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						Ackman's fund zooms ahead as he casts himself as 
						corporate helpmate
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		 [March 26, 2019]   
		By Svea Herbst-Bayliss 
 BOSTON (Reuters) - For months, activist 
		investor William Ackman promised to rebuild his record. Now he has some 
		numbers to prove it.
 
 Since Jan. 1, Pershing Square Holdings has gained 31.9 percent, making 
		it the best start to a year in the firm's 15-year history, Ackman wrote 
		in a letter released on Monday.
 
 More importantly, Ackman laid out how his hedge fund is essentially 
		transforming itself into a holding company that owns stakes in public 
		companies and offers a helping hand to struggling management teams to 
		resurrect once-strong returns.
 
 "We attribute our improved performance to initiatives that we have 
		implemented over the last 18 months," he wrote.
 
		
		 
		
 With his own transformation on firmer ground, Ackman said he can again 
		help others. "Pershing Square, as a large influential investor with a 
		track record for successful turnarounds, can provide management with the 
		required runway and necessary long-term backing to succeed."
 
 For years Ackman earned billions for himself and clients while growing 
		Pershing Square Capital Management into a roughly $20 billion firm. But 
		in 2015 a soured bet on drug company Valeant paved the way for three 
		years of losses, when investors ran for the exits, shrinking assets to 
		$8 billion.
 
 Now Ackman's publicly traded fund, Pershing Square Holdings, makes up 
		roughly three-quarters of the firm's $8 billion in assets and the 
		capital is stable because investors have to sell to another investor 
		before exiting.
 
 Permanent capital will help improve his own returns over time and let 
		him become a helpmate to struggling companies, Ackman wrote.
 
		
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			William 'Bill' Ackman, CEO and Portfolio Manager of Pershing Square 
			Capital Management, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in 
			New York City, U.S., May 8, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid 
            
			 
To get here, Ackman went back to his roots and last year laid off staff, told 
his investor relations executives to stop raising new capital and re-dedicated 
himself to researching investment ideas instead of jetting around the world to 
visit with clients.
 Ackman and his colleagues now own more than 20 percent of Pershing Square 
Holdings' outstanding shares, he wrote.
 
His business, he explained to anyone who does not know about investments in 
companies like Chipotle and Canadian Pacific , is buying companies at a discount 
and helping them flourish again.
 Over the last months, Ackman, once a fixture at conferences and on television, 
adopted a more low-key style, which he is translating to portfolio companies as 
well.
 
 He said he has a lot of influence but prefers to use it "sparingly." 
"Occasionally, we will ask a question, share an idea, or raise an issue. Most of 
the time, our CEOs rarely hear from us," Ackman wrote, saying they call him. "We 
view our job as oversight, not day-to-day management."
 
 
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; editing by Grant McCooland Leslie Adler) 
				 
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