Stock Markets April 8, 2026

Analysts Split as Ackman’s $64bn Bid for Universal Music Awaits Bolloré Family Decision

Bolloré and Vivendi’s reaction to Pershing Square’s cash-and-shares proposal is pivotal as UMG’s board begins its review

By Hana Yamamoto VIV
Analysts Split as Ackman’s $64bn Bid for Universal Music Awaits Bolloré Family Decision
VIV

Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square has proposed a roughly $64 billion cash-and-shares takeover of Universal Music Group, a bid that has divided market analysts. The decisive factor is whether Vincent Bolloré and Vivendi - together holding close to 32% of UMG - will back the plan. UMG’s board will examine the offer, valued at about 30.40 euros per share, above the stock’s prior peak of 29.49 euros in May 2024, while major brokerages and research houses offer differing views on the likely outcome and strategic logic.

Key Points

  • The Pershing Square proposal is a cash-and-shares offer valued at about 30.40 euros per UMG share, above the company’s prior peak of 29.49 euros from May 2024 - impacts media and financial markets.
  • Combined holdings of Bolloré and Vivendi amount to close to 32% of UMG, making their decision central to whether the deal proceeds - impacts ownership control in the media sector.
  • Research houses are divided: some see potential value unlock via a U.S. listing, others view the offer as something UMG could achieve independently, creating uncertainty for investors in media and related equities.

Market participants remain sharply divided over the prospects for billionaire Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square to acquire Universal Music Group in a deal valued at about $64 billion. The spotlight is on the Bolloré family and Vivendi, whose combined stakes approach 32% of UMG, as analysts say their response will largely determine the bid’s fate.

UMG confirmed on Wednesday that its board will review the proposal and consider its "implications" for stakeholders, but the company provided no further comment. Neither Vincent Bolloré nor Vivendi has publicly responded to the offer.

The proposal from Pershing Square is a mixture of cash and shares and is valued by the bidder at roughly 30.40 euros per UMG share. That level exceeds the company’s former record share price of 29.49 euros, set in May 2024.


Analysts split on whether Bolloré and Vivendi will back the deal

J.P. Morgan said it does not expect Vivendi and the Bolloré family to support the takeover, arguing that there is "nothing in [the] proposal that UMG could not do itself" and suggesting Bolloré may prefer to pursue value realisation on his own timetable.

Analysts at AlphaValue described the move as a U.S. listing "disguised as a merger," noting that should Vivendi and Bolloré accept, the transaction could supply a welcome cash injection for both groups.

Morningstar declined to predict whether the major shareholders will endorse the bid, but said the merger could help unlock value in UMG, which Morningstar regards as "grossly undervalued." The firm added that beyond the major holders - Bolloré, Vivendi, Tencent and Pershing Square itself - other shareholders would have "little to say in the outcome."

Deutsche Bank did not offer a view on whether the Bolloré camp will back the deal, but labeled the offer "opportunistic and timely" in light of UMG’s relative weakness versus the broader market, referencing a year-to-date decline of around 14% as of Tuesday.

ING’s analysts warned of "a bit of wishful thinking" in some of the more optimistic valuation scenarios, while acknowledging Pershing Square’s proposal raised legitimate points about UMG’s strategic shortcomings. ING noted on Tuesday that the deal "might well fail."


What remains uncertain

At this stage the outcome hinges on whether Bolloré and Vivendi decide the proposed combination - and the U.S. listing element it entails - aligns with their objectives for control and value extraction. With UMG’s board beginning a formal review and major shareholders silent, analysts say the situation is unresolved and could go in multiple directions.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over Bolloré and Vivendi’s response - their decision will directly affect the likelihood of the transaction proceeding and thus the outlook for UMG shares and related media holdings.
  • Possibility the deal fails - analysts such as ING cautioned the bid "might well fail," which would leave strategic questions about UMG’s valuation and direction unresolved, affecting the entertainment and media sector.
  • UMG’s recent underperformance - Deutsche Bank highlighted a year-to-date decline of around 14% as of Tuesday, underscoring market sensitivity to the company’s valuation and making share-price volatility a risk for equity investors.

More from Stock Markets

Exyn Technologies Seeks Nasdaq Listing with Share-and-Warrant Units Apr 8, 2026 Saudi Stocks Rise; Tadawul All Share Advances 2.27% to One-Month High Apr 8, 2026 Jefferies Tracking: Airline and OTA Site Visits Jump as Travel Demand Strengthens Apr 8, 2026 Barclays Sees Limited Near-Term Earnings Impact From Iran War for Energy Services, Flags Longer-Term Uncertainty Apr 8, 2026 BTIG Survey Finds Broad Weakening in U.S. Homebuilder Demand in March Apr 8, 2026