Overview:

Universal Music Group surged 13%+ in Amsterdam after Pershing Square submitted a $64.4B (€55.8B) cash-and-stock bid at €30.40/share — a 78% premium — via SPARC Holdings, proposing to move UMG's listing from Amsterdam to NYSE by year-end. Bill Ackman cited six factors depressing UMG's valuation including Bolloré's 18% stake, the postponed US listing, and a €2.7B Spotify stake that carries no valuation credit. The S&P 500 opened at 6,587 before trading down 0.2% as WTI hit $115.8/bbl — its highest since April 2008 — on Kharg Island strikes and Trump's 8 PM ET deadline. The Nasdaq shed 0.4%. The day runs simultaneously on three tracks: AVGO's AI 2031 deal, Ackman's UMG bid, and the Iran war's sharpest escalation yet.

NEW YORK, April 7, 2026. Universal Music Group shares surged more than 13% in Amsterdam after Pershing Square’s $64.4 billion (€55.8 billion) bid valued UMG at €30.40 per share — a 78% premium to its April 2 close of €17.10. The S&P 500 opened Tuesday at approximately 6,587 and traded down 0.2%, while the Nasdaq Composite shed 0.4% from its Monday close of 21,996.34. WTI crude oil jumped roughly 2% to near $115 per barrel as overnight U.S. strikes on Kharg Island, Iran’s primary oil export hub, intensified supply fears and drove the benchmark to its highest level since April 2008, with Trump’s self-imposed 8 PM ET Iran deadline approaching. The UMG bid — a non-binding cash-and-stock proposal from Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square via its SPARC Holdings acquisition vehicle — is the largest media M&A proposal since the Iran war began, and the culmination of nearly five years of Ackman’s campaign to relocate the world’s biggest music label to the New York Stock Exchange.


The Pershing Square bid — what UMG shareholders would receive

Pershing Square’s proposal, submitted to UMG’s board on Tuesday morning, calls for a business combination transaction in which all outstanding UMG shares would be acquired through Pershing Square SPARC Holdings — an acquisition vehicle that received SEC approval in 2023. Each UMG shareholder would receive €9.4 billion in total cash consideration (€5.05 per share) plus 0.77 shares of the newly created company (“New UMG”) per UMG share held. The total implied value of €30.40 per share represents a 78% premium to UMG’s April 2 close of €17.10 and values the company at approximately $64.4 billion (€55.8 billion). The new entity would be incorporated in Nevada and list its shares on the New York Stock Exchange — the relocation that Ackman has publicly championed since 2021 as the key to unlocking a significantly higher valuation multiple for UMG’s business. Pershing Square expects the transaction to close by the end of 2026. The proposal is non-binding, and UMG had not formally responded as of Tuesday morning.

The offer also includes two governance conditions that Ackman presents as essential to the value creation plan: a complete board refresh, with Michael Ovitz — CAA co-founder and former Disney president — proposed as the incoming chairman; and a new employment contract and compensation arrangement for CEO Lucian Grainge. Ackman’s statement praised Grainge’s “excellent job nurturing and continuing to build a world-class artist roster and generating strong business performance,” while arguing that “UMG’s stock price has languished due to a combination of issues that are unrelated to the performance of its music business — and importantly, all of them can be addressed with this transaction.” That formulation positions the bid as a structural fix for a well-managed but undervalued business rather than a hostile management challenge.


Why UMG’s stock has “languished” — the six factors Ackman cited

Ackman’s public statement identified six specific factors he believes have depressed UMG’s trading multiple below the level warranted by its business fundamentals. Understanding them clarifies the value creation logic of the bid. First, uncertainty around the Bolloré Group’s 18% stake: the French billionaire Vincent Bolloré family controls approximately 80% of UMG’s voting rights through their holding, and the market has long priced a discount for the governance overhang this creates. Second, the postponement of UMG’s U.S. listing: UMG confidentially filed a draft registration statement with the SEC in July 2025 for a secondary NYSE listing, then in March 2026 announced it was putting those plans on hold “citing market conditions.” That reversal appears to have been the direct catalyst for Ackman’s decision to force the issue through a formal acquisition proposal. Third, underutilisation of UMG’s balance sheet, which Pershing Square argues has led to reduced returns on equity. Fourth, the absence of a publicly disclosed capital allocation plan and earnings algorithm — a governance gap that makes institutional modelling of UMG’s long-term cash flow difficult. Fifth, the lack of investor credit in UMG’s valuation for its €2.7 billion stake in Spotify, which Pershing Square proposes to sell on-market or via block transaction as part of the new entity’s capital allocation strategy. Sixth, Tencent’s significant shareholding and the related concentration of ownership creating float constraints for index fund eligibility.

The core thesis is that UMG trades at a persistent discount to both its intrinsic value as the world’s largest music library and to comparable IP-rich media businesses in the U.S. market — a discount driven entirely by listing structure, governance, and capital allocation opacity rather than by operational performance. Ackman is proposing to fix all six factors simultaneously through the transaction structure: the SPARC vehicle provides the U.S. listing; the Spotify stake sale addresses balance sheet utilisation; the board refresh and capital allocation commitment address governance; and the NYSE move resolves index fund eligibility. If the deal closes, UMG’s music library — home to Taylor Swift, Drake, Billie Eilish, The Weeknd, Lady Gaga, Sabrina Carpenter, Kendrick Lamar, and hundreds of other major artists — would become the anchor asset of a U.S.-listed, NYSE-traded entity that can be owned by every major American institutional investor and index fund, a universe currently largely excluded by UMG’s Amsterdam listing.


Ackman’s UMG history — the five-year saga behind Tuesday’s bid

This is not Ackman’s first attempt to acquire or reorganise UMG. In 2021, Pershing Square Tontine Holdings — a special-purpose acquisition company — targeted UMG in a deal that would have given it a 10% stake, but Ackman shelved the transaction under pressure from the SEC, which raised questions about whether the SPAC structure could accommodate such an acquisition under NYSE rules. Separately, Pershing Square acquired approximately 10% of UMG directly from Vivendi (part of the Bolloré family’s empire) in the summer of 2021 for approximately $4 billion, around the time of UMG’s Euronext Amsterdam debut in September 2021. Ackman joined UMG’s board as a director, publicly advocating for the U.S. listing throughout 2023 and 2024.

In March 2025, Pershing Square sold a 2.7% stake in UMG for approximately $1.4 billion, reducing its position while retaining a significant holding. In May 2025, Ackman resigned from UMG’s board, citing “new executive and board obligations arising from his recent investments.” Tuesday’s non-binding bid is the culmination of that five-year arc: having advocated for the U.S. listing internally, sold partially, resigned from the board, and watched management postpone the listing in March 2026, Ackman is now proposing to accomplish through acquisition what he could not accomplish through influence. The SPARC Holdings vehicle — the SEC-approved successor to Pershing Square Tontine Holdings — is the instrument specifically designed for exactly this kind of structured business combination, and its approval in 2023 makes Tuesday’s bid the first opportunity to deploy it at scale in a major transaction.


Kharg Island, WTI at $115, and Trump’s 8 PM deadline

While the UMG deal and the AVGO-Google announcement generate structural, asset-specific price action, the session’s macro direction is governed by what is happening in the Persian Gulf. WTI crude surged to $115.8 per barrel during Tuesday’s session — the highest since April 2008 — following overnight U.S. military strikes on Kharg Island, the offshore terminal from which approximately 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports originate. Brent crude climbed to $111.0. The significance of Kharg Island as a target is qualitatively different from the military and nuclear infrastructure strikes that characterised the conflict’s first five weeks: Kharg is a civilian-commercial energy facility whose destruction or severe damage would not merely maintain the Hormuz throughput disruption already in place, but would add a production-loss dimension to a market that had previously been pricing only the logistics disruption. Even partial damage to Kharg Island’s loading and storage infrastructure could impair Iranian export capacity for months or years beyond any eventual ceasefire.

Trump’s social media posts ahead of the 8 PM ET deadline were escalatory in tone. Markets are trading the 8 PM event as a binary: a formal ceasefire announcement or substantive diplomatic signal would produce a sharp sell-off in crude and a relief rally in equities; further escalation or silence would sustain or extend the current crude trajectory. The S&P 500 opened down 0.2% and the Nasdaq shed 0.4%, with the Iran escalation more than offsetting the AVGO, UNH, and HUM positive catalysts for the broad indices. For active traders positioned ahead of the 8 PM deadline, Tuesday’s close and Wednesday’s open will represent the most acute single event risk of the conflict period since the February 28 opening strikes. The WTI move to $115.8 — a level not seen in 18 years — is the crude market’s pricing of Kharg Island’s symbolic and physical significance: there is nothing more to threaten after Kharg. Either Iran’s export capacity is destroyed, or the threat to destroy it has reached its logical terminus. Either outcome resolves the geopolitical ambiguity that has kept energy prices elevated in the $100–$115 band for six weeks. Futures markets heading into the evening will be the first available indication of which direction that resolution is taking.


Tuesday in summary — three tracks, one session

April 7 is running on three simultaneous tracks that are largely disconnected from each other. Track one is structural AI infrastructure: AVGO’s 2031 Google deal and Anthropic compute commitment represent the clearest single-session expression of the AI custom silicon secular thesis since the conflict began, and AVGO’s ~4% open is the clean read-through of that signal. Track two is geopolitical media M&A: Ackman’s UMG bid is the kind of large-scale strategic transaction that, in a normal macro environment, would dominate financial news coverage for days and drive the entire media-entertainment sector. Track three is the Iran war’s sharpest escalation yet: Kharg Island strikes and a presidential 8 PM deadline creating the largest binary geopolitical event of the conflict period. That all three are operating simultaneously on April 7 is not a coincidence — high geopolitical uncertainty typically suppresses traditional M&A and investment, but in the current period it is occurring in parallel with the largest deals and technology infrastructure commitments in recent memory. The market’s modestly negative session — S&P 500 down 0.2% — is the honest expression of a market that cannot cleanly net those three tracks into a directional signal until the 8 PM deadline produces clarity. PreMarket Daily covers each session’s catalysts before the open — subscribe for daily pre-market analysis.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...