relationships.
We worked with Sullivan and Cromwell.
And the lawyer there named Joe Shanker, who I met earlier in my career, Pershing Square
is actually my second act in the hedge fund business. I started a fund called Gotham Partners
when I was 26. One of my early investments was a company called Rockfella Center Properties
that was heading for bankruptcy. And the lawyer on the other side representing Goldman Sachs
was a guy named Joe Shanker. So he was like an obvious phone call because he had yet another
real estate bankruptcy. And that one we did very well, but I missed the big opportunity. And I suffered severe psychological torture every time I walked
by Rockfellow Center because we could have made, we knew more about that property than anyone else,
but I knew less about deal making and didn't have the resources. And I was 28 years old or 27.
And they hired a better lawyer than we did. And they outsmarted us on that one in a way.
So I said, okay, I'm gonna go hire this guy
the next time around.
So.
Okay, we'll probably talk about Rockefeller Center
and some failures.
But first you said Fox in the henhouse.
Yes.
Something that the board and the chairman were worried about.
Why would they call you a Fox?
So you keep saying activist investing is not the board and the chairman were worried about, why would they call you a fox?
So you keep saying, activists investing is not anything to worry about.
It's always good, mostly good.
But that expression applied in this context, they were still worried about that.
And so maybe there's a million questions here, but first of all, what is the process of getting
on the board look like?
So a board can always admit a member at any time in their discretion for a U.S. company.
Maybe there's some jurisdiction where you need to share all the vote, but in most cases,
a board can vote on any director that they want.
If the board doesn't invite you to the party, you have to apply to be a member in effect. And that
process is called, basically, it's the process of ultimately running a slate for a meeting
where you propose a number, any shareholder can propose to be on a board of a company if
they own one share of stock in the business. And getting your name in the companies, you know, in the materials they sent to shareholders,
those rules were written in a way that were very unfavorable and very difficult to get in the door.
And those rules have been changed very recently, where the company now has to include a candidate,
really all the candidates in the materials they sent to shareholders, so the shareholders picked
the best ones. When we applied, or when we applied, when we ran proxy contests in the
past, that was not the case. And so you have to spend a lot of money, mostly mailing
fees and all kinds of other legal and other expenses to let everyone know you're running,
like running a political campaign. And then you got to run around and meet with the big
shareholders, fly around the country, explain your case to them. And then there's a shareholder
meeting. And if you get a majority of the votes, you get on.
What's this proxy contest slash battle idea?
What's the battle comes when they don't want you down?
And a lot of that has to do with, I would say, pride, normal human kind of stuff.
A lot of times, a board of an underperforming company doesn't want to admit that they've
underperformed.
And boards of directors 20 years ago when we started Pershing Square were pretty cushy
jobs.
Sitting on a board of a company, you play golf with the CEO at nice golf courses, you make
a few hundred thousand dollars a year to go to four meetings.
It was kind of a rubber stamp world where boards, you know, at the end of the day,
they, the CEO really ran the show.
Once shareholders could actually dislodge board members and they could lose their seats.
And that's really the rise of shareholder activism.
Board started taking their responsibilities much more seriously because directors are typically, you know, there are many cases, they're retired CEOs.
This is kind of how they're making a living in the later part of their career. They're sit on four boards.
They collect a million, a million and a half dollars a year in directors fees. If they get thrown off the board by the shareholders,
that's embarrassing, obviously.
And it affects their ability to get on other boards. So, you know, again, incentives as I said earlier,
drive all human behavior. The incentives directors
want to preserve their board seats. So if you have a director, now the directors on board
serve in various roles. The most vulnerable ones are ones who, for example, chair a compensation
committee. And if they put in a bad plan or they overpaid management, they're subject to attack
by shareholders. But these contests are not dissimilar to political contests where there's mudslinging and other side puts out false information about you, you have to respond,
and they're spending the shareholders' money. So they have unlimited resources, and you're
spending your and your investors' money when you're a small firm, finite resources so they can
outspend you, they can sue you, they can try to jigger the mechanics in such a way that you're going to lose.
There's some unfortunate stuff that's happened in the past, manipulative stuff.
So also some stuff that's public, like in the press and all this kind of stuff?
Oh, of course. There'll be articles about Yambol, the dirty days where they would
go through your trash and make sure that you're not sleeping around
and things like this. That's okay. I'm subject. I can survive extreme scrutiny because I've been
through this for a long time. So you're saying the fat and happy hens can get very wolf-like
when the fox is trying to break in.
Is this how we extend this?
Well, the fox is a threat to the hens.
Yeah, yeah, but you're just cares.
The charismatic fox just explained to me
why the fox is good for everybody in the henhouse.
At the end of the day, it's actually very good
on a board to have someone, you know,
if you, there are many examples over time
and some handful of high profile ones where the board fought tooth and nail to keep the
activists off the board. And then once the activists got on the board and they said,
you know, the guy's not so bad after all, the shareholders voted them on, he's got some
decent ideas and let's all work together to have this workout. And so there are very
few cases where after the contest, when the, by the way, sometimes you have to replace
the entire board. We've done that.
But in most cases, you get a couple of seats on the board
and it's just, you wanna build a board
comprised of diverse points of view.
And that's how you get to the truth.
What was the most dramatic battle for the board
that you have been a part of?
The Canadian Pacific Proxy Contest.
So Canadian Pacific was considered the most iconic company in Canada.
It literally built the country because the rail that got built over Canada
is what united the various provinces into a country.
And then over time, because the railroad business is a pretty good business,
they built a ton of business, they built a ton
of hotels, they owned a lot of real estate, and it became this massive conglomerate.
But it was horribly mismanaged for decades.
By the time we got involved, it was by far the worst-run railroad in North America.
They had the lowest profit margins, they had the lowest growth rate.
Every quarter of management would make excuses generally about the weather
as to why they underperform versus...
And there there's a direct competitor, a company called Canadian National, as the rail
goes right across the country.
And Canadian Pacific would constantly be complaining about the weather.
And basically, you know, same country, same regions, the tracks weren't that far apart.
And but it was a really important company and being on this board
was like an honorary thing. And everyone on the board was an icon of Canada. The chairman
of the Royal Bank of Canada, the head of the most important privately held grain company,
the sort of an important collection of big time Canadian executives. Here we were, you know, this is probably about 13 years ago.
And, you know, still maybe 44 year old from New York, not a Canadian, basically saying this is the worst run railroad in North America.
And we bought 12% of the railroad at a really low price. And we brought with us to our first meeting, the greatest railroader ever, a guy named
Hunter Harrison who had turned around Canadian National.
So we'd like, okay, we've got a great asset.
We've got the greatest railroad CEO of all time.
He's come out of retirement to step in and run the railroad.
And we brought him to the first meeting and they wouldn't even meet with him.
And they wouldn't, certainly we't going to consider hiring them.
And that led us to a proxy contest.
And this is where the engine starts churning to figure out how this contest can be won.
So what's involved in...
Well, the key is we had to, one, come up with a group of directors who would be willing
to step into a battle.
We didn't want a bunch of New York directors or even American directors.
We wanted Canadians.
The problem was this was the most iconic company in Canada, and we wanted high-profile people.
We talked to all the high-profile people in Canada.
Everyone of them would say, Bill, you're entirely right.
This thing is the worst right now.
It needs to be fixed.
I see John at the club.
I see him at the Toronto club.
I can't do this, but you're totally right.
And that was the concern because you have to file your materials by a certain day.
You got to put together a slate.
We needed a big slate because we knew that we had to replace basically all the directors.
And then one, I spoke to a guy who was one of the wealthiest guys in Canada,
who was on the board at one point in time. And he said, Bill, I have an idea for you.
Is this woman Rebecca McDonald? Why don't you give her a call? And I called Rebecca and
she was the first woman to take a company public in Canada as CEO. And she was a kind of anti-establishment,
not afraid to take on anything kind of person. And I called her, we had a great conversation.
And she was in the Dominican Republic at her house. And I flew down to see her. And she
said, yeah, I'm all in. And actually, once we got her, that enabled us to get others.
And then we put together our slate and
We had some pretty interesting dialogue with the company they tried to embarrass us all the time in the press publicly What do we press publicly? You know at one point I wrote an email saying look let's come to a piece on this thing
but if we don't you're really forcing my hand and we're gonna have to rent the largest hall in Toronto and
We don't. You're really forcing my hand and we're going to have to rent the largest hall in Toronto
and invite all the shareholders and it's going to be embarrassing for management.
And I made reference to some nuclear winter.
Let's not have it be a nuclear winter.
And they thought they'd embarrass me by releasing the email, but it only inspired us.
And we rented the largest hall in Canada and we put up a presentation walking through,
you know, here's Canadian National, here's Canadian Pacific, here's what they said, here's what they did. And we had Hunter get up, who's this incredibly
charismatic guy from Tennessee, an amazing, you know, he's like a lion, okay, incredibly
deep voice, unbelievable track record, incredibly respected guy. It's like getting Michael Jordan
to come out of retirement and come run the company. Hunter was
incredible and Paul Lowe, other members of my team were super engaged. Canadians are known to be nice.
So one of the problems we had is shareholders would never tell management or the board that
they were losing. It was not until the night before the meeting when the vote came in, the management realized that they lost. We got 99% of the vote and they offered us
a deal, when they begged us to take a deal, they said, look, we'll resign tonight so that we don't
have to come to the meeting tomorrow. That's how embarrassed they were. That was kind of an
interesting one. So in both this proxy battle and the company itself, this was one of
your more successful investments. It was. I mean, the stock's up about 10 times, and it's an industrial
company. It's a railroad. It's not like a growth, like it's not Google. So it's a great story. And
the company's now run by a guy named Keith Creel. And Keith, it was Hunter's Protoshae. And in
so many ways, he's actually better than Hunter.
He's doing an incredible job.
And the sad part here is we did very well.
We tripled our money over several years.
And then I went through a very challenging period
because of a couple of bad investments.
And we had to sell our Canadian Pacific to pay,
to raise capital, to pay for investors who are leaving.
But we had another opportunity to buy it back in the last couple of years.
And so we're now again a major owner of the company.
But had we held onto original stock,
it would have been epic, if you will.
So on this one, you were right.
Yes.
And I read an article about you,
and there's many articles about you. I read
an article that said Bill is often right, but you approach it with a scorched earth approach
that can often do more, sort of can do damage. I haven't read the often right article, but
the good news is we are often right. And I say we because we're a team, a small team,
but a fortunately very successful one.
So our batting average as investors is extremely high.
And the good news is our record's totally public.
You can see everything we've ever done.
But the press doesn't generally write about the success stories.
They write about the failures.
And so we've had some epic failures, big losses.
Good news is they've been a tiny minority of the cases.
Now, no one likes to lose money.
It's even worse to lose other people's money.
And I've done that occasionally.
The good news is if you're stuck with us, you've done very well, you know, over a long time.
On a small tangent since we were talking about boards, did you get a chance to see what happened
with the OpenAI board?
Because I'm talking to Sam Altman soon.
Is there any insight you have, just maybe lessons you draw from this kind of, these
kinds of events, especially with an AI technology company, such dramatic things happening?
Yeah, that was an incredible story.
Look, governance really matters.
And the governance structure of open AI, I think,
leaves something to be desired.
I think Sam's point was this and maybe Elon Musk point,
originally set up as a nonprofit.
And it reminds me, actually, I invested in a nonprofit run
by a former Facebook founder where he's
going to create a Facebook-like entity for nonprofits to promote goodness in the world.
The problem was he couldn't hire the talent he wanted because he couldn't grant stock
options, he couldn't pay market salaries.
And ultimately, he ended up selling the business to a for-profit.
So it taught me for-profit solutions to problems are much better than non-profits.
And here you had kind of a blend, right?
It was set up as a non-profit, but I think they found the same thing.
They couldn't hire the talent they wanted without having a for-profit subsidiary.
But the non-profit entity, as I understand it, owns, or a big chunk of open AI.
And the investors own sort of a capped interest
where their upside is capped
and they don't have representation on the board.
And I think that's a, you know, was a setup for a problem.
And that's clearly what happened here.
And there's, I guess, some kind of complexity
in the governance.
I mean, because of this nonprofit and cap profit thing, it seems like there's a much
of complexity and non-standard aspects to it that perhaps also contributed to the problem.
Yeah. Governance really matters. Boards of directors really matter,
giving the shareholders the right to have input at least once a year
on the structure of the governance of companies is really important. And private venture-backed
boards are also not ideal. I'm an active investor in ventures. And there are some complicated issues
that emerge in private venture stage sort of venture stage companies,
where board members have somewhat divergent incentives
from the long-term owners of a business.
And what you see a lot in venture boards is,
they're presided over generally by venture capital investors
who are big investors in the company.
And oftentimes it's more important to them
to have the public
perception that they're good directors so they get the next best deal. If they have
a reputation for kind of taking on management too aggressively, word will get out in the
small community of founders and they'll miss the next Google. And so their interests are
not just in that particular company. That's also one of the problems.
Again, it all comes back to incentives.
Can you explain to me the difference in venture-backed like VCs and shareholders?
So this means before the company goes public?
Yeah.
So private venture-backed companies, the boards tend to be very small, could be a handful
of the venture investors and management.
They're often very rarely independent directors.
It's just not an ideal structure.
Oh, I see.
You want independent.
It's beneficial to have people who have an economic interest in the business and they
care only about the success of that company as opposed to someone who, if you think about
the venture business, getting into the best deals is more important than any one deal.
And you see cases where, you know, the boards go along with, in some sense, cases bad behavior in the part of management
because they want a reputation for being kind of a founder-friendly director.
You know, that's kind of problematic. You don't have the same issue in public company boards. So we talked about some of the big wins and your track record, but you said there were
some big losses.
So what's the biggest loss of your career?
Biggest loss of my career is a company called Valiant Pharmaceuticals.
We made an investment in a business that didn't meet our core principles.
The problem in the pharmaceutical industry, and there are many problems as I've learned, is it's a very volatile business. It's based on drug discovery. It's based
on predicting the future revenues of a drug before it goes off patent. Lots of complexities.
We thought we had founded a pharmaceutical company we could own because of a very unusual founder and the way he approached this business.
It was a company where another activist was on the board of directors of the company and
kind of governing and overseeing the day-to-day decisions.
We ended up making a pass of investment in the company.
Up until this point in time, we really didn't make pass of investments.
The company made a series of decisions that were disastrous. And then we stepped in to try to solve the problem.
It was the first time I ever joined a board.
And the mess was much larger than I realized from the outside.
And then I was stuck.
And it was very much a confidence-sensitive strategy,
because they built their business
by acquiring pharmaceutical assets.
And they often issued stock when they acquired targets. And so once the market lost
confidence in management, the stock price got crushed and it impaired their ability
to continue to acquire low costs, drugs. And we lost $4 billion.
$4 billion.
Yeah. How's that for a big loss?
That's...
It's up there.
Some sweating this whole conversation, both the wins and the losses and the stakes involved.
And by the way, that loss catalyzed other, what I call, mark-to-market losses. So very
high profile, huge number, disastrous press. Then people said, okay, Bill's going to go
out of business. So we're going to bet against everything he's doing. And we know his entire
portfolio because we only own 10 things. And we're gonna bet against everything he's doing. And we know his entire portfolio
because we only own 10 things.
And we were short a company called Herbalife,
very famously.
We've only really shorted two companies.
The first one, there's a book,
the second one, there's a movie.
Okay.
We no longer short companies,
but so people pushed up the price of Herbalife,
which is when you're a short seller, that's
catastrophic, I can explain that.
And then they also shorted the other stocks that we owned.
And so that valiant loss led to an overall more than 30% loss in the value of our portfolio.
The valiant loss was real and was crystallized, and selling the position, taking that loss.
Most of the other losses were what I would call mark-to-market losses that were temporary, but many people
go out of business because as I mentioned before, large move in a price, if investors
are redeeming or you have leverage, you can put you out of business. And if people assumed
if we got put out of business, we'd have to sell everything or cover our short position
and that would make the losses even worse. So Wall Street is kind of ruthless. So they can make money off of that whole thing? Absolutely. So they use the
opportunity of valiant to try to destroy you reputation financially and then capitalizing
to make money off of that? Yes. Well, that's a terrifying spot to be in. Well, what was the
light going through that? It was pretty grim. It's actually much worse than that because I had a lot of stuff going on personally as
well.
And these things tend to be correlated.
The valiant mistake came at a time where I was contemplating my marriage.
And I was also, the problem with the hedge fund business is when you get to a certain
scale, the CEO becomes like the chief marketing officer
of the business. I'm really an investor as opposed to a marketing guy. But when you have
investors who give you a few hundred million dollars, they want to see you. Once a year, Bill,
I'd love to see you for an hour. But if you've got a couple hundred of those, you find yourself
on a plane to the Middle East, to Asia, flying around the country. This is pre-zoom. And that takes you away from the investment
process. You have to delegate more. That was a contributor to the valiant mistake. So now we
lose a ton of money on valiant. My ex-wife and I were talking about separating, getting divorced.
I put that on hold. I didn't want to make a decision in the middle of this crisis.
And things just kept getting worse. We were also sued when you lose a lot of money. We didn't get sued by our investors, but we got sued by a shareholder because when the stock price goes down,
shareholders sue. We've done nothing wrong other than make a big mistake. So you have litigation,
your investors are taking their money out. I'm in the middle of a divorce.
The divorce starts to proceed.
My ex-wife's lawyers' expectations of what my net worth was
was about three times what it actually was,
and it was going lower in the middle of this.
And I remember the lawyers saying,
look Bill, you know,
we've estimated your net worth at X,
but don't worry, we only want a third.
But X was 3X, so a third was 100%.
And then we had Idleitigation, and actually never before publicly disclosed, and I'll share it with you now.
We had a public company that owned about a third of our portfolio that was called our
version of Berkshire Hathaway.
I tried to learn from Mr. Buffett over time and it was so to speak permanent capital.
The problem with hedge funds is people can take their money out of your quarter.
What Buffett has is a company where people want to take their money out, they sell the
stock but the money stays.
So we set up a similar structure in October of 2014 and then a year later, Valiant happens.
And then a year later, we're in the middle of the mess and we're still in the mess.
By mid-2017, we've got litigation underway and another activist investor, a firm called Elidious Associates, which is run by a guy named
Paul Singer, took a big position in our public company that was the bulk of our capital. And
they shorted all the stocks that we owned and they went long the short, probably went long
the short that we were short. And they were making a bet that we'd be forced to liquidate.
And then they would make money on, you on, our public company was trading at a discount to what all the securities were. So they bought the
public company, they shorted the securities, and then they came to see us and to try to
be activists and force us to liquidate. And that sort of...
So I thought this was going to be, I envisioned an end where the divorce takes
all of my resources, the permanent capital vehicle ends up getting liquidated, and another
activist in my industry puts me out of business. And I had met Neri Oxman right around this
time and I had fallen completely in love with her. And I was envisioning a world where I was bankrupt,
a judge found me guilty of whatever.
He sends me off to jail, or not that judge,
because he was a civil judge, but another judge
sues the SEC Department of Justice.
And I find myself in this incredible mess.
And I decided I didn't want things to end that way.
So I did something I'd never done before.
I talked all before about you don't borrow money, I borrowed money.
And I borrowed $300 million from JP Morgan in the middle of this mess.
And I give JP Morgan enormous credit in seeing through it.
And also, I had been a good client over a long period of time and it's like a handshake
bank and they bet that I would succeed. I had been a good client over a long period of time and it's like a handshake bank.
And they bet that I would succeed. And I took that money to buy enough stock in my public company that could prevent an activist from taking over and effectively buy control of our little public
company. And I got that done. And that I knew was the moment, the turning point. And I resolved
my divorce and divorces get easier to resolve
when things are going badly. I was able to resolve that. We settled the litigation. I
was buying blocks of our stock in the market. I remember a day I bought a big block of stock
in the market. I got a call from Gordon Singer, who's Paul Singer's son who runs there, London,
part of their business. He's like, Bill, was that you buying that block? I said, yes.
He's like, fuck.
So he knew-
He knew that once I got that,
they were not gonna be able to succeed and they went away.
And that was the bottom.
And then we've had an incredible run since then.
And you were able to protect your reputation
from the valiant failure still?
I mean, this is a business where you're going to make some mistakes.
It was a big one.
It was very reputationally damaging.
The press was a total disaster, but I'm not a quitter.
And actually the key moments for us, we've never taken our core investment principles
and actually really written them down.
Something we talked about at meetings, kind of our investment team meetings.
I had a member of the team, I said, look, go find a big piece of granite and a chisel.
And let's take those core principles.
I want them like Moses's 10 commandments.
Okay, we're going to chisel them and then we're going to put it up on the wall.
And once we produce those, we put one on everyone's desk.
I said, look, if we ever again veer from the core principles,
hit me with a baseball bat.
And that was the bottom.
And ever since then, we've done,
we've had the best six years in the history of the firm.
So refocus on the fundamentals.
And love helps. Love helps.
I literally met Neri at the absolute bottom.
Our first date was September 7th, 2017.
That was very close to the bottom.
Actually, there's one other element to the story.
So this went on for a few months after I met her.
The other element is that one day I got a call from Neri.
She's like, Bill, guess what?
I'm like, what?
Brad Pitt is coming to the media lab.
He wants to see my work.
I'm like, that's beautiful, sweetheart.
I didn't know Brad Pitt was interested in your work.
As a man, that's a difficult phone call to take. And apparently, he's really interested in architecture.
Okay. Now, Nara and I were like, you know, we would WhatsApp all day, every day.
We talked throughout the day.
Brad Pitt shows up at the Media Lab at 10 o'clock.
I, you know, talked during the morning.
You know, I'd kind of text her to see how things are going.
Don't hear back.
On WhatsApp, you can see whether the other person's read it or not.
No response.
A couple hours later, send her another text.
No response.
6 o'clock.
No response.
8 o'clock.
No response.
10 o'clock.
No response.
And finally calls me at 10.30 and tells me how great.
So I had this scenario.
Okay, I'm going to, a judge is going to find me.
Uh, we're going to lose to the judge.
Uh, all my assets will disappear.
Yeah.
And then Brad Pitt's going to take my girlfriend.
Yeah.
Brad Pitt's your competition.
This is great.
So it was like a moment.
Yeah.
That was sort of the bottom.
And then sort of, you know, the motivational thing.
I didn't want to lose to an activist. Didn't want to lose my girl to some other guy. So.
Brad Pitt and you emerged from all that the winner on all fronts.
I'm a very fortunate guy. Very fortunate and lucky.
You talked about some of the technical aspects of that, but psychologically just, is there
a, like, what are you doing
at night by yourself?
It was a hard time.
A hard time because I was separated from my wife and my kids.
I was living in, you know, not the greatest apartment.
You know, I had a beautiful home and so I had to go find like a bachelor place.
And I was, I didn't want to be away from my kids.
I moved like 10 blocks away and I wasn't seeing them and they didn't like it.
So I ended up buying an apartment I didn't like in the same building as my kids, like
with a different entrance so I could be near them.
And I was home alone.
I got a dog.
That was a babar.
You can call him a babar, not the elephant.
He's a black Labradoodle.
He was supposed to be a mini but he's not the elephant. He's a black labradoodle. He was supposed to be a mini,
but he's not so as many. But I got him at six weeks old and he would keep me company. And I
started meditating actually. And a friend recommended TM and I would meditate 20 minutes in the morning,
20 minutes in the evening. And I also big believer in exercise and weightlifting and I played tennis.
And I had been, this is not my first proximity to disaster.
I had another moment in my career like 2002.
And I learned this method for dealing with these kind of moments, which is you just make
a little progress every day.
So today, I'm going to wake up, I'm going to make progress.
I'll make progress on the litigation, I'll make progress on the portfolio, I'll make
progress with my life, and progress compounds, a bit like money compounds.
You don't see a lot of progress in the first few weeks, but like 30 days in, like, okay, You can't look up the mountaintop where you used to be, because then you'll give up, right?
But you're just okay. Just step by step by step. And then 90 days in, you're like, okay,
I was way down there. Okay, I'm not, okay, I don't look up. Just keep making progress,
progress, progress. And progress really does compound. And one day you wake up and like, wow,
it's amazing how far I've come.
And if you look at a chart of Pershing Square, our company,
you can see the absolute bottom.
You can see where we were.
You can see the drop.
And you can see where we are now.
And that huge drop that felt like a complete unbelievable
disaster looks like a little bump
on the curve. And it really gives you perspective on these things. You just have to power through.
And I think the key is, I've always been fortunate from a mental health point of view,
and nutrition, sleep, exercise, and a little progress every day. That's it. And good friends and family.
I had go take a walk with a friend every night and a sister who loves me and parents who were
supportive. But they were all worried about their son, their brother. It was a moment.
And also, by the way, the other thing to think about is when you recover from something like
this, you really appreciate it.
And also, as much as the media loves when some successful person falls, they love writing
the story of success, they love even more the story of failure, but when you recover
from that, it's kind of like the American story.
America, you think of the great entrepreneurs and how many failures they had before they
succeeded.
How many rocket launches did SpaceX have explode on the pad?
And then you look at success.
I mean, that's why Musk is so admired.
You mentioned Herbalife.
Can you take me through the saga of that?
It's historic.
So we at Pershing Square shorted very few stocks.
And the reason for that is short selling
is just inherently treacherous.
So if you buy a stock, it's called going long.
You're buying something.
Your worst case scenario is you lose your whole investment.
You buy a stock for a hundred because the zero uses $100, right, per share.
You buy one share, you lose 100.
You short a stock at 100, what it means is you borrow the security from someone else.
The analogy I gave that made it easy for people to understand, it's a bit like you think,
you know, silver coins are going to go down in value. And you have a friend who's got a whole pile of these 1880 silver, silver US dollars, and you
think you're going to go down in value. You say, hey, can I borrow, you know, 10 of those dollars
from you? He's like, sure, but what are you going to pay me to borrow? I'll pay you, you know,
I'll pay you interest on your, on the value of the dollars today. So you borrow the dollars that
are worth $100 each today.
You pay them interest while you're borrowing them.
And then you go sell them in the market for $100.
That's what they're worth.
And then they go down in price to 50.
You go back in, you buy the silver dollars back at $50
and you give them back to your friend.
Your friend is complete, fine.
You borrowed 10, you gave them the 10 back
and he got interest in the meantime.
He's happy, he made money on his coin collection.
You however made $50 times the 10 coins.
You made 500 bucks.
That's pretty good.
The problem with that is what if you sell them and they go from 100 to 1,000?
Now you're going to have to go buy them back and you're going to pay whatever, $10,000
to buy back coins that you sold for 500.
You're going to lose $9,500.
And there's no limit to how high a stock price can go.
Companies go to $3 trillion in value.
A lot of people shorted Tesla saying, oh, it's overvalued.
He's never going to be able to make a successful electric car.
Well, I'm sure there are people who went bankrupt shorting Tesla.
That's why we had short stocks.
But I was presented with this actually reporter that covered the other short investment we
made early in the career of a company called MBIA.
It came to me and said, Bill, I found this incredible company.
You got to take a look at it.
It's a total fraud and they're scamming poor people.
We should say that MBIA was a very successful short.
It was.
A big part of it was that we used a different kind of instrument
to short it, where we reversed that sort of,
we made the investment asymmetric in our favor,
meaning put up a small amount of money
if it works, we make a fortune.
Where short selling is you kind of sell something
and you have to buy it back at a higher price.
Herbalife didn't have the, what's called credit default swaps
that you could purchase.
Not a big enough company, didn't
have enough debt outstanding to be able to implement it. You had to short the stock in
order to make it as successful to bet against the company. And the more work I did in the
company, the more I was like, oh my God, this thing's an incredible scam, that they
purport to sell weight loss shakes. But in reality, they're selling kind of a fake business
plan. And the people that adopted lose money and they go after poor people. They go after actually in many cases undocumented
immigrants who are pitched on the American dream opportunity and because they have
few other options because they can't get legal employment, they become herp-life distributors.
And it's a business where you, so-called multi-level
marketing, multi-level marketing is sort of the name for a legitimate company like this,
or it's a pyramid scheme, where basically your sales are really only coming from people who are,
you convince them by the product by getting them into the business. That's precisely what this
company is. And like, okay, shorting a pyramid scheme seems like, one, we'll make a bunch of money,
but two, the world will be behind us because they're harming poor people.
Regulators will get interested in a company like this.
And we thought the FTC is going to shut this thing down.
And we did a ton of work.
And I gave this sort of epic presentation laying out all the facts.
Stalker completely crushed.
And we were on our way.
And the government actually got interested early on, launched an investigation pretty
early, SEC and otherwise.
But then a guy named Carl Icahn showed up.
And we have a little bit of a backstory.
But his motivations, who were not really principally driven by thinking Herbalife was a good company, he thought it was a good way to hurt me.
So he basically bought a bunch of stock and said it was a really great company.
And Carl, at least at the time, threw his weight around a bit.
He was a credible investor, had a lot of resources, and that began the saga. So he was, we should say, a legendary investor himself?
I'd say legendary in a sense, yes, for sure.
An iconic.
Iconic.
Carl Icon.
Oh, that's very well done.
Yeah, so definitely a iconic investor.
So what was the backstory between the two of you?
So I mentioned that I had another period of time
where significant business challenges.
This was my first fund called Gotham Partners,
and we had a court stop a transaction
between some private company we owned in a public company.
It's another long story, if you want to go there.
I would love to hear it as well.
But it was really my deciding to wind up my former fund.
And we owned a big stake in a company called
Hallwood Realty Partners, which was a company
owned real estate assets.
And it was worth a lot more than where it was trading.
But it needed an activist to really unlock the value.
And we were, in fact, going out of business
and didn't have the time or the resources to pursue it.
So I sold it to Carl Icahn.
But and I sold it to him at a premium
to where the stock was trading. I think the stock was like 66. I sold it to him Icahn. And I sold it to him at a premium to where the stock was trading.
I think the stock was like 66.
I sold it to him for 80, but it was worth about 150.
And I said, look, and part of the deal was Carl's like, look, I'll give you Schmuck insurance.
I'll make you sure you don't look bad.
And I had another deal at a higher price without Schmuck insurance, but I deal with Carl at
a lower price with Schmuck insurance.
And the way the Schmuck insurance went, he said, look, Bill, if I sell the stock
in the next three years for a higher price, I'll give you 50% of my profit.
That's a pretty good deal.
So we made that deal.
And because I was dealing with Carl Icahn who had a reputation for being difficult. I was very focused on the agreement and we didn't want him to be able to be cute.
The agreement said, if he sells or otherwise transfers his shares, we came up with a definition
include every version of sale because it's Carl.
He then buys the stake and then makes a bid for the company.
And, you know, the plan is for him to get the company. And he bids like 120 a share.
And the company hires Morgan Stanley to sell itself. And he raises a bid to 125 and 130.
Eventually gets sold, I don't remember the exact price, let's say $145 a share.
price, let's say $145 a share. And Carl's not the winning bidder. And he sells his stock or loses or transfers his shares for $145 a share. So we owe is actually our investors the difference between
$145 and $80 times 50%. And I had like, lawyers never like you to put like an arithmetic example.
I put like a formula, like out of a math book in the documents so there can be no confusion. It was only an eight page really
simple agreement. So the deal closes and he's supposed to pay us in two business days or three
business days. I waited a few business days. No money comes in. I call Carl. I call Carl.
Congratulations on the Hall of Realty. Thanks, Bill.
I just want to remind you, I know it's been a few years,
but we have this agreement.
Remember the Schmuck insurance?
It's like, yeah.
I said, well, you always are Schmuck insurance.
He said, what do you mean?
I didn't sell my shares.
I said, do you still have the shares?
He says, no.
I said, what happened to them?
Well, the company did a merger for cash and they took away my shares, but I didn't sell
them.
You understand what happened?
So I said, I'm going to have to sue you.
Sue me.
I'm going to sue you.
So I sued him and the legal system in America takes, can take some time.
And what he would do is we sued and we won in the, in the whatever,
New York Supreme Court.
Uh, and then he appealed and you can appeal like six months after the case.
We waited to the 179th day and they would appeal.
And then we fought at the next level and then he would appeal.
And he appealed all the way to the Supreme Court.
Of course, the Supreme Court wouldn't take the case.
It took years.
Now, we had, as part of our agreement, we got 9% interest on the money that he owed us.
So I viewed it as my Carl Icahn money market account with a much higher interest rate.
And eventually I won.
What was the amount?
Just tiny.
Now, it was material to my investors. So my first fund, I wound it down, but I wanted to maximize everything for my investors,
right?
These are the people who backed me at 26 years old.
I was right out of business school and no experience, and they supported me, so I'm
going to go to the end of the earth for them.
And 4.5 million relative to our fund at the end was maybe 400 million, so it wasn't a
huge number.
But it was a big percentage of what was left after I sold all our liquid security. So I was fighting for it.
So we got 4.5 million plus interest for eight years or something. That's how long the litigation
took. So we got about double. So he owed me $9 million, which to Carl Icon, who had probably a
$20 billion net worth at the time, this was nothing. But to me, it was like, okay, this is my investor's money.
I'm gonna get it back.
And so, eventually we won.
Eventually he paid and then he called me.
He said, Bill, congratulations.
Now we can be friends and we can do some investing together.
I'm like, Carl, fuck you.
You actually said fuck you?
I'm not that kind of person generally,
but you know, it made eight years to pay me, not me,
even me, my investors money they owed.
So yeah, so he probably didn't like that.
So he kind of hung around in the weeds,
waiting for an opportunity. And then from there, I started purging. We So he kind of hung around in the weeds waiting for an opportunity.
And then from there, I started purging.
We had a kind of straight line up.
We were up in the first 12 years, we could do nothing wrong.
Then Valiant, Herbalife, he sees an opportunity and he buys the stock.
He figures he's going to run me off the road.
And so that was the beginning of that.
And kind of the moment, and I think I'm told by CNBC, it's the most watched segment in
business television history.
They're interviewing me about the Herbalife investment on CNBC, and then Carl Eichon calls
into the show.
And we have kind of an interesting conversation where he calls me all kinds of names and stuff.
So it was a moment.
It was a moment in my life.
It wasn't public information that he was long on herbal life.
He didn't yet disclose he had a stake.
But he was just telling me how stupid I was to be sure at this company.
So for him, it wasn't about the fundamentals of the company.
It was about, it was just personal.
100%. Is there part of you that regrets saying, fuck you on that phone call?
To Carl Icahn. No. I generally have no regrets because I'm very happy with where I am now.
And I feel like, you know, it's a bit's a bit like, you step on the butterfly in the forest
and the world changes because every action has a reaction.
If you're happy with who you are, where you are in life,
every decision you've made, good or bad,
over the course of your life,
got you to precisely where you are.
I wouldn't change anything.
He said you lost money on urban life.
So what, so he did the long-term battle.
What he did is he got on the board of the company and used the company's financial resources
plus his stake in the business to squeeze us.
And a squeeze in short selling is where you restrict the supply of the securities.
So that there's a scarcity and then you encourage people to buy the stock and you drive the
stock up.
And as I explained before, you short those coins at 10, they go to 100.
You can lose theoretically an unlimited amount of money.
That's scary.
That's why we don't short stocks.
That's why I didn't short stocks before this.
But this was, unfortunately, I had to have the personal lesson.
So how much was for him personal versus part of the game of investing?
Well, he thought he could make money doing this.
He wouldn't have done it if he had otherwise.
He thought his bully pulpit, his ability to create a short squeeze, his control over the
company would enable him to achieve this.
And he made a billion, we lost a billion.
So, you think it was a financial decision or not a personal?
It was a personal decision to pursue it, but he was waiting for an opportunity where he
could make money at our expense and was kind of a brilliant opportunity for him.
Now the irony is, well, first of all, the FTC found a few interesting facts.
So one, the government launched an investigation.
They ended up settling with the company and the company paid $220 million in fines.
I met a professor from Berkeley a couple years ago
who told me that he had been hired by the government as their expert on Herbalife,
and he got access to all their data, was able to prove that they're a pyramid scheme,
but the government ultimately settled with Carl because they were afraid they could,
you know, they could possibly lose in court, so they settled with him.
But if you look at the stock, if we'd been able to stay short the entire time, we would have made
a bunch of money because the stock had a $6 billion market cap and we shorted it today,
it's probably a billion, a billion and a half. So you left the short-posit or whatever that's
called? Covered. We closed it out. Yeah. We sold Valiant, we covered Herbalife. That was the resetting moment for the firm
because it would just psychologically,
and the beauty of investing is you don't need to make it back
the way you lost it, right?
You can just take your loss,
whether losses are valuable and that the government allows you
to take a tax loss and that can shelter other gains.
And we just refocused.
Can you say one thing you really like about Carl Icahn and one thing you really don't
like about him?
Sure.
He's a very charming guy.
In the midst of all this, the Hollywood one, he took me out for dinner to his favorite
Italian restaurant.
Really?
Yeah.
We're in the middle of the litigation to see if he could resolve it.
He offered 10 million to my favorite charity.
The problem was that it wasn't my money, it was my investors money, so I couldn't settle with him on that basis.
But, you know, I had the chance to spend real time with him at dinner.
He's funny.
He's charismatic.
He's got incredible stories.
And, you know, actually I made peace with him over time.
We had a little hug out on CNBC, even had him to my house, believe it or not.
I hosted something called the Finance Cup, which is a tennis tournament between people
in finance in Europe and the US.
And we had the event at my house.
One guy thought to invite Carl Icahn.
And so we had Carl Icahn there to present awards. And again, I have to say, I kind of like the guy.
But I didn't like him much during this.
Is there, because at least from the outside of perspective, there's a bit of a personal
vengeance here or anger can build up.
Do you ever worry the personal attacks
between powerful investors can cloud your judgment
or what is the right financial decision?
I think it's possible,
but again, I try to be extremely economically rational.
And actually the last seven years been quite peaceful.
I really have not been an activist in the old form
for many years.
And the vast majority of even our activist investments historically were very polite
at respectful cases.
The press, of course, focuses on the more interesting ones.
Like Chipotle was one of the best investments we ever made.
We got four of eight board seats and we worked with management.
It was a great outcome. I don't think there's never been a story about it.
The stocks up almost 10 times from the time we hired Brian Nicholas, CEO, but it's not
interesting because there was no battle.
Whereas Herbalife, of course, was like an epic battle, even Canadian Pacific.
For a period there, most people when they meet me in person, they're like, wow, you
seem like a really nice guy.
But I thought, you know, so, but things have been pretty calm for the last seven years.
Of course, there's more than just investing that your life is about, especially recently.
Let me just ask you about what's going on in the world first. What was your reaction and what is your reaction
and thoughts with respect to the October 7th attacks by Hamas on Israel?
You know, it's a sad world that we live in that one, we have terrorists and two, that
we could have such barbaric terrorism. And yeah, just a reminder of that.
So there's several things I can ask here first
on your views on the prospects of the Middle East,
but also on the reaction to this war
in the United States, especially on university campuses.
So first let me just ask,
you've said that you're pro-Palestinian.
Can you explain what you mean by that?
You know, with all of my posts about Israel, I'm obviously very supportive of the country of Israel,
Israel's right to exist, Israel's right to defend itself. My Arab friends, my Palestinian friends,
you know, we're kind of saying, hey Bill, where are you? What about Palestinian
lives? And I was pretty early in my life, the guy named Marty Parrots who's been important
to me over the course of my life, a professor or a first investor in my fund introduced
me to Neri, asked me when I was right out of school to join this nonprofit called the
Jerusalem Foundation, which was a charitable foundation
that supported Teddy Collich when he was mayor of Jerusalem. I ended up becoming the youngest
chairman of the Jerusalem Foundation in my 30s and I spent some time in Israel. And the early
philanthropic stuff I did with the Jerusalem Foundation, the thing I was most interested in
was kind of the Palestinian, the plight of the Palestinians and kind of peaceful coexistence.
And so I had kind of an early kind of perspective and as chairman of the Jerusalem Foundation,
I would go into Arab communities and I would meet the families in their homes.
You know, you get a sense of the humanity of a people and I care about humanity.
I generally take the side of people who've been disadvantaged.
Almost all of our philanthropic work has been in that capacity. So, it's sort of my natural
perspective. But I don't take the side of terrorists ever, obviously. And the whole thing is just a
tragedy. So, to you, this is about Hamas, not about Palestine?
Yes.
I mean, the problem, of course, is when Hamas controls, for the last almost 20 years, has
controlled Gaza, including the education system, they're educating.
You see these training videos of kindergarteners indoctrinating them into hating Jews and Israel.
Of course, you don't like to see Palestinians celebrating some of those early videos of
October 7th with dead bodies in the back of trucks and people cheering. It's a really unfortunate
situation. But I think about, you know, a
Palestinian life is important and as valuable as a Jewish life, as an American life. And,
you know, what do people really want? They want a place, they want a home, they want
to be able to feed their family, they want a job that generates the resources to feed
their family, they want their kids to have a better life than they've had.
They want peace.
I think these are basic human things.
I'm sure the vast majority of Palestinians share these views, but it's such an embedded
situation with hatred and, as I say, indoctrination.
And then going back to incentives. Terrorists generate their resources
by committing terrorism, and that's how they get funding. And that's, there's a lot of graft.
It's a plutocracy, right? The top of the terrorist pyramid, if you accept the numbers that are in
the press, the top leaders have billions of dollars, 40 billion or so has gone into Gaza over the
last and the West Bank over the last 30 years, a number like that.
And a lot of it's disappeared into some combination of corruption or tunnels or weapons.
And the tragedy is, you look at what Singapore has achieved in the last 30 years.
Right? You know, you look at what Singapore has achieved in the last 30 years, right? Do you think that's still possible if we look into the future of 10, 20, 50 years from now?
Absolutely.
So not just peace, but...
Peace comes with prosperity.
You know, people are, you know, under the leadership of terrorists.
You're not going to have prosperity and you're not going to peace. And I think the Israelis withdrew in 2005 and fairly quickly Hamas took control of the situation.
That should never have been allowed to happen. And I think if you think about, I had the opportunity
to spend what I'd call it an hour with Henry Kissinger a few months before he passed away.
called an hour with Henry Kissinger a few months before he passed away. We were talking about
Gaza or in the early stage of the war. He said, look, you know, this is not,
you can think about Gaza as a test of a two-state solution. It's not looking good. These were his words. So the next time around, you know, the Palestinian people should have their own state, but it can't be a
state where 40 billion resources goes in and is spent on weaponry and missiles and rockets going
into Israel. And I do think a consortium of the Gulf states, the Saudis and others,
have to ultimately oversee the governance of this region.
If I think, if that can happen, I think you can have peace, you can have prosperity and
you know, I'm fundamentally an optimist.
So coalition of governance.
Governance matters, you know, going back to what we talked about before.
And you know, that kind of approach can give the people a chance to flourish.
100%.
I mean, look at what Dubai has accomplished with nomads in the desert, right?
And that's become a major...
It's a tourist destination.
Gaza could have been a tourist destination.
Take me through the saga of university presidents,
testifying on this topic,
on the topic of protests on college campuses,
protests that call for the genocide of Jewish people
and the university presidents,
maybe you could describe it more precisely,
but they fail to denounce the calls for genocide.
So it begins on October 8th, probably.
And you can do a compare and contrast with how Dartmouth managed the events of October
7th and the aftermath and how Harvard did. And October 8th or shortly
thereafter, the Dartmouth president who had been in her job for precisely the same number
of months that the Harvard president had been in her job. The first thing she did is she got the
most important professors of Middle East studies who were Arab and who were Jews and convened them and held an open
session, Q&A for students to talk about what's going on in the Middle East and began an opportunity
for common understanding among the student body.
Dartmouth has been a relatively benign environment on this issue.
And students are able to do work.
And there aren't disruptive protests with people with bullhorns
walking into classrooms interfering with, you know,
people pay today $82,000 a year, which itself is crazy,
to go to Harvard.
But imagine your family borrows the money,
or you borrow the money as a student,
and your learning is disrupted
by constant protest and the university does nothing. When George Floyd died, the Harvard
president wrote a very strong letter denouncing what had taken place and calling this an important
moment in American history and took it incredibly seriously. Her first letter about October 7th was not
that. Let's put it that way. And then her second letter was not that. And then ultimately,
she was sort of forced by the board or the pressure to make a more public statement.
But it was clear that it was hard for her to come to an understanding of this terrorist act.
And then the protestor erupted on campus and they started out reasonably benign.
And then the protestors got more and more aggressive in terms of violating university
rules on things like bullying and the university did nothing.
And that obviously for the Jewish students, the Israeli students, the Israeli faculty,
Jewish faculty created an incredibly uncomfortable environment.
And the president seemed indifferent.
And I went up to campus and I met with hundreds of students in small groups and larger groups.
And they're like, Bill, why is the president doing nothing?
Why is the administration doing nothing?
And that was really the beginning. And that, you know, I reached out to the president, reached out to the board of Harvard. I said,
look, this thing is heading the wrong direction, and you need to fix it. And I have some ideas,
love to share. And I got the Heisman, as they say, you know, they just kept pushing off the opportunity for me to meet with the president and
meet with the board and
certain point in time I pushed, you know, I'm kind of a
Activist when you push me it reminded me of you know, early days of activism where I couldn't get the CEO of Wendy's to return my call
I couldn't get the CEO of Harvard to take a meeting.
And then finally, I spoke to the chairman of the board, a woman by the name of Penny Pritzker,
who I knew from on a business school board with her. And it was, as I described, one
of the more disappointing conversations of my life. And it did not seem, she seemed a
bit like, if you will, dear in the headlights, They couldn't do this. They couldn't do that.
The law was preventing them from doing various things.
And that led to my first pledge to the university.
And I sort of ended the letter sort of giving this,
President of Harvard, a dare to be great speech.
This is your opportunity.
You can fix this.
This could be your legacy. And I sent it to the, emailed it to the president
and the board members whose email address is ahead. I posted it on Twitter. I got no response,
no acknowledgement, nothing. And in fact, the open dialogue I had with a couple of people on
the board basically got shut down after that. And that led to letter number two. And then when the Congress, led by Lee Stefanik,
announced an investigation of anti-Semitism on campus and concern about violations of law,
the president was called to testify along with two other, the president of MIT,
The president was called to testify along with two other, you know, the president of MIT, you know, the president of University of Pennsylvania, who were having similar issues on campus. I
reached out to the president of Harvard and said, well, one, the Israeli government had gotten
in touch and offered the opportunity for me to see the Hamas, if you will, GoPro film. And I said,
you know what, I'd love to show it at Harvard and they thought that would be a great idea.
And so I partnered with the head of Harvard Hubbard,
guy named Rabbi Hershey.
And we were putting the film up on campus
and I thought, you know, if the president were to see this,
it would give her a lot of perspective on what happened
and she should see it before her testimony.
And so I reached out to her,
where actually Rabbi Hershey did and he was told she would be out of town
and couldn't see it. And then I reached out to her again, said, look, I'll facilitate your
attendance in the Congress. Come see the film, I'll fly you down. That was rejected. And then
she testified. And I watched a good percentage, 80% of the
testimony of all three presidents, and it was an embarrassment to the country, embarrassment
to the universities. They were evasive, they didn't answer questions, they were rude, they
smirked, they looked very disrespectful to our Congress. And then of course, there was that several minutes where
finally at least DeFonic was not getting answers to her questions. And she said,
let me be kind of clear. What if protesters were calling for genocide for the Jews? Does that
violate your rules on bullying and harassment? And the three of them basically gave the same answer. You know, it depends on the context and not until they actually executed on the genocide
that the university have the right to intervene. And the thing that perhaps bothered me the most
was the incredible hypocrisy. You know, Harvard was, you know, each of these universities are
ranked by this entity called FIRE, which is a nonprofit that focuses on free speech on campus.
And Harvard has been in the bottom quartile for the last five years and dropped to last
before October 7th out of like 250.
I should mention briefly that I've interviewed on this podcast the founder of FIRE and the
current head of FIRE.
We discussed this at length, including running for the board of Harvard and the whole
procedure of all that.
It's quite a fascinating investigation of free speech for people who care about free
speech absolutism.
That's a good episode to listen to because those folks kind of fight for this idea.
It's a difficult idea actually to internalize.
What does free speech and college campuses
look like?
Robert Leonard Harvard has become a place where free speech is not tolerated on campus
or at least free speech that's not part of the accepted dialogue or, you know, this whole
notion of speech codes and microaggressions really emerged on the elite, you know, the
Harvard Yale campuses of the world. And the president of Harvard's explanation
for why you could call for the genocide of the Jewish people
on campus was Harvard's commitment to free expression.
And one of the more hypocritical statements of all time.
And you really can't have it both ways.
Either Harvard has to be a place where it's a free speech.
She basically said we're a free speech absolutist place, which is why
we have to allow this. And Harvard could not be further from that. And so that was a big
part of it. And I was in the barber chair, if you will, getting haircut. And I had a
guy on my team send me the three minute section. I said, cut that line of questioning.
And I put out a little tweet on that.
And it's called My Greatest Hits of Post.
It's got something like 110 million views.
And everyone looked at this and said,
what is wrong with university campuses and their leadership and their governance.
By the way, in a way, this whole conversation has been about governance.
Harvard has a disastrous governance structure, which is why we have the problem we have.
And just to linger on the testimony, you mentioned smirks and this kind of stuff, and you mentioned
Dare to be Great.
I myself am kind of a sucker for great leadership.
And those moments that you mentioned Churchill or so on,
even great speeches.
People talk down on speeches like it's maybe just words,
but I think speeches can define a culture
and define a place, define a people that can inspire. And I think actually
the testimony before Congress could have been an opportunity to redefine what Harvard is,
dare to be great for, dare to be a great leader.
President Harvard had a huge opportunity because she went third, right? The first two gave the
world's most disastrous answers to the question.
And she literally just copied their answer, which is itself, you know, kind of ironic
in light of ultimately what happened.
It's tough because you can get busy as a president, as a leader, and so on. There's
these meetings. And so you think Congress, maybe you're smirking at the ridiculousness of the meeting you need to remember
that
Many of these are opportunities to like give a speech of a lifetime
Sure, like that if there is principles with which you want to see a
Institution become and embody in the next several decades
there's opportunities to do that and you as a great leader also need to have a sense of when is the opportunity to do that.
And October 7th really woke up the world on all sides, honestly.
Like there is serious issue going on here.
And then the protests woke up the university.
There's a serious issue going on here.
It's an opportunity to speak on free speech
and on genocide, both.
Yes.
Do you see the criticism that you are a billionaire donor
and you sort of used your power and financial influence
unfairly to affect the governing structure of Harvard in this case.
First of all, I never threatened to use
financial or other resources.
The only thing I did here was I wrote public letters.
I spoke privately to a couple members of the board.
I spoke for 45 minutes to the chairman.
None of those conversations were effective or went anywhere
as far as I could tell.
I think my public letters and then some of the posts I did
and that little three minute video excerpt had an impact.
But it wasn't about, I mean, you can criticize me
for being a billionaire, but that had, you know,
it was really the words.
It's a bit like, again, going back to the corporate analogy.
It's not the fact that you own 5% of the company that causes people to vote in your favor. It's the fact that your ideas are right. And I think, you know, I was disappointed
after the congressional testimony, the board of Harvard said that they were 100% behind, unanimously
100% behind President Gay. And so clearly, I was ineffective. And ultimately what took her down
was other, I would say, activists who identified issues with academic integrity,
and then she lost the confidence of the faculty. And once that happens, it's hard to stay. And I
wanted her to be fired basically or be forced to resign because of failures of leadership,
because that would have sent a message about the importance of leadership, failure to stop
an emergence of anti-Semitism on campus.
And there's some news today, the protests are getting worse.
Is there some tension between free speech on college campuses and disciplining students
for calls of genocide?
Yes, there's certainly attention. I think, first of all, I think free speech is incredibly important and I'm on the side.
I'm a lot closer to absolutism on free speech than otherwise.
The issue I had was the hypocrisy.
They were restricting other kinds of speech on campus, principally conservative speech,
conservative views.
It wasn't a free speech absolutist campus.
And the protests were actually quite threatening to students.
And there are limits to even absolutist free speech.
And they begin where people feel,
intimidation, harassment, and threat to bodily harm,
et cetera, that kind of speech is generally, I think again, pretty
technical, but is people feel like they're in imminent harm by virtue of the protest.
That speech is at risk of not meeting the standards for free speech.
But Harvard is a private corporation.
And as a private corporation, they can put on what restrictions they want.
And Harvard had introduced only a few months before bullying and harassment policies.
And that's why Representative Stefanik focused on, it's not like she said, it's calling
for genocide against the Jews, violate your free speech policies.
She says it's calling for genocide against the Jews, violate your policies on bullying
and harassment.
And I think everyone looked at this when they said, depends on the context, and they said,
look, if you replace Jews with some other ethnic group, students have been, who've used
the N word, for example, have been thrown off campus or suspended. Students who've
hate speech directed at LGBTQ people has led to disciplinary action. But attacking,
spitting on Jewish students or kind of roughing them up a bit, seemed like we're calling for their
elimination, didn't seem to violate the policies.
So it's, look, I think a university should be a place where you have broad views and
open viewpoints and broad discussion.
But it should also be a place where students don't feel threatened going to class, where
their learning is not interrupted, when final exams are not interrupted by people coming in and
with loud protest.
Students ask me when I went up there, what would you do if you were a Harvard president?
I said, this was before I knew what was happening on the Dartmouth campus.
I said, I would convene everyone together.
This is Harvard.
We have access to the best minds in the world.
Let's have a better understanding of the history.
Let's understand the backdrop.
Let's focus on solutions. Let's bring Arab and Jewish and Israeli students together. Let's form
groups to create communication. That's how you solve this kind of problem.
And none of that stuff has been done. It's not that hard.
Jared Ranere Do you think this reveals a deeper problem
in terms of ideology and the governance of Harvard in the, maybe the culture of Harvard?
Yes. So on governance, the governance structure is a disaster. So the way it works today is
Harvard has two principal boards. There's the board of the corporation, the so-called fellows
of Harvard. It's a board of, I think, 12 independent directors and the president. There's no shareholder
vote. There's no proxy system. It's really a self-perpetuating board that effectively
elects its own members. So once it becomes, once the balance tips politically one way
or another, it can be kept that way forever. There's no kind of rebalancing system.
You know, if a U.S. corporation goes off the rails, so to speak, the shareholders can get
together and vote off the directors. There's no ability to vote off the directors. Then there's
the board of overseers, which is, I think, 32 directors. And there, a few years ago,
if you could put together 600 signatures, you could run for that board and put up a bunch of
candidates and about five or six get elected each year.
And a group did exactly that, and it was an oil and gas kind of disinvestment group.
They got the signatures, a couple of them got elected, and Harvard then changed the
rules.
And they said, now we need 3,200 signatures.
And by the way, if there are these disincent directors on the board, we're only going to
cap them at five.
So if three were elected in the oil and gas thing, now there are only two seats available.
And then a group of former students, kind of younger alums, one of whom I knew, approached
me and said, look, Bill, we should run for the board.
And they decided it's pretty late, only a few weeks before. The signatures were due.
And they loved your support.
I took a look at their platform.
I thought it looked great.
I said, look, happy to support.
And I posted about them, did a Zoom with them.
And they got thousands of signatures.
Collectively, the four got whatever,
12,000 signatures or something like this.
And they missed by about 10% the threshold.
What did Harvard do in the middle of the election?
They made it very, very difficult to sign up for a vote,
and it just makes them look terrible.
And they've got now thousands of alums upset that,
and again, this wasn't an election.
It was just to put the names on the slate.
So the only candidates on the slate
are the ones selected by the existing members.
And so it's businesses fail because of governance failures. Universities fail because of governance
failures. It's not really the president's fault because the job of the board is to
fire, hire and fire the president and help guide the institution academically and otherwise.
So that's governance.
An ideology, I was like, how can this be?
October 7th, the event that woke me up was 30 student organizations came out with a public
letter on October 8th, literally the morning after this letter was created and said, Israel
is solely responsible for Hamas's violent acts.
Again, Israel had not even mounted a defense at this point and there were still terrorists running around
in the southern part of Israel.
And I'm like, Harvard students,
you know, 34 Harvard student organizations signed this letter
and I'm like, what is going on?
You know, WTF, right?
And that's when I went up on campus this letter and like what is going on, you know, WTF, right?
And that's when I went up on campus and I started talking to the faculty
and that's when I started hearing about actually builds,
it's this DEI ideology.
Am I, what?
Like diversity, equity, inclusion, you know,
I obviously am familiar with these words
and, you know, I see this in the corporate context.
They say, yeah, and they started talking to me about this oppressor oppressed
framework, which is effectively taught on campus and represents the backdrop for
many of the courses that are offered and, and the various, some of the studies and
other degree offerings.
I'm like, I had not even heard of
this. And, you know, I'm a pretty aware person, but I was completely unaware. And basically,
they're like, look, Israel is deemed an oppressor, and the Palestinians are deemed the oppressed.
And you take the side of the oppressed and any acts of the oppressed to dislodge the oppressor
oppressed and any acts of the oppressed to dislodge the oppressor regardless of how vile or barbaric are okay.
I'm like, okay, this is a super dangerous ideology.
And so I wrote a like questioning post about this.
I'm like, here's what I'm hearing.
Is this right?
Then I had someone, a friend of mine sent me a Christopher Rufus book, America's Cultural Revolution,
which is sort of a sociological study of the origins of the DEI movement and critical race
theory. And I found it actually one of the more important books I've read and also I
found it quite concerning. And really, it's sort of a ultimately DEI comes out of a kind of a Marxist socialist
backdrop way to look at the world. And so I think there are a lot of issues with it, but
unfortunately, it's advancing, like ultimately concluded, racism as opposed to fighting it,
which is what I thought it was ultimately about.
So maybe you can speak to that book a little bit.
So there's a history that traces back across decades and then that infiltrated college
campuses.
So basically, what Rufo argues is that the Black Power movement of the 60s really failed.
It was a very violent movement and many of the protagonists ended
up in jail. And out of that movement, a number of kind of thought leaders, this guy named
Mark Hughes and others built this framework, kind of an approach. Say, look, if we're gonna
be successful, it can't be a violent movement. number one. And number two, we need to infiltrate, if you will, the universities. And we need to
become part of the faculty. And we need to teach the students. And then once we take over the
universities with this ideology, then we can go into government. And then we can go into
corporations. And we can change the world. So I thought an important book and the more I dug in, the more I felt there was credibility
to this, not just the kind of sociological backdrop, but to what it meant on campus.
And Harvard faculty were telling me that there really is no such thing as free speech on
campus and that there was a survey done
on a year or so ago of the Harvard faculty
and only 2% of the faculty admitted,
even in an anonymous survey,
admitted to being having a conservative point of view.
So we have a campus that's 98% non-conservative,
liberal progressive,
that's adopted this DEI construct.
And this, and that I learned from a member of the search committee for the Harvard president that they
were restricted in looking at candidates, only those who met the DEI offices criteria.
And I shared this in one of my postings and I was accused of being a racist. exist. And that's someone who believes in diversity is a very good thing for organizations.
And that equity and fairness isn't really important. And having an inclusive culture
is critical for a functioning of an organization. So here I was, someone who was like, okay,
DI sounds good to me, at least in the small D, small E, I version of events,
but this DEI ideology is really problematic.
So what's the way to fix this in the next few years, the infiltration of DEI with the
uppercase version of universities and the things that have troubled you,
the things you saw at Harvard and elsewhere. Jared Ranere The same way this was an eye-opening event for me,
it has been for a very broad range of other people. I've never gotten,
I mentioned general growth, I got a lot of nice letters from people for making money on a stock
that went up 100 times. But I literally get hundreds of emails, letters, texts, handwritten letters, type letters
from people the ages of 25 to 85 saying, Bill, this is so important.
Thanks for speaking out on this.
You were saying what so many of us believe but have been afraid to say.
I described it as almost a McCarthy-esque kind of movement and that if you challenge
the DEI
construct, people accuse you of being racist.
It's happened to me already.
I'm perhaps a much less vulnerable than a university professor who can get shouted off
campus, canceled.
I'm sort of difficult to cancel, but that doesn't mean people aren't going to try. And I've been the victim of
a couple of interesting articles in the last few days, or at least one in particular in
The Washington Post, written by what I thought was a well-meaning reporter. But it's just
clear that I've taken on some big parts of at least the progressive establishment, DEI.
I'm also a believer that Biden should have stepped aside
a long time ago and it's only getting worse.
So I'm attacking the president, DEI,
elite universities, and you make some enemies doing that.
But I should say, I'm still at MIT and I love MIT
and I believe in the power of great universities
to explore ideas, to inspire young people to think, to inspire young people to lead.
CB Let me ask, okay, how can you explore how to think when you're only shared a certain point of view, right?
How can you learn about leadership
when the governance and leadership of the institution
is broken and exposure to ideas?
If you're limited in the ideas that you're exposed to.
So I think universities at risk,
I mean, the concerning thing, right,
is if 34 student organizations that each have,
I don't know, 30 members or maybe more, right,
that's a thousand, okay? That's a meaningful percentage of the campus, perhaps, that ultimately
respond. Now, 10 or so, the 30 withdrew the statement once many of the members realized
what they had written. So I don't think it seems like the statement was signed by the
leadership and not necessarily supported by all the various students that were members. But if the university teaches people these precepts, this is the
next generation of leaders. Normally, if you think about, I wrote my college thesis on
university admissions, the reason why controlling the gates of the Harvard institution, the
admissions office is important, isn't
that many of these people who graduate end up with, you know, the top jobs in government
and ultimately become judges. They're, you know, permeate through society. And so it
really matters what they learn. And if they're limited to one side of the political aisle and they're not open to a broad array of views
and this represents some of the most elite institutions
in our country.
I think it's very problematic for the country long-term.
Yeah, 100% agree.
And I also felt like the leadership
wasn't even part of the problem
as much as they were almost out of touch, like, unaware
that this is an important moment, it's an important crisis, it's an important opportunity
to step up as a leader and define the future of an institution.
So, I don't even know where the source of the problem is, it could be literally
government structure as
we've been talking about.
Well, it's two things. I think it's governance structure. I also think universities are selecting,
they're not selecting leaders.
Yeah.
You know, it's not clear to me that university should necessarily be run by academics, right? You know, the, the, the dean of a university,
you know, the person who helps,
the sort of the business of the university, right? And then there's the academics of the
university and having a, I would argue having a business leader run these institutions,
and then having a board that's involved, a board that has
itself diverse viewpoints and by the way permanently structured to have diverse viewpoints is a
much better way to run a university than picking an academic that the faculty supports because,
you know, one of the things I learned about how faculty get hired at universities, ultimately signed off by the board.
But the new faculty are chosen by each of the various departments.
Once the departments tip, there's sort of a tipping point politically where once they
tip in one direction, the faculty recruit more people like themselves.
And so the department's going more and more progressive, if you will, with the
passage of time. And they only advance candidates that match their political objectives. It's not
a great way to build an institution which allows for... Small D diversity.
...diversity. And diversity, by the way, is not just race and gender.
And that's also something I feel very strongly about.
Well, luckily, engineering robotics is touched last by this.
It is touched, but, you know, when I'm at the computing building, Stata and the new
one, politics doesn't infiltrate or I haven't seen it infiltrate quite as deeply as elsewhere.
But it's in the biology department at Harvard because in the biology is controversial now.
Yes. Yes.
Because biology and gender, there are faculty, there's a woman at Harvard who was
limited canceled from the faculty as a member. I think she was at the med school
and she made the argument that there are basically,
you know, two genders determined by biology. She wasn't allowed to stay. That's another
topic for another time.
That's a topic.
You should do a show on that one. That would be an interesting one.
So as you said, technically Claudine Gay, the president of Harvard, resigned over plagiarism, not over
the thing that you were initially troubled by.
It's hard to really know, right?
It's not like a provable fact.
I would say at a certain point in time, she lost the confidence of the faculty, and that
was ultimately the catalyst.
And whether that was, how much of that was the plagiarism issue, and how much of that
was some of the things that preceded it, or was it all of these issues in their entirety?
We don't really...
There's no way to do a calculus.
Can you explain the nature of this plagiarism from what you remember?
So Aaron Seberium and Christopher Rufo, one from the Free Beacon, and Chris surfaced some
allegations on or identified some plagiarism issues that I would say the initial examples were use of the
same words with proper attribution, some missing footnotes. And then over time, with I guess more
digging, they released, I think ultimately something like 76 examples of what they call plagiarism in 8 of 11 of her articles.
And one of the other things that came forth here is as president of the university, she
had sort of the thinnest transcript academically of any previous president, very relatively
small body of work. And then when you couple that with the amount of plagiarism that was
pervasive. And then I guess some of the other examples that surface were not missing quotation marks
where the authors of the work felt that their ideas had been stolen. And really plagiarism
is academic fraud. There's their indicia, one indicia plagiarism is a missing footnote.
That could also be a clerical error. And so when a professor's
accused of plagiarism, the university does a deep dive. They have these administrative
boards and it can take six months, nine months, a year to evaluate intent matters. Was this
intentional theft of another person's idea? That's academic fraud, or was this sloppy, you missed or just humanity,
right? You miss a footnote here or there. And I think once it got to a place where people felt
it was theft of someone else's intellectual property, that's when it became intolerable
for her to stay as president of Harvard. So is there a spectrum for you between
for her to stay as president of Harvard. So is there a spectrum for you
between the different kinds of plagiarism,
maybe plagiarizing words and plagiarizing ideas
and plagiarizing novel ideas?
Of course.
The common understanding of plagiarism,
if you look in the dictionary, it's about theft.
The theft requires a intent. Did the person intentionally take someone else's
ideas or words? Now, if you're writing a novel, words matter more. If you're taking Shakespeare
and presenting it as your own words. If you're writing about ideas, ideas matter, but you're not supposed to take someone else's words
without properly acknowledging them, whether it's quotation marks or otherwise. But in the context
of an academic's life's work before AI, everyone's going to have missing quotation marks and footnotes.
I remember writing my own thesis. You know, I would take
books you couldn't take out of Widener Library, so I'd have index cards and I'd write stuff
on index cards and I'd put a little citation to make sure I remember to cite it properly.
And you know, scrambling to do your thesis, get it in on time, what's the chances you
forget at what point, what are your words versus the author's words and you forget to put quotation marks?
Just the humanity, the human fallibility of it.
So you don't get, it's not academic fraud to have human fallibility, but it's academic
fraud if you take someone else's ideas that are an integral part of your work.
Is there a part of you that regrets that, at least from the perception of it, the President
of Harvard stepped down over plagiarism versus over refusing to say that the calls for genocide
are wrong?
Again, I think it would have sent a better message if a leader fails as a leader and that's the reason for their resignation or dismissal,
then she gets, if you will, caught on a technical violation that had nothing to do with failed
leadership because I don't know what lesson that teaches the board about selecting the
next candidate.
I mean, the future of Harvard, a lot of it's going to depend on who they pick as the next
leader. Here's an interesting anecdote that I think is not surfaced publicly. So a guy
named Larry Bakow was the previous president of Harvard. Larry Bakow was on the search committee
and they were looking for a new president. And what was strange was they picked an old white guy to be president of
Harvard when there was a call for a more diverse president. And what I learned was Harvard actually
ran a process, had a diverse new president of Harvard, and in the due diligence on that
candidate shortly before the announcement of the new president, they found out that presidential candidate had a plagiarism problem.
And the search had gone on long enough they couldn't restart a search to find another candidate.
So they picked Larry Backo off the board,
off the search committee, to be next president of Harvard as kind of an interim solution.
And then there was that much more pressure
to have a more diverse
candidate this time around because there was a big disappointment to the DEI office, if you will,
and I would say to the community at large, that the Harvard of all places couldn't have a racially
diverse present. It's an important message. So the strange thing is that they didn't do due diligence on President Gay and that
it was a relatively quick process.
So the whole thing, I think, is worthy of further exploration.
So, this goes deeper than just the president?
Yes, for sure.
When a company fails, most people blame the CEO.
I generally blame the board, right?
Because the board's job is to make sure the right person's
running the company.
And if they're failing, help the person.
If they can't help the person, make a change.
That's not what's happened here.
The board's hand was sort of forced from the outside,
whereas they should have made their own decision
from the inside.
You still love Harvard?
Sure.
It's a 400 odd year institution.
It's enormously helpful to me in my life, I'm sure.
My sister also went to Harvard and the experiences,
learnings, friendships, relationships.
Again, I'm very happy with my life.
Harvard was an important part of my life.
I went there for both undergrad and business school.
I learned a ton, met a lot of faculty,
a lot from a number of my closest friends,
so I still really keep in touch with high mid then.
So yeah, it's a great place, but it needs a reboot.
Yeah, I still have hope.
I think universities are really important institutions.
You know, when I went to Harvard, there were 1,600 people in my class.
I think today's class is about the same size.
And their online education really has not sort of taken off, right?
So I heard Peter Teal speak at one point in time.
And he's like, what great institution do you know
that's truly great that hasn't grown in 100 years? And the incentives in some sense of the
alums are for it, it's a bit like a club. If you're proud of the elitism of the club, you don't
want any new members, but the fact that the population has grown of the country. So significantly, since certainly I was a student in 1984, and
the fact that Harvard recruits people from all over the world, it's really serving a
smaller and smaller percentage of the population today. And some of them are most talented
and successful entrepreneurs anyway. It's a token of success that they
didn't make it through their undergraduate years. They left as a freshman or they didn't
attend at all.
For entrepreneurs, yes, but it's still a place.
Very important for research, very important for advancing ideas and yes, in shaping dialogue and the next generation of Supreme Court justices
and members of government, politicians.
So yes, it's critically important, but it's not doing the job it should be doing.
Nari Auxman, somebody you mentioned several times throughout this podcast.
Somebody I had a wonderful conversation with, a French with, I've known, looked up to her,
admired her, has been a fan.
I've been a fan of hers for a long time, for work, and of hers a human being.
Looks like you're a fan of hers as well.
Yes.
What do you love about Neri?
What do you admire about her as a scientist, artist, human being?
I think she's the most beautiful person I've ever met.
And I mean that from like the center of her soul.
She's the most caring, warm, considerate, thoughtful person I've ever met and
And she couples those remarkable qualities with brilliance incredible creativity beauty
elegance grace
Yeah, I'm talking about my wife
But I'm talking incredibly dispassionately
But I mean what I say. She's the most remarkable person I've ever met.
And I've met a lot of remarkable people.
And I'm incredibly fortunate to spend a very high percentage
of my lifetime with her ever since I met her,
six years ago.
So she's been a help to you through some
of the rough moments you describe sure
I mean I met her at the bottom
Which is not a bad place to meet someone if it works out
Is there some degree of yin and yang with the two personalities you have you have described yourself as
Emotional and so on but it does seem the two of you have slightly different styles
about how you approach the world.
Sure.
Well, interestingly, we have a lot of like, we come from very similar places in the world.
There are times where you feel like we've known each other for centuries.
I met her parents for the first time a long time ago, almost six years ago as well.
And I knew her parents were from Eastern Europe originally.
So I asked her father what city
that her family come from originally.
And I called my father and asked him,
dad, what's grandpa Abraham?
Where's he from?
What's the name of the city?
And then I put the two cities into Google Maps
and they were 52 miles apart.
Which I thought was pretty cool. Then of course, at some point we did genetic testing.
Make sure we weren't related, which we were not. But we share incredible commonality on
values. We are attracted to the same kind of people. You know, she loves my friends, I love hers.
We love doing the same kind of things.
We're attracted to, you know,
we like spending time the same ways.
And she has, yeah, it's more emotion, more elegance.
She doesn't like battles, but she's very strong,
but she's more sensitive than I am. Yeah, you are constantly in multiple battles at the same time, and there's often the media,
social media, it's just fire everywhere.
You know, that hasn't really been the case for a while.
I've had relative peace for a long time because as
I stopped being, as I haven't had to be the kind of activist I was earlier in my career,
I think since October 7th, yes, I do feel like I've been in a war.
Can you tell me the saga of the accusations against Neri?
So I did not actually surface the pleasures and allegations against President Gay that
surfaced by, you know, Aaron and maybe Christopher Rufo as well, or maybe Chris helped promote
what Aaron and some anonymous person identified.
But I certainly, it was a point in time where the board had said we're 100% behind her and
unanimously.
And I really felt she had to go.
So it didn't bother me at all that they had identified problems with her work.
So I shared, I reposted those posts.
And then when the board, she ultimately resigned and she got a $900,000 a year
professorship continuing at Harvard, I said, look, in light of her limited academic record
and these plagiarism allegations,
she had to go.
I knew when I did so, I assumed I was actually a bit paranoid about that thesis I had written.
I only had one academic work, but I hadn't checked it for plagiarism and I thought, that's
going to happen.
Actually, I had someone, I did not have a copy
on hand, so I got a copy of my thesis and I remember writing it. Harvard at the time was pretty,
they kind of gave you a lecture about making sure you have all your footnotes and quotation marks.
I learned later that apparently they had a copy of my thesis at the New York Public Library.
that apparently they had a copy of my thesis at the New York Public Library.
And a member of the media told me he was there online with, you know, a dozen other members of the media all trying to get a copy of my thesis to run it through some AI.
They had to first do optical character recognition to convert the paper document into digital.
But fortunately, through a miracle, I didn't have an issue. I didn't think about
Neri, of course, who has whatever, 130 academic works. And so we were just at the end of a
vacation for Christmas break. And I was early in the morning for a vacation time. And all of a
sudden, I hear my phone ringing in the other room or vibrating in the morning for a vacation time and all of a sudden I hear my phone ringing in
the other room or vibrating in the other room multiple times. I'm like, I pick up the phone,
it's our communication guy, Fran McGill, and he's like, Bill, Business Insider has apparently
identified a number of instances of plagiarism in Neri's dissertation. Let me send you this email,
he sent me the email. And they had identified four paragraphs in her 330-page dissertation where she had cited
the author, but she had used the vast majority of the words and those paragraphs were from
the author and she should have used quotation marks.
And then there was one case where she paraphrased correctly an author but did not footnote that it was from his work.
And so we were presented with this and told they're going to publish in a few hours and we're
like, well, can we get to the next day? We're just about to head home and they're like, no,
we're publishing by noon. We need an answer by noon. And so we downloaded the copy of her thesis
on the slow internet and you know,
Neri checked it out and she said, you know what, looks like they're right.
And I said, look, you should just admit your mistake. And she wrote a very simple, gracious,
yes, I should have used quotation marks. And on the author, I failed to cite. She pointed out
that she cited them 80 other times and wrote a several paragraph section
of her thesis acknowledging his work.
And none of these were like important parts of her thesis, but she acknowledged her mistake
and she said, you know, apologize for my mistake.
And I apologize to the author who I failed to cite.
And I stand on the shoulders of, you know, all the people came before me and looking
to advance work.
We sort of thought it was over.
We head home.
In flight on the way home, although we didn't realize this till we got back the following
day, a business insider published another article and said, Neri Oxman admits to plagiarism.
Plagiarism of course is academic fraud and this thing goes crazy viral.
The title is Bill Ackman's Wife, Celebrity Academic, Neri Oxman.
And they use the term celebrity because there are limits to what legitimate media can go
after.
But celebrities, there's a lot more leeway in the media and what they can say.
So that's why they call her a celebrity. first time ever she'd been called a celebrity.
And basically she's admitting to academic fraud.
And then they said, and then the next day at 5.19 p.m., I remember the timeline pretty
well, an email was sent to Fran McGill saying,
you know, we've identified, you know,
two dozen other instances of plagiarism in her work.
15 of which are Wikipedia entries
where she copied definitions.
And the others were mostly software hardware manuals
for various devices or software she used in her work.
Most of which were in footnotes where she described a nozzle were hardware manuals for various devices or software she used in her work, most of
which were in footnotes where she described a nozzle for a 3D printer or something like
this.
And they said, we're publishing, you know, tonight.
The email they sent to us was 6,900 words.
It was 12 pages.
It was practically indesuffable.
You couldn't even read it in an hour.
And we didn't have some of the documents
they were referring to.
And I'm like, Nari, you know what I'm going to do?
I think it will be useful to provide context here.
I'm going to do a review of every MIT professors,
dissertations, every published paper.
AI has enabled this.
And so that was, I put out a tweet basically saying that.
And we're doing a test run now, because to get it right and I think will be useful exercise
provide some context if you will and
then this thing goes crazy viral and
You know nary is a pretty sensitive person
Pretty emotional person and someone who's a perfectionist and
Having everyone in the world thinking you committed
academic fraud is a pretty damning thing.
Now they did say they did a thorough review of all of her work and this is what they found.
I'm like, sweetheart, that's remarkable.
I did 130 works, 73 of which were peer reviewed, blah, blah, blah.
And she's published in Nature Science and all these different publications.
That's actually a pretty good batting average.
But you know, they can't, this is wrong, right?
This is not academic fraud. Okay, these are inadvertent mistakes. And the Wikipedia entries,
Neri actually used Wikipedia as a dictionary. This is the early days of Wikipedia. And they also
referred to the MIT handbook, which has a whole section on plagiarism, academic handbook. And if you read it, which I ultimately did, they make
clear a few things. Number one, there's plagiarism, academic fraud, and there's what they call
inadvertent plagiarism, which is clerical errors where you make a mistake. And it depends on intent.
And there's a link that you can go to, which is a section on if you get investigated at MIT,
what happens, what's the procedure, what's the initial stage, what's the investigative stage, what's the
procedure if they identify it.
And they make very clear that academic fraud is, and they list plagiarism, research staffed,
a few other things, but it does not include honest errors.
Honest errors are not plagiarism under MIT's own policies. And in the handbook,
they also have a big section on what they call common knowledge. And common knowledge depends
on who you're writing your thesis for. And so if it's a fact that is known by your audience,
you're not required to quote or cite. And so all those Wikipedia entries were for things like sustainable design, computer aided design. She just took a definition from Wikipedia,
common knowledge to her readers, no obligation under the handbook, totally exempt.
On the, using the same words she referred to like, whatever, some kind of 3D printer, she was
the Stratasys 3D printer. And she quoted from the manual,
right away. Stratasys is a company you consulted for. You don't need to, that's not something,
you're not stealing your ideas. You're describing a nozzle for a device you use in your work in a
footnote. That's not a theft of idea, right? And so I'm like, this is crazy. And so this has got to stop. And so I reach out to
the guy I knew was on the board of business insider, the chairman, and his name is going to come
public shortly. I committed to that time to keep his name confidential. It's now surfaced publicly
in the press. Can I just pause real quick here? Just I don't know. There's a lot of things I want to say,
but you made it pretty clear,
but just as a member of the community,
there's also like a common sense test.
I think you're more precisely like legal and looking at,
but there's just like a bullshit test
and like nothing that Neri did is plagiarism in the bad meaning
of the word.
Plagiarism right now is becoming another ism like racism or so on using an attack word.
I don't care what the meaning of it is, but there's the bad academic frolic theft, theft
of an idea.
And maybe you can say a lot of definitions and this kind of stuff
But then there's just a basic bullshit test where everyone knows
This is a thief and this is
Definitely not a thief and there's nothing about anything that nary did
Anything in her thesis or in her life
Everyone that knows her she's a rock star, right? I just want to make it clear.
It really hurt me that the internet,
whatever is happening could go after,
could go after a great scientist,
because I love science and I love celebrating great scientists.
And it's just really messed up that whatever the machine
and we can talk about business inside or whatever,
social media, mass hysteria, whatever is happening,
like we need the great scientists of the world
because that's like the future depends on them.
And so we need to celebrate them and protect them
and let them flourish and let their do their thing
and like keep them out
of this whatever whatever shit storm that we're doing to get clicks and advertisements and drama
and all this kind we need to protect them so I just want to say there's no there's nobody I know
and a million friends that are scientists a world-class scientists, Nobel Prize winners, they all love Neri, they all respect Neri, she did zero wrong.
And then the rest of the conversation
we're gonna have about how broken journalism is and so on,
but I just wanna say that there's nothing
that Neri did wrong, it's not a gray area or so on.
I also personally don't love that Claudine Gay
is a discussion about plagiarism because
he distracts from the fundamentals that is broken.
This becomes some weird technical discussion.
But in case of Neri, did nothing wrong.
Great scientist, great engineer at MIT and beyond.
She's doing a cool thing now.
So anyway.
Could not have said it better myself.
Now, obviously I'm'm focusing the technical part.
Right. Because you want to be precise here.
Well, it's not even that. I mean, yes, I have said that we're going to sue business insider.
And in 35 years of my career, of someone who has not every article has been a favorable one,
not every article has been an accurate one. I've never threatened to sue
the media, and I've never sued the media. But this is so egregious. It's not just that she did
nothing wrong, but they accused her of academic fraud. They did it knowing. They make reference to
MIT's own handbook. So they had to read all the same stuff that I read in the handbook.
reference to MIT's own handbook. So they had to read all the same stuff
that I read in the handbook.
They did that work.
Then after I escalated this thing to the Henry Blodgett,
the chairman of Business Insider, to the CEO of Axel Springer,
I even reached out to Henry Kravis at a certain point
in time, one of the controlling shareholders
of the company through KKR, laying out the factual errors in the article.
Business Insider went public after they said
Neri committed academic fraud and plagiarism
and said we didn't challenge any,
the facts remain undisputed in the article.
So it's basically Neri committed plagiarism,
that story won.
Neri admits to plagiarism, she admits to plagiarism.
She admitted to making a few clerical errors.
That's the only thing she admitted to.
And she graciously apologized.
So they said, Neri admits to plagiarism,
apologizes for plagiarism, that's incredibly damning.
And by the way, we're doing an investigation
because we're concerned that there might have been
inappropriate process, but the facts of the story have not been disputed by Neri Oxman or Bill Ackman.
And that was totally false.
I had done it privately.
I had done it publicly on Twitter, on X. I laid out, I have a whole tech stream, a
WhatsApp stream with the CEO of the company.
And they double down, they double down again.
And so I don't sue people lightly.
And you stay tuned.
So you're at least for now moving forward with...
It's a certainty we're moving forward.
There's a step we can take prior to suing them where we basically send them a letter demanding they make a series
of corrections, that if they don't make those corrections, the next step is litigation.
I hope we can avoid the next step.
And I'm just making sure that we present the demand to Business Insider and also me to
Axel Springer that it's incredibly clear how they defamed
her, the factual mistakes in her stories, and what they need to do to fix it.
If we can fix it there, we can move on from this episode and hopefully avoid litigation.
So that's where we are.
I don't know.
You're smarter than me.
There's technical stuff.
There's legal stuff.
There's journalistic stuff.
But just fuck you, Business Insider, for doing this. I don't know much in this world, but
journalists aren't supposed to do that.
Now, look, we're going to surface all this stuff publicly, ultimately. The email was not to Neri
saying there was plagiarism in her work. The email came from a reporter named Catherine Long.
The headline was, your wife committed plagiarism.
Shouldn't she be fired from
MIT? Just like you caused Claude and Gay to be fired from Harvard. It was a political
agenda. She doesn't like me. Okay. And she was trying to hurt me and they couldn't find plagiarism, my thesis. And
you know, being the subject of short, you know, being a short seller, the Herbalife Battle went on for years,
they tried to do everything to destroy my reputation. So they're already gone to my trash,
they're done all that work. So anything they could possibly find, you know,
I've always lived a very clean life.
Okay, thankfully. And if you're going to be an activist short-sell, you better because
they're going to find out dirt on you if it exists. And so they're like, how can we really
hurt Bill? By the way, Nari had left MIT years earlier. When the reporter found out she was
no longer a member of the MIT faculty, they were enraged. They didn't believe us. They
made us like, you know, prove to us you should no longer on the MIT faculty, they were enraged. They didn't believe us. They made us prove to us,
you should know longer on the MIT faculty because they wanted to get her fired. And by the way,
malice is one of the important factors in determining whether some, whether defamation
is taking place. And this was a malice-driven, this was not about news. And the unfortunate
thing about journalism is business sense that I made a
fortune from this. This story was published and republished by thousands of media organizations
around the world. It was the number one trending thing on Twitter for like two days. Every
newspaper, it was on the front page of every Israeli newspaper,, was on the front page of the Financial Times. Okay, so this,
and she's building a business. And, you know, if you're CEO of a science company and you
committed academic fraud, that's incredibly damaging. But I ultimately convinced her that this was good.
I said, sweetheart, you're amazing, you're incredible, you're incredibly talented,
but you're mostly known in the design world.
Now everyone in the universe, okay, it's sort of an area oxman, okay?
We're going to get this thing cleared up.
You're going to be doing an event in six months where you're going to tell the world, you're
going to go out of stealth mode, you can tell the world about all the incredible things
that you're building and you're designing and you're creating.
And it's going to be like the iPhone launch
because everyone's gonna be paying attention
and they're gonna wanna see your work.
And you know, that's how I try to cheer her up,
but I think it's true.
It is true, but then you're doing your job
as a good partner, seeing the silver lining of all of this.
How is, just from observing her, how did she stay strong through all of this psychologically?
Because at least I know she's pushing ahead with the work.
Oh, she's full speed ahead in her work.
She's built an amazing team.
She's hired 30 scientists, roboticists, people who biologists, plants specialists, material
scientists, engineers, really incredible crew. She's
built this 36,000 square foot lab in New York City that's one of a kind. They're working
out of it. It's still under construction while they're working out of it. And so she's going
to do amazing things. But as I said, she's an extremely sensitive person. She's a perfectionist.
As I said, she's an extremely sensitive person. She's a perfectionist. Okay, imagine
thinking that the entire world thinks you committed academic fraud. And so that was very hard for her.
She's a very positive person, but I saw her and I would say her darkest
emotional period for sure.
She's doing much better now.
But you can kill someone.
You can kill someone by destroying their reputation.
People commit suicide. People go into these deep, dark
depression. Well, my worry primarily when I saw what business inside I was doing is that they
might dim the light of a truly special scientist and creator.
It's not going to happen. But I also worry about others like Neri,
young Neri's that this sends a signal to that might scare them. And you know,
journalism shouldn't scare aspiring young scientists.
The problem is the defamation law in the US is so favorable to the publisher, to the media,
and so unfavorable to the victim.
And the incentives are all wrong.
You know, when you went from a paper version of journalism to digital and you could track how many people click
and it's a medium that advertising drives the economics and if you can show an advertiser more clicks,
you can make more money, right?
So a journalist is incentivized to write a story that will generate more clicks. How do you write a story that generate more clicks?
You get a billionaire guy, okay? And then you go after his wife and you make a sensationalist story
and you give them no time to respond, right? You know, look at the timing here. On the first story,
you know, they gave us three hours. On the second one, the following day, 5.19 pm, the email comes
in not to Neri, not to her
firm, but to my communications person who tracks us down by 5.30, 10 minutes later.
They published their story in 92 minutes after and they sent us, we're going to surface
all these documents in our demand.
Read the email they sent, whether you could even decipher it. It's, you know, it's, there was no...
And by the way, there's a reason why academic institutions,
when professors accused of plagiarism, why they had these very careful processes
with multiple stages and they take, they can take a year or more,
because it depends on intent.
Was this intentional?
In order to be a crime, an academic crime, you got to
prove that they intentionally stole. Look, in some cases, it's obvious. In some cases,
it's very subtle. And they take this stuff super seriously. But they basically accused an area of
academic crime. And then 92 minutes later, they said she committed an academic crime. And that
should be a crime. And that should be punishable with litigation,
and there should be a real cost,
and we're gonna make sure there's a real cost,
reputationally and otherwise to Business Insider,
and to Axel Springer,
because ultimately you gotta look to the controlling owner,
you know, they're responsible.
I'll just say that you, in this regard,
are inspiring to me for facing basically an institution that's whole purpose is to
write articles.
So you're like going into the fire.
My kids' school, the epithet for the school or the saying is go forth unafraid.
I think it's a good way to live.
And again, words can't harm me.
You know, the power of X, and we do owe Elon enormous thanks for this, is now, so for example,
the Washington Post wrote a story about me a couple of days ago.
And I didn't think the story was a fair story.
So within a few hours of the story being written,
I'm able to put out a response to the story
and send it to a million, 200,000 people.
And it gets read and reread, I haven't checked,
but probably five million people saw my response.
Now those are the people on X.
It's not everyone in the world.
There's a disconnection between the X world and the offline world.
But, you know, reputation in my business is basically all you have.
And as they say, you can, you can take a lifetime to build reputation and take five
minutes to have it disappear. And the media plays a very important role,
and they can destroy people. At least we now have some ability to fight back.
We have a platform we can surface our views. You know, the typical old days, they write an
incredibly damning article and you point out factual errors and then like two months later,
they bury a little correction on page whatever by then the person was fired or where their life
was destroyed or the reputation is damaged. You know, it was with Warren Buffett talking about
media and it's something he, a business he really loves. And he says, you know what, Bill? He said,
a thief with a dagger. The only person who can cause you more harm than a thief with
a dagger is a journalist with a pen. And those were very powerful words.
So you think X formerly known as Twitter is a kind of neutralizing force to that, to
the power of centralized
journalists to constitutions.
100%.
And I think it's a really important one.
And it's really been eye-opening for me to see how stories get covered in mainstream
media.
And then you actually, what I do on X is I follow people on multiple sides of an issue.
And you can, or I post on a topic and I get to hear the other side.
I read the replies.
And the truth is something that people
have had a lot of question about.
Particularly in the last, I would say five years,
beginning with Trump's talking about fake news.
And a lot of what Trump said about fake news is true.
The world, a big part of the world hated Trump and did everything they could to discredit
him, destroy him.
And he did a lot of things, perhaps deserving of being discredited, used by a very imperfect,
in some cases, harmful leader.
But everything from pre-election, the Hunter at Biden laptop
story in the New York Post that then Twitter made it difficult for people to share and and to read COVID, the Jay Boutich hours of the world questioning the government's response,
questioning long-term lockdowns, questioning keeping kids out of school, questions about masks,
about vaccines, which are still not definitively answered, no counterbalance to the power of the government
when the government can shut down avenues of free speech. And where the mainstream media
has kind of towed the line in many stents to the government's action. So having an independently
owned powerful platform is very important for truth, for free speech, for hearing the other side
of the story, for counterbalancing the power of the government.
Elon is getting a lot of pushback.
The SpaceX's and Tesla's of the world are experiencing a lot of government questions
and investigations. Even the President of the United States came
out and said, look, he needs to be investigated. I'm getting my own version of that in terms of
some negative media articles. I don't know what's next. But yeah, if you stick your neck out in
today's world and you go against the establishment or at least the existing administration, you can find yourself in a very challenged
place and that discourages people from sharing stuff.
That's why anonymous speech is important, some of which you find on Twitter.
You mentioned Trump.
I have to talk to you about politics.
Sure.
Amongst all the other battles, you've also been a part of that one.
Maybe you can correct me on this, but you've been a big supporter of various Democratic candidates over the years.
But you did say a lot of nice things about Donald Trump
in 2016, I believe.
So it was interviewed by Andrew Sorkin
a week after Trump won the election.
Yes.
And I made my case for why I thought
he could be a good president.
Yes. So what was my case for why I thought he could be a good president. Yes.
So what was the case back then, to which degree
did that turn out to be true, and to which degree did it not?
To which degree was he a good president,
to which degree was he not a good president?
Look, I think what I said at the time
was the United States is actually a huge business.
And it reminds me a bit of the type of activist investments
we've taken on over time, where this really, really great
business has kind of lost its way.
And with the right leadership, we can fix it.
And if you think about the business of the United States
today, right, you've got $32 trillion with the debt,
so it's over leveraged, or it's highly leveraged,
and the leverage is only increasing.
We're losing money, i.e. revenues,
aren't covering expenses.
The cost of our debt is going up,
as interest rates have gone up
and the debt has to be rolled over.
We have enormous administrative bloat in the country.
The regulatory regime is incredibly complicated
and burdensome and impeding growth.
Our relations with our competitor nations and
our friendly nations are far from ideal. And those conditions were present in 2020 as well.
They're just, I would say, worse now. And I said, look, it's a great thing that we have a business
man as president. And in my lifetime, it's really the first businessman as opposed to, I mean,
maybe Bush to some degree was a business person. But I thought, okay, I was one of the CEO to be
CEO of America. And now we have Trump. Look, he's got some personal qualities that seem less
ideal. But he's going to be president of the United States, he's going to rise to the occasion.
This is going to be his legacy. And he knows how to make deals. And he's got, he's going to rise to the occasion. This is going to be his legacy. He knows how to make deals.
He's going to recruit some great people into his administration, I hoped.
Growth can solve a lot of our problems.
If we can get rid of a bunch of regulations that are holding back the country, we can have
a president.
Obama was, I would say, not a pro-business president.
He did not love the business community.
He did not love successful people.
And having a president who just changed the tone on being a pro-business president, I
thought would be good for the country.
And that's basically what I said.
And I would say Trump did a lot of good things.
And a lot of people, you can get criticized for acknowledging that.
But I think the country's economy accelerated dramatically.
And that, by the way, the capitalist system helps the people at the bottom best when the
system does well and when the economy does well.
The black unemployment rate was the lowest in history when Trump was president.
And that's true for other minority groups.
So he was good for the economy.
And he recognized some of the challenges and issues and threats of China early.
He kind of woke up NATO.
Now, again, the way he did all this stuff, you can object to.
But NATO actually started spending more money on defense in the
early part of Trump's presidency because of his threats, which turned out to be a good thing in
light of ultimately the Russia-Ukraine war. And I think if you analyze Trump objectively based
on policies, he did a lot of good for the country. I think what's bad is he did some harm as well. I do think civility disappeared
in America with Trump as president. A lot of that's his personal style. And how important
is civility? I do think it's important. I do think he was attacked very aggressively by the left,
by the media that made him paranoid. They probably
interfered with his ability to be successful. He had the Russian collusion investigation
overhang. And when someone's attacked, they're not going to be at their best, particularly
if they're paranoid. I think there's some degree of that. But I'm giving kind of the best of defense of Trump. You know, just you look at how he managed his team, right?
Very few people made it through the Trump administration without getting fired or quitting.
And, you know, he would say they're the greatest person in the world when he hired them and
they're a total disaster when he fired them.
It's not an inspiring way to be a leader and to attract really talented people.
I think the events surrounding the election, you know, I think January 6th, he could have done a
lot more to stop a riot. I don't consider it an insurrection, but a riot that takes place in our
capital and where police officers are killed or die, commit suicide, cause for failure
to, as they saw it to do their job, you know, he stepped in way too late to stop that.
He could have stopped it early.
You know, many of his words, I think, inspired people, you know, some of whom with malintent
to go in there and cause harm and literally to shut down the government.
There were some evil people, unfortunately, there. So he's been a very imperfect president and also, I think, contributed to the extreme
amount of divisiveness in our country.
So I was ultimately disappointed by the note of optimism.
And again, I always support the president.
I trust the people ultimately to select our next leader. It's a bit like who wants to be a millionaire.
When you go to the crowd and the crowd says certain thing, you got to trust the crowd.
But usually in who wants to be a millionaire, it's a landslide in one direction.
So you know which letter to pick.
Here we had an incredibly close election, which itself is a problem.
So my dream and what I've tried a little bit, played politics in the last little period,
to support some alternatives to Trump, so that we have a president, you know, I use the,
you know, example, imagine you woke up in the morning, it's election day, whatever it is,
this November 4th, whatever, 2024. And you still haven't figured out who to vote for,
because the candidates are so appealing that, you don't know which lever to pull because it's a tough call.
That's the choice we should be making as Americans.
It shouldn't be, I'm a member of this party and I'm only going to vote this way.
I'm a member of that party going to vote the other way and I hate the other side.
And that's where it's been, unfortunately, for too long.
Or you might be torn because both candidates are not good.
Yeah. So you want to, I love a future where
I'm torn because the choices are so amazing. The problem is the party system is so screwed
up and the parties are self-interested and there's another governance problem, right,
an incentive problem. Michael Porter, who was one of my professors at Harvard Business
School, wrote a brilliant piece on the American political system and all the incentives and market dynamics and
what you call the competitive analysis.
It's a must read.
I should dig it up and send it around on X, but it explains how the parties and the incentives
of these sort of self-sustaining entities that where the people involved are
not incentivized to do what's best for the country, it's a problem.
You've been a supporter of Dean Phillips for the 2024 US presidential race.
Yes.
What do you like about Dean?
I think he's a honest, smart, motivated, capable, proven guy as a business leader. And I think in
his three terms in Congress, he ran when Trump was elected. He said his kids cried,
his daughters cried, inspired him to run for office, ran in a Republican district in Minnesota
for the last 60 years. He was elected in the landslide, has been reelected twice, moved up the ranks in the Congress,
respected by his fellow members of Congress, advanced some important legislation during
COVID, senior roles on various foreign policy committees, centrist.
Considered I think the second most bipartisan member of
the Congress. I'd love to have a bipartisan president. That's the only way to get kind of go
forward. But we'd enormously benefit if we had a president that chose policies on the basis of
what's best for the country as opposed to what his party wanted. What I like about him is he's
financially independent. He's not a billionaire, but he
doesn't need the job. The party hates him now because he challenged the king. Right? And so,
but he's willing to give up his political career because what he thought was best for the country.
He tried to get other people to run who are higher profile, had more name recognition, none would.
No one wants to challenge Biden. You know, if they want to be, have a chance to stay in office or run in the future.
But he's very principled. I think he would be a great president.
But he needs, his shot is Michigan, but he needs to raise money in order to,
he's only got a couple of weeks and he's got to be on TV there. That's expensive. So we'll see.
So he has to increase name recognition and all that kind of stuff. Also, as you mentioned, he's got to be on TV there, that's expensive. So we'll see. So he has to increase name recognition,
all that kind of stuff.
Also, as you mentioned, he's young.
Yeah, he's 55, but he's young 55.
You see him play hockey.
Yeah, I mean, I guess 55,
no matter what is a pretty young age.
I'm 57. I feel young.
I can do more pull-ups today than I can as a kid.
That's a standard.
You're at the top of your tennis game.
I'm at the top of my tennis game, for sure.
Maybe there's someone that would disagree with that.
And by the way, the other thing to point out here is,
and I have been pointing this out as of others,
Biden is, I think, is done.
I mean, it's embarrassing.
It's embarrassing for the country having him
as a presidential candidate,
let alone the president of the country.
It's crazy.
And it's just going to get worse
and worse. And he should, you know, the worst of his legacy is his ego that prevents him from
stepping aside. And that's it. It's his ego. And it is so wrong and so bad and so embarrassing.
You know, we talked to people, I was in Europe, I was in London a few days ago, and
people were like, Bill, how can this guy be your president?
And it's a bit like, again, I go back to my business analogy, being a CEO is like a full
contact sport.
Being president of the United States is like some combination of wrestling, marathon running,
you know, drive being a triathlete.
I mean, you got to be at the serious physical shape and at the top of your game to represent
this country.
And he is a far cry from that and it's just getting worse and it's embarrassing.
And he cannot be...
And by the way, every day he waits, he's handing the election to Trump because it's harder
and harder for an alternative candidate
to surface.
Now, Dean is the only candidate left on the Democratic side that can still win delegates.
He's on the ballot in 42 states.
And the best way for Biden to step aside is for Dean to show well in Michigan.
And so you think there is a path with the delegates and all that kind of stuff?
100%. What has to happen is, New Hampshire, he went from zero to 20% of the vote and 10 weeks
with no name recognition.
I helped a little bit.
Elon helped.
We did spaces for him.
We had 350,000 people in the spaces, some originally 40,000 live or something, and then
the rest after.
Then he was on the ground
in New Hampshire. And New Hampshire is one of the states where you don't need to be registered
to a party to vote for that candidate. So it's like jump all. And he got 20%. And that's
with a lot of independence and Democrats voting for Haley. Haley, who I like and who I've
supported, does not look like she's going to make it.
Trump is really kind of running the table. And so vote for Haley as an independent Michigan,
maybe throw away your vote. I think it increases the likelihood that Dean can get those independent
votes. If he could theoretically, again, he needs money, he could beat Biden in Michigan.
Biden's doing very poorly in Michigan.
His polls are terrible.
The Muslim community is not happy with him.
And he really spent no time there.
And so if he's embarrassed in Michigan, it could be catalyst for him withdrawing, then
Dean will get funding.
If he wins Michigan or shows well in Michigan and people say he's viable, he's the only
choice we have.
He'll attract from the center. He'll attract from people, Republicans who won't vote for Trump,
in which there are a big percentage, could be 60% or more. It could be 70% won't vote for Trump,
and also from the Democrats. So I think he's a really interesting candidate,
but we've got to get the word out.
Yeah. I got a chance to chat with Dean. I really like him I really like him and I think the next president of the United States is gonna have to
Meet and speak regularly with Zelensky Putin and Yahoo with world leaders and have
some of the most historic
conversations agreements negotiations and I just don't see Biden doing that. No, and not for
Any reason but sadly yeah, I mean think about it this way
When Biden's in present now you saw his recent impromptu press conference
Which he did after the special prosecutor, you know report basically saying the guy was way past his prime
And then he confused the president of Mexico and the president of Egypt a special prosecutor report basically saying the guy was way past his prime,
and then he confused the president of Mexico and the president of Egypt. So, they're very careful when they roll them out, and he's scripted, and he's always reading from a lectern. Imagine the
care they have in exposing him, and when they expose him, it's terrible. Okay, imagine how
bad it is for real. So-
It's not good.
No, bad, really bad for America.
And I'm upset with him and upset with his family.
I'm upset with his wife.
You know, this is the time where the people closest to you
have to put their arms around you and say, you know,
dad, you know, honey, you've, you know,
you've done your thing.
This is gonna be your legacy
and it's not gonna be a good one.
Great leaders should also know when to step down.
Yeah. One of the best tests of a leader is succession planning.
This is a massive failure of succession planning.
Outside of politics, let me look to the future. First, in terms of the financial world,
what are you looking forward to in the next couple of years?
You have a new fund. What are you thinking about in terms of investment, your own and the entire
economy, and maybe even the economy of the world? Sure. So the SEC doesn't allow,
doesn't like us to talk about new funds that we're launching
that we filed with the SEC.
Sure.
But I would say I do, and by the way, if anyone's ever interested in a fund, they should always
read the prospectus carefully, including the risk factors. That's very, very important.
But I like the idea of democratizing access to good investors. And I think that's an interesting trend,
so we want to be part of that trend. In terms of financial markets, generally,
the economy, a lot is going to depend upon the next leader of the country. So we're kind of
right back there. The leadership of the United States is important for the US economy. It's
important for the global economy. it's important for global peace.
And we've gone through a really difficult period and it's time, we need to break.
But look, I think the United States is an incredibly resilient country.
We have some incredible moats.
Among them we have the Atlantic and the Pacific and we have peaceful neighbors to the north
and the south.
We're an enormously rich country.
Capitalism still works effectively here. I
get optimistic about the world when I talk to my friends who are either venture capitalists
or my hobby of backing these young entrepreneurs. I talk to a founder of a startup if you want
to get optimistic about the world. So I think technology is going to save us. I think AI,
of course, has its frightening, terminator-like scenarios. But I'm going to take
the opposite view that this is going to be a huge enabler of productivity,
scientific discovery, drug discovery, and it's going to make us healthier, happier, and better.
So I do think the internet revolution had a lot of good. It's obviously some bad I think the AI revolution is going to be similar, but we're at this other really interesting juncture
in the world, you know with
Technology and we're gonna have to use it for our good on the media front. I'm happy about X and I think
Elon's gonna be successful here. I think advertisers will realize it's a really good platform the best way to reach
Me if you want to sell something to me, I've actually bought stuff on some ads in X. I don't
remember the last time I responded to direct response advertising. In terms of my business,
I have an incredible team. It's tiny. We're one of the smallest firms relative to the assets we manage. It's a bit like
the Navy SEALs, not the US Army.
We have only 40 people at Pershing Square, so it's a tight team. I think we'll do great things. I think we're early on. My ambitions investment-wise, I've always wanted to,
I've always said I'd like to have a record as good as Warren Buffett's. The problem is each year he adds on another year. He's now in his 93rd year, so I've got
36 more years to just get where he is, and I think he's going to add a lot more years.
I'm excited about seeing what Neri's going to produce. She's building an incredible company
that's trying to solve a lot of problems with respect to products and buildings and their impact on the
environment. Her vision is how do we design products that by virtue of the products existence,
the world is a better place. Today, her world is a world where the existence of the new car
actually is better for the environment than if the new car hadn't existed. Think about that in
every product scale
That's what she's working on. I don't want to give away too much, but you're gonna see some early
Examples of what she's working on. So again, I get excited about the future
and
And crises are sort of a terrible thing to waste and we've had a number of these here
I think this disaster in the Middle East, my prediction is the next few months,
this war will largely be over in terms of getting rid of Hamas.
I think I can envision a world in which Saudi Arabia, some of the other Gulf states come together,
take over the governance and reconstruction of Gaza. Security guarantees are put in place.
of Gaza, security guarantees are put in place. The Abraham Accords continue to grow. A deal is made. Terrorists are ostracized that this October 7th experience on the Harvard, Penn,
MIT, Columbia, unfortunately other campuses is a wake-up call for universities generally.
is a wake-up call for universities generally. You know, people see the problems with DEI,
but understand the importance of diversity and inclusion,
but not as a political movement,
but as a way that we return to a meritocratic world
where someone's background is relevant
in understanding their contribution.
But it's not, we don't have race quotas
and things that were made illegal
years ago actually being implemented in organizations on campus.
So I think there's, we can go through a corrective phase and I'm an optimist and I hope we get
there.
So you have hope for the entirety of it, even for Harvard.
I hope even for Harvard.
It's generally hard to break 400-year-old things. Well, I share your hope and you're a fascinating mind, a brilliant mind, persistent, as you
like to say, and fearless.
The fearless part is truly inspiring, and this was an incredible conversation.
Thank you.
Thank you for talking to me, Bill.
Thank you, Lex.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Bill Ackman.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you some words from Jonathan Swift. A wise person should have
money in their head, but not in their heart. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.