Billionaire Bill Ackman Quietly Doubled Down on His Hedge Fund’s $1.4 Billion Turnaround Bet

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Billionaire Bill Ackman Quietly Doubled Down on His Hedge Fund's $1.4 Billion Turnaround Bet


  • Ackman started buying shares of this company after management aimed to course correct from some poor decisions.

  • With a new CEO in charge, it’s showing signs of a turnaround.

  • The market has continued to punish shares despite signs of progress, and it could be a buying opportunity.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Nike ›

Bill Ackman is one of the most closely followed investment managers on Wall Street. At his core, he’s a value investor, buying stocks in companies the market has turned against, but that still possess incredibly valuable assets. He typically holds those positions for a long time, waiting for the market to realize its mistake and reward investors willing to buy the assets when they were priced unreasonably low.

But investors may have been surprised that one of Ackman’s new purchases in 2024 disappeared from his hedge fund Pershing Square’s financial disclosures with the SEC in 2025. The hedge fund is required to file form 13F with the SEC every quarter, disclosing its public equity positions at the end of the period.

In mid-2024, Pershing Square disclosed a new purchase of Nike (NYSE: NKE), which it increased to a $1.4 billion stake by the end of the year. But at the start of the year, the investment manager converted the equity stake into deep in the money call options with a multi-year expiry. Ackman says if his thesis plays out, Pershing Square will earn double the return it would have from owning the stock.

Here’s why Ackman doubled down and why it’s not too late to join him.

Image source: Getty Images.

Ackman started buying Nike stock when former CEO John Donahue admitted to mismanaging the business. Donahue prioritized direct-to-consumer sales, cutting off ties with wholesalers. He focused on product development and segmentation by gender instead of sports. And ultimately that led to a slowdown in product innovation and sales.

Nike saw revenue decline 10% in the quarter that ended in August 2024. Shortly after, the board replaced Donahue with former executive Elliott Hill. Hill developed the Win Now strategy in an attempt to lean into Nike’s strength and turn the business around. The strategy encompasses strong brand marketing, increased pace of innovation, and improving wholesale relationships while returning its direct-to-consumer site and stores to premium destinations.

The company’s just starting to see the efforts pay off. Last quarter, revenue increased 1% on a year over year basis (down 1% on an FX-neutral basis). It saw particular strength in the wholesale segment, but direct-to-consumer sales were down as Nike discounted older inventory to move more units. That’s reflected in its gross margin contraction of 320 basis points.


Bill Ackman, Pershing Square, John Donahue, Nike, Elliott Hill, buying stocks
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