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REPORT: Bill Ackman Says He'll Sell His JCPenney Stake If The Board Won't Let Him Replace The CEO

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Bill Ackman

The New York Post's James Covert reports that hedge fund manager Bill Ackman threatened to sell his massive stake in JCPenney if the board didn't find a new CEO to replace interim CEO Mike Ullman.

From the Post: 

At a tense July 22 meeting, with Penney’s business still swooning, a source said Ackman demanded that Penney find a new CEO by the time it announced second-quarter results on Aug. 20 — and threatened to sell his 18-percent stake if the board didn’t agree.

Ackman, the largest shareholder in JCPenney who has a seat on the retailer's board, sent a letter yesterday saying that the board is looking for a new CEO to replace Ullman, who took over the helm again after Ron Johnson stepped down back in April.

JCPenney fired back at the activist investor saying his "latest actions are disruptive and counterproductive." 

Ackman's $12 billion Pershing Square Capital Management owns a 17.74% stake in JCPenney, according to the latest 13F regulatory filing for the fund.

He started building his position in the retailer September 2010.

So far, he has taken a bath on the stock. Since September 28, 2010, the date of his initial 13D regulatory filing on JCPenney, shares of the retailer have tumbled more than 47%.

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Bill Ackman Fires Off Another Letter To JCPenney This Time Calling For The Ouster Of The Board's Chairman

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Bill Ackman

Bloomberg TV's Stephanie Ruhle reports that hedge fund manager Bill Ackman has fired off yet another letter to JCPenney board calling for the resignation of Tom Engibous, the chairman of the board. 

According to Bloomberg, Ackman has said he has "lost confidence" in Engibous and wants him to be replaced with Allen Questrom, the former CEO of JCPenney. 

Yesterday, the activist investor sent a letter yesterday saying that the board is looking for a new CEO to replace Mike Ullman, who took over the helm again after Ron Johnson stepped down back in April.

JCPenney fired back slamming Ackman saying his "latest actions are disruptive and counterproductive." 

Ackman is the largest shareholder in JCPenney and he has a seat on the retailer's board. His $12 billion Pershing Square Capital Management owns a 17.74% stake in JCPenney, according to the latest 13F regulatory filing for the fund.

He started building his position in the retailer September 2010. Since September 28, 2010, the date of his initial 13D regulatory filing on JCPenneyshares of the retailer have tumbled more than 47%.

The stock was last trading down 4%. 

Here's the Bloomberg TV clip: 

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Bill Ackman Flips About Private Jets And Secret Meetings Without Him In His Latest Letter To JCPenney's Board

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William Bill Ackman

Activist investor Bill Ackman blasted the JCPenney board in yet another publicly released letter.  

Ackman, who is the largest shareholder in the retailer and has a seat on the board, writes about how he thought other board members were excluding him from meetings.

That turned out to not be true. 

From the letter:

Yesterday's press release implies that my letter was the first time the board was made aware of my concerns about the hiring process. As you know, for nearly four months I have been advocating for the promised search process to be launched. Last Friday, I wrote a several-thousand-word email to the board outlining my concerns about our current trajectory and the need for a rapid search process. I asked the board to consider my thoughts over the weekend. When Tom wrote back on Monday dismissing my approach, I assumed that the full board had met to consider my concerns and that Tom, as the spokesperson, was accurately representing the views of the outcome of that meeting.

I later learned that no such meeting had taken place and that Tom had simply called directors individually. A director I spoke to earlier this week explained that they agreed with my approach for an accelerated search process, but Tom did not a call a meeting so they could share their views with other board members. Boards must have the ability to deliberate openly amongst one another so that all points of view can be adequately discussed. By not calling a meeting, Tom prevented the board from properly functioning and fulfilling its fiduciary duties.

Then, Ackman, who owns a private Gulfstream G550, goes on to take a dig at Ullman for the use of a private jet. If you recall, the New York Post called out former CEO Ron Johnson for using the company jet to commute between Dallas and his Palo Alto, Calif. home. 

From the letter: 

I am concerned that personal relationships and potentially other business dealings outside of JC Penney are affecting certain board members’ judgment. While I do not know whether Tom is still splitting his GV aircraft with Mike – perhaps not, because Mike has access to our two G450s (one has to ask the appropriateness of our aircraft fleet in light of the current state of the Company) – these type of outside business dealings can color the thinking of our board when independent judgment is most needed. As a result, I would like the full board to be provided with full and fair disclosure on any directors’ business activities or financial dealings, charitable donations or activities, outside board involvement with Mike or JC Penney of any kind so that the full board is informed of the potential for any director conflicts.

Pershing Square Capital Management owns a 17.74% stake in JCPenney, according to the latest 13F filing.

Since September 28, 2010, the date of Ackman's initial 13D regulatory filing on JCPenneyshares of the retailer have tumbled more than 47%.

Here's the full letter: 

To My Fellow Directors:

I think JC Penney is at a very critical stage in its history and its very existence is at risk. During a period like this one, it is absolutely critical that we work together to solve our problems. It is essential that our board function extremely effectively or we will certainly fail. In my history as a board member of many public companies over the last 15 years, I have never before released a public letter to a board of which I was a current member. That was admittedly an extraordinary step, but you should understand that I did so as a last resort after attempting to negotiate a resolution of my concerns about the recruitment process with our Chairman and the Company’s advisors over the last week. After having read the board’s public response to my letter and considering the events of the last few weeks, I am concerned that a small subset of the board is negotiating and speaking on behalf of the full board, that the rest of the board has not been properly informed and has not been given an opportunity to express its views, nor is even included in deliberations about what to do.

A proper functioning board needs to be fully informed about all material facts about a corporation in order to make deliberate and intelligent decisions. Extreme candor among directors is critical. Directors need to hear from one another in an open forum so all issues can be aired in a transparent fashion. Directors must put personal relationships and issues aside that might color their decision-making process. The board must be led by a Chairman who is unbiased, can make decisions without regard to personal relationships, and focused only on what is best for the corporation.

In recent weeks, our board has ceased to function effectively.

Material information is not being properly shared with the board, and the board does not have access to independent advice. As the Chairman of the Finance committee, I need to have full access to the financial affairs of the corporation in order to help lead the board in making critical financial decisions in fulfilling my fiduciary duties. When Mike became CEO, he terminated Alix Partners and cutoff Blackstone from access to information and a role in assisting us in analyzing the current state of affairs. My team was similarly cut off from access to information. This is despite the fact that when I joined the board, the Company explicitly agreed in writing to allow the Pershing Square analysts access to information so that they could assist me in analyzing the financial affairs of the Company. Alix Partners and Blackstone were hired by the Board to assist the Board in its deliberations and to help the Company in controlling cash, expenses, and future commitments. It was entirely inappropriate for Mike to terminate the board’s advisors without the board’s knowledge or consent. We are now flying blind.

While I like Robert Pruzan and Centerview, they are Mike’s advisors, not the Board’s financial advisors. They are conflicted, therefore, in providing independent financial advice to the board. Robert is therefore not likely to recommend that Mike should be terminated, nor is he going to criticize any decisions that have been made by Mike. He is not going to show us projections that would lead one to the conclusion that management should be changed. We are therefore not able to receive the objective advice that we need in order to make intelligent decisions.

Bob Peterson and Susan Ray were very helpful to me and my team and the board in understanding what was going on J.C. Penney. I, and I believe, the rest of the board thought very highly of both of them. Once Mike became CEO, Bob and Susan said they were no longer authorized to answer our questions. When I confronted Mike directly, he reluctantly agreed to allow Bob and Susan to speak to my team. Last week, Bob was constructively terminated (his strategy position was eliminated and he was offered a middle-tier position in the finance department, so he quit). I was told that Susan was fired last week. I do not know the basis for her termination.

Material hiring and firing decisions are being made without the board being properly consulted. Our marketing has been a major problem. I thought we had begun to make material progress when Sergio was brought in as a consultant. Marketing messages were tested. Data were generated to determine ROIs of our various campaigns. Traffic was recovering, Mother’s Day was strong, and we appeared to be recovering. Unfortunately, Mike fired Sergio without the board’s consent. He has now hired Debra Berman, a friend of Mary Beth’s from Kraft. No other candidate was considered for the position as far as I know.

Up until Mike’s current tenure, there was a process for hiring executive officers. They would be vetted, at a minimum, by the compensation committee, and their package would be considered by the committee and recommended to the board for its approval. In light of the fact that Ms. Berman is a friend of a director, particularly one who is Chairing the search committee, this new executive’s hiring should be analyzed with greater scrutiny. Sometimes CEOs hire friends of directors in order to curry favor with those directors. While I am not suggesting that this is what has happened here, proper process was not followed in this personnel decision.

Furthermore, in light of the criticality of this role and the difficulties we have had in this area, one would reasonably have assumed that the full board would have had the opportunity to interview Ms. Berman. That could easily have been accomplished at the last board meeting for apparently her hiring was being negotiated at that time. As Allen Questrom pointed out in his interview on CNBC yesterday, the decision to hire a consumer packaged goods marketing executive as the CMO of J.C. Penney is a strange decision. The skills and experience one learns from marketing lunch meats and American cheese to consumers are not logically applicable to marketing JCPenney to our customer base.

Imagine my surprise when I learned of Ms. Berman’s hiring from a press release on my Bloomberg machine. Unless the compensation committee met to consider Debra without me, Mike hired Debra without the approval of the comp committee. I and other directors still do not know how much she is being paid, how much equity she has been granted, etc. This is entirely inappropriate in my view.

I am very concerned about personnel decisions that are being made without the board being asked for its consent or even notified. It appears to me that a lot of other qualified people have been terminated, individuals with no experience in a particular function are given important roles in that area, and that some very questionable hiring decisions have been made. For example, at the last meeting, Mike mentioned that he had made a member of the merchant team head of real estate and construction even though she has no background in real estate or construction.

When Mike first joined as our interim CEO, he told me that he intended only to hire one or two people total. This made sense to me because interim CEOs do not make many material hiring decisions (those are left for the new CEO) and instead focus on recruiting a new CEO. While the board agreed that it would take the ‘interim’ out of Mike’s title to assist him with working with the team in Plano, Mike was hired by this board as an interim CEO. He has not acted like one. When Mike was asked about succession at the last board meeting, he said that he did not know of any other executive who could run the Company. I learned yesterday from an analyst that Mike had told her and the other members of the analyst community that he was not an interim CEO, but the board’s long-term choice. Mike provided the analyst community with false information. That explains why the analyst community was so surprised yesterday to hear that the board had started a search process. If Mike had told the truth that he was indeed an interim CEO, there would be no disruption in revealing that a search process was underway.

Compare how Mike has handled the situation with A.G. Lafley, the interim CEO of P&G. The situation is remarkably analogous. P&G’s board made a decision to replace CEO Bob MacDonald. Not having an immediately obvious candidate to promote internally or from the outside, the board brought back A.G. Lafley, the former CEO, as an interim CEO. As the interim CEO, Lafley immediately began a process to identify the next CEO and gave a story the following week to the Wall Street Journal so that there was no confusion about Lafley’s interim status.

I am also very concerned about the budgeting process. We received three different financial projections – a new one at each of the last three board meetings – each one projecting worse results than the previous one. Most disconcerting was Mike’s disavowal of the first two projections when he explained at the last meeting that those were not “his numbers.” I find this particularly troubling because these projections were presented by Mike himself to the board in May and in June so it is hard for me to understand why he should not have ownership for May and June’s projections. Now Centerview is running a new set of numbers.

In light of the uncertainty about our projections, I am also extremely troubled about the aggressive inventory purchases and future commitments we are making for later this year and 2014. Yesterday, I received a call from one of the Company’s largest vendors who explained his concern about the number of purchase orders he has received from the Company. When a vendor expresses concern that J.C. Penney is buying too much, we need to take a very hard look at the commitments we are making. In my opinion, Mike is overly optimistic about the near-term future of J.C. Penney. This vendor recommended, and I agree, that JCP should be making only conservative inventory commitments and then chasing inventory in the event we sell beyond our projections.

Yesterday’s press release implies that my letter was the first time the board was made aware of my concerns about the hiring process. As you know, for nearly four months I have been advocating for the promised search process to be launched. Last Friday, I wrote a several-thousand-word email to the board outlining my concerns about our current trajectory and the need for a rapid search process. I asked the board to consider my thoughts over the weekend. When Tom wrote back on Monday dismissing my approach, I assumed that the full board had met to consider my concerns and that Tom, as the spokesperson, was accurately representing the views of the outcome of that meeting.

I later learned that no such meeting had taken place and that Tom had simply called directors individually. A director I spoke to earlier this week explained that they agreed with my approach for an accelerated search process, but Tom did not a call a meeting so they could share their views with other board members. Boards must have the ability to deliberate openly amongst one another so that all points of view can be adequately discussed. By not calling a meeting, Tom prevented the board from properly functioning and fulfilling its fiduciary duties.

Beginning on Monday, I and my counsel attempted to negotiate a resolution of our differences. We proposed that the Company publicly disclose that a search process had been launched and that the Company commit to an accelerated time frame. My counsel and I negotiated with Chip Delaney of Skadden and Rob Pruzan. I assumed that the board was being informed about our request and the advisors were representing the full board’s views on this issue. My argument for public disclosure of the search process was based on the fact that a search process would likely leak as the search firm contacted potential candidates. We believed that the leak would be more damaging and disruptive to the Company than if we affirmatively told the world what was going on. I also believed that publicly announcing the process would keep the board focused on getting the search done promptly.

After our proposal had been rejected by the advisors, I decided to write yesterday’s letter and release it to the media because I thought it was the right thing to do as a fiduciary for the Company and its shareholders. Sometimes being “disruptive” is exactly what a Company and board needs at a critical time.

At our last board meeting at the first evening’s executive session, Tom terminated our discussion despite directors asking for the opportunity to continue to discuss our concerns. As a result, the executive session we held at the end of the following day did not give the board an adequate opportunity to discuss our affairs as many directors had to leave to make flights home. To state the obvious, executive sessions require sufficient time so all issues can be fully discussed and debated, and important decisions can be made.

I am concerned that personal relationships and potentially other business dealings outside of JC Penney are affecting certain board members’ judgment. While I do not know whether Tom is still splitting his GV aircraft with Mike – perhaps not, because Mike has access to our two G450s (one has to ask the appropriateness of our aircraft fleet in light of the current state of the Company) – these type of outside business dealings can color the thinking of our board when independent judgment is most needed. As a result, I would like the full board to be provided with full and fair disclosure on any directors’ business activities or financial dealings, charitable donations or activities, outside board involvement with Mike or JC Penney of any kind so that the full board is informed of the potential for any director conflicts.

I have lost confidence in our Chairman’s ability to oversee this board. I would therefore recommend that Tom be replaced as our Chairman. Allen Questrom said on TV yesterday that he is willing to be our Chairman in the event we meet certain conditions; namely, he is not willing to step into a hostile situation and he must be comfortable with the CEO we designate. If we join arms and this conflict behind us, reach out to Allen as a full board, and commit to move forward with an accelerated search process, I believe that Allen would come on board to help us right away. With Allen as our new Chairman, we would have the benefit of one of the great retail CEOs in assisting us in overseeing the Company at this critical time, and we would have his input and direction in selecting our next CEO, something with which he has enormous experience and relationships.

I hereby request that we hold a board meeting as soon as possible so that the board can deliberate and make decisions about all of the above.

Time is of the essence. Hopefully, this is the last board letter I need to release to the press.

Sincerely,

Bill

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Starbucks CEO Called Hedge Fund Manager Bill Ackman's Actions 'Despicable'

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howard schultz starbucks

The infighting among JCPenney's board, sparked by Bill Ackman's letter announcing he was looking for a new CEO, escalated after he published another scathingly critical letter today.

His fellow board members called his suggestion to fire CEO Myron Ullman "disruptive and counterproductive." In comments to The Wall Street Journal, Starbucks CEO Howard Schulz joined the critics, calling Ackman's actions "despicable," and claiming that he has "severely damaged the company." 

Here's the full quote: 

"Mike is working tirelessly to save this company, and it is despicable of Ackman to leak a letter asking for his removal," said Howard Schultz, the chief executive of Starbucks Corp., on whose board Mr. Ullman sits. "The irony is that Ackman himself has every step of the way severely damaged this company."

He doubled down when speaking to The Financial Times, calling Ackman a "destroyer of companies," and his actions "disgusting."

"As someone who runs a public company, I’m speaking out on behalf of people whose livelihoods can be destroyed by people like this," Schultz adds.

Schultz previously called Ullman's decision to return and help turn the company around "heroic." Like Ullman, Schultz stepped down as CEO then came back when Starbucks was in serious trouble. 

He was also no big fan of Ackman's hand-picked CEO, Ron Johnson, who was ousted after just 16 months when the company's stock plummeted, telling the FT that "Bill Ackman has blood on his hands for being the one who brought Ron Johnson in." 

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STARBUCKS CEO: Bill Ackman 'Ruined The Lives Of Thousands Of JCPenney Employees'

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Howard Shultz

Starbucks CEO Howard Shultz ripped into Bill Ackman over the activist investor's aggressive letters to JCPenney's board on CNBC's "The Closing Bell" with Maria Bartiromo.

Ackman's letters are calling for a new CEO within the next 30 to 45 to replace interim CEO Mike Ullman, who returned after Ron Johnson stepped down.

The activist investor also wants the board's chairman Tom Engibous replaced with Allen Questrom.  

Here's what we've transcribed part of Shultz's interview with CNBC's Maria Bartiromo: 

"... I think what we've all witnessed, though, the last 24 hours, is such a despicable act. Something so irresponsible that a board member of an existing public company would release and leak an email without sharing it with the board or the CEO is beyond comprehension.  But the story is worse than that. Here's the situation and this is the truth. This is not fiction. Bill Ackman was the primary engineer and architect of recruiting Ron Johnson to the company and he and Ron Johnson co-authored the strategy that fractured the company and ruined the lives of thousands of JCPenney employees and fractured shareholder value." 

"My problem is ... Mike Ullman graciously came back to change the company and worked tirelessly and given the time and support from the board I'm very confident he will do just that. And there's one other thing. Bill Ackman released an email today that said that Mike Ullman is not communicating with him and the board. When Mike decided to come back, I shared with him verbatim all the things that I did during the transformation with Starbucks and he used many of those communication tactics, including emailing and communicating with board weekly as well as with employees. So this is a tragic example of an irresponsible, despicable act. This isn't about Mike Ullman for me it's about financial engineering and people who do things for their own benefit and as a result fracture the goodwill, shareholder value and life of hardworking people ... Mike Ullman is a world class CEO and fantastic leader." 

[phone breaks up and rejoins the program]

"... What I was trying to say, Maria, is that Mike Ullman came back really to try and save the company. What's so perverse here is that he's trying to save the company that Bill Ackman has basically done severe damage to and for Ackman to do what he's done in the last 24 hours is not only irresponsible but it's destructive behavior. If I was sitting on that board, I would be asking for Bill Ackman's removal." 

Shultz is not a shareholder in JCPenney and he has never met Ackman. 

Ackman is the largest shareholder in JCPenney with a nearly 18% stake. Since Sept. 28, 2010, the date of his initial 13D regulatory filing on JCPenneyshares of the retailer have tumbled more than 47%.

Watch the full video below: 

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Looks Like Hedge Fund Manager Daniel Loeb Posted Another Taunting Message On His Bloomberg Terminal

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daniel loeb third pointOutspoken hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb, the founder of Third Point LLC, has left another taunting message on his Bloomberg terminal MSG9 ("message 9") line. [via ZeroHedge]

From Loeb:  

"Never interfere with an enemy when he is in the process of destroying himself." 

Hmm...Wonder who that's directed toward? 

A couple of weeks ago, Loeb left a message targeted at ex-friend Bill Ackman

"New HLF product: The Herbalife Enema, administered by Uncle Carl."

Ackman has continued to make headlines for his two huge disastrous bets on JCPenney and Herbalife.

So far, he has lost hundreds of millions of dollars — an estimated $600 million on his JCPenney investment and at least $300 million on his Herbalife short.

Weeks after Ackman publicly announced he's shorting $1 billion worth of Herbalife, Loeb snapped up a sizeable long position. He exited that stake for a profit. 

Loeb also reportedly shorted JCPenney.

Ackman, who if JCPenney's top shareholder, has been a big cheerleader for the struggling retailer.  Since September 28, 2010, the date of his initial 13D regulatory filing on JCPenneyshares of the retailer have tumbled more than 47%.  

Last week, he was firing off long letters to the board demanding that they find a new CEO to replace interim CEO Mike Ullman. 

He also reportedly threatened to sell his stake in JCPenney if the board doesn't find a new chief executive. 

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George Soros Takes JCPenney's Side In Fight With Bill Ackman

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George Soros

George Soros, who owns a sizeable stake in JCPenney, has taken sides with the retailer in its feud with hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, Bloomberg News reports. 

According to Bloomberg, which cites unnamed sources familiar, Soros told JCPenney that he supports current CEO Mike Ullman and his team of executives. 

The stock was last trading up about 3%.

Soros Fund Management reported a 7.91% passive stake in JCPenney back in April. 

Last week, Ackman, who is JCPenney's top shareholder, fired off letters to the board demanding that they find a new CEO to replace interim CEO Mike Ullman. He also reportedly threatened to sell his stake if the retailer didn't find a new CEO. 

This isn't the first time Soros has taken the opposing side of Ackman.  

It was recently reported that Soros had snapped up a large long position in Herbalife, the stock that Ackman is famously and very publicly shorting. 

Ackman then filed a complaint with the SEC accusing Soros Fund Management of violating securities laws by illegally colluding with other investors.

Shortly after that, Soros asked to redeem all of his money (less than $250 million) from Ackman's Pershing Square.

Also, they both work in the same building at 888 Seventh Avenue. 

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REPORT: Ackman Is Going To End His Push To Replace JCPenney CEO Mike Ullman

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It appears that hedge fund manager Bill Ackman might surrender in his fight against JCPenney's board.

This just in from New York Post reporter James Covert... 

Ackman, who is JCPenney's largest shareholder and a member of the board, fired off strongly worded letters to the retailer's board last week. 

His first letter on Thursday demanded that they replace JC Penney's interim CEO Mike Ullman in the next 30 to 45 days. Ackman's second letter said that he has lost confidence in the board's chairman Tom Engibous and called for his replacement with Allen  Questrom.

JCPenney called Ackman's actions "latest actions are disruptive and counterproductive."

Ackman's $12 billion Pershing Square Capital owns nearly an 18% stake in JCPenney.

He has taken a bath on the stock so far.

Since September 28, 2010, the day when Ackman filed his first regulatory filing on JCPenney, shares of the retailer's stock have tumbled more than 50%.

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People Think Bill Ackman Is Having A Stress-Induced Meltdown, But Someone Who Knows Him Says He's Having 'Fun'

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Bill Ackman

Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, the founder of $12 billion Pershing Square Capital Management founder, can't stay out of the spotlight.

Ackman's two huge, public bets on JCPenney and Herbalife have gone disastrously wrong this year, and, to many, Ackman's behavior seems increasingly desperate and unhinged.

Ackman has been betting on a turnaround at the struggling retailer since 2010 and he's been betting that nutritional product seller Herbalife will fail.

So far, he has lost hundreds of millions of dollars on each of these investments — an estimated $600 million on his JCPenney investment and at least $300 million on his Herbalife short.

To some, his latest behavior--trying to replace the new CEO of JC Penney only four months after Ackman brought him in to repair the damage inflicted by Ackman's last CEO--to accusing a fellow hedge-funder George Soros of criminally ganging up with other investors to attack his Herbalife short--reek of desperation, or worse.

We checked in with a source close to Ackman to get a reaction to this. Our source familiar with Ackman assured us that Ackman is not having some sort of meltdown.  

In fact, our source says, Ackman is "very calm" and was swimming laps on Friday afternoon. What's more, Ackman considers this sort of investing "fun," the source explained.

What is apparently fun for Ackman, however, is rubbing others the wrong way.

Starbucks CEO Howard Shultz, for example, described what Ackman has done to JC Penney as "despicable." And the JC Penney drama is a long way from being done.

Ackman, who is JCPenney's top investor, fired off two public letters to JCPenney's board last week.

His first letter on Thursday demanded that they replace JC Penney's interim CEO Mike Ullman in the next 30 to 45 days. 

Ackman's second letter, on Friday, said that he has lost confidence in the board's chairman Tom Engibous and called for his replacement with retail legend Allen  Questrom.

JCPenney responded to Ackman by saying his "latest actions are disruptive and counterproductive."

There have also been reports that Ackman, the largest shareholder in JCPenney and member of the board, threatened to sell his shares if the board didn't find a new CEO.

Of course, that would be at a big loss for his fund. Since September 28, 2010, the date of his initial 13D regulatory filing on JCPenneyshares of the retailer have tumbled more than 47%.

According to some retail analysts, the timing of Ackman's letters is incredibly poor, especially since retailers are gearing up for the back-to-school season. 

"He's a media disaster. That's what he is. If there are things going on with the company, the last thing you want to do is air your dirty laundry in public. And when you are trying to attract someone to take over the company, what do you think the board is doing at a crucial time like back to school? Denying these claims," an analyst who wished to remain anonymous, commented. 

The back-to-school work for JCPenney, such as picking out inventory and merchandise, has already happened, though.  

According to Brian Sozzi, Belus Capital's CEO and chief equities strategist, the concern surrounding Ackman's actions would be on the potential impact on the holiday season and the first quarter of next year. 

"What the letter has done, if the news flow from prior weeks didn't already, is knock the first domino over in a chain of events that could impact holidays and the first quarter of 2014.  JC Penney owns all its back to school items, correct.  But, what it doesn't own is the market price it will get for those goods.  If vendors are telling them it will cost more to get them the merchandise it requires to compete during the holidays, JCPenney may look to become especially promotional for back to school.  Inventory is a retailer's lifeline to cash daily," Sozzi told us.  

"So while they are out discounting more for back to school, and getting higher invoices for their vendors for future purchases, the stock market will grow concerned regarding the company's liquidity levels and access to additional liquidity.  As the stock goes down, vendors get even more nervous, charge higher prices, JC Penney becomes more aggressive with its inventory to raise cash," he added. 

Another analyst felt like Ackman isn't taking responsibility for JCPenney's situation because he was the one who picked the former disastrous CEO Ron Johnson as CEO. Ullman was asked to return to rescue the company after Johnson got ousted back in April.  

 "Bottom line—Ackman got his company into this situation by hiring Ron Johnson and he was happy to turn on him. Now he's throwing a tantrum because he wants Ullman out because things are not happening quick enough. The guy has been around for four months. They should be thanking Ullman for stepping in.  All these public tantrums, any CEO, good luck getting him in there," an analyst, who wished to remain anonymous, explained. 

Still, Ackman isn't the only large investor who wants to see change in JCPenney's management. Hedge fund manager Richard Perry's firm, which owns a 7.3% stake in JCPenney, also sent a letter on Friday asking the retailer to replace Ullman, CNBC's David Faber reported

And then there's Herbalife.

At the beginning of last week, there were shocking reports that Ackman had filed a complaint with the SEC accusing George Soros's Soros Fund Management accusing them of violating securities laws by illegally colluding with other investors and ganging up on him.

Before that news broke, CNBC's Scott Wapner reported that Soros had amassed a large long position in Herbalife.  Herbalife, a multi-level marketing firm that sells nutrition products, is the stock Ackman is famously short.  He's shorting $1 billion worth of Herbalife because he believes the company is a "pyramid scheme." 

"Well this seems to be like a desperation move and the kettle calling the pot black. When Mr. Ackman went short he had a huge public announcement and urged people that the stock was way overvalued. Now there are people buying the stock and it's cutting into his profits, so he's trying to retaliate,"former SEC chairman Harvey Pitt said in an interview with CNBC this week.

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BILL ACKMAN RESIGNS FROM JC PENNEY BOARD, STOCK SPIKES (JCP)

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JCPenney store redesign

After much publicized drama, JC Penney has announced that activist investor Bill Ackman has resigned from the board of directors.

"During my time on the J. C. Penney Board of Directors, I have always advocated for what I believe to be in the best interests of the Company," said Ackman. "At this time, I believe that the addition of two new directors and my stepping down from the Board is the most constructive way forward for J. C. Penney and all other parties involved."

Ackman, a well-known hedge fund manager, took a stake in the department store chain with the intention of turning around its sales.

He recruited Ron Johnson, the retail guru behind the Apple stores. However, sales collapsed as Johnson rolled out his revamped sales strategy.

Johnson was eventually ousted and replaced by former CEO Myron Ullman, who agreed to work as interim CEO as the board searches for a permanent replacement.

The stock immediately jumped by 4% on the news.

Here's the full statement via Yahoo Finance/ Reuters:

Plano, Texas (August 13, 2013) - J. C. Penney Company, Inc. (JCP) ("the Company") today announced a series of actions related to its Board of Directors. First, William A. Ackman of Pershing Square Capital Management has resigned from the Board effective Aug. 12, 2013.

The Company also announced that Ronald W. Tysoe, a highly respected retail industry executive who spent 16 years as Vice Chairman at Federated Department Stores Inc. (now Macy`s, Inc.), has been elected to the Board also effective Aug. 12, 2013. In addition, the Board said that it intends to name another highly qualified new director in the near future.

Thomas Engibous, Chairman of the Board of Directors, said, "The Company is extremely fortunate to have the benefit of Ron Tysoe`s judgment and experience at this important time. His deep knowledge of the retail industry and his financial expertise will be invaluable to us as we continue the work underway to return J. C. Penney to profitability and growth. I would like to thank Bill Ackman for his service on the Board over the past two years."

Mr. Ackman said, "During my time on the J. C. Penney Board of Directors, I have always advocated for what I believe to be in the best interests of the Company - its stockholders, employees and others. At this time, I believe that the addition of two new directors and my stepping down from the Board is the most constructive way forward for J. C. Penney and all other parties involved." 

Mr. Tysoe said, "J. C. Penney is one of America`s great companies, and I am very happy to be joining the Board of Directors. I look forward to working collaboratively with the rest of the Board and management to advance the turnaround currently underway."

The Board today also reaffirmed its overwhelming support for Chief Executive Officer Myron E. (Mike) Ullman, III and for Chairman Thomas Engibous, both of whom have been working tirelessly to position the Company for future success. This important work has included stabilizing the Company`s operations and financial position, restoring confidence among vendors, and taking steps to get customers back into stores.

The Board expresses its deep appreciation for the efforts of the Company`s 116,000 associates, who continue to provide outstanding service to J. C. Penney`s customers during the back-to-school season. It is also grateful to the many vendors and other business partners, as well as stockholders, who have taken the opportunity during the past week to express their confidence in the Company`s leadership and its current path.  

Ronald W. Tysoe has over 20 years of retail, finance and real estate investment industry experience. He served as a member of the Board of Directors of Federated Department Stores Inc. from 1988 to 2005, as Vice Chairman for Finance and Real Estate from 1990 to 2006, and as Chief Financial Officer from 1990 to 1997.

Mr. Tysoe currently serves on the boards of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM), Scripps Networks Interactive (SNI), Cintas Corporation (CTAS), and Taubman Centers, Inc. (TCO). He received his Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Law degrees from the University of British Columbia.

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Bill Ackman Invokes An Old Line From Warren Buffett When Explaining Why He Sent Those Letters To JCPenney's Board

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Bill Ackman

Activist investor Bill Ackman stepped down from JCPenney's board today following a public feud with the retailer's board of directors. 

CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin caught up with Ackman this morning following his resignation.

"I elevated a bunch of issues that are critically important by making them public. We came to an agreement on Ron Tysoe," Ackman told Sorkin, adding, "The board will now function more effectively without the noise." 

Last week, he fired off letters to the board demanding that they find a new CEO to replace interim CEO Mike Ullman and that chairman Tom Engibous resign.

It appears that part of his reasoning for sending the letters is that he was taking what he believed to be a Warren Buffett-style investing approach.  (He has compared his investment strategy to Buffett before.)

Sorkin reports: 

His basis in the company is $25 per share. So it is not clear that he has any ambition to sell these shares at a low price. One other thing, he quoted Warren Buffett.  Warren Buffett had a letter that he wrote in 1993. I just want to read you a bit of it. He is wrapping himself in sort of the Buffett flag a little bit in terms of his decision to go public which has been something that people, including myself, have been highly critical of. This is what Warren Buffett said. He said, "A director who sees something he doesn't like should attempt to persuade other directors of his views. If he is successful, the board will have the muscle to make the appropriate change.  Suppose though, that the unhappy director can't get other directors to agree with him. He should then feel free to make his views known to the absentee owners. Otherwise known as the public shareholders. Directors seldom do that of course. The temperament of many directors would in fact be incompatible with critical behavior of that sort. But I see nothing proper in such actions assuming the issues are serious. Naturally, the complaining director can expect a vigorous rebuttal from the unpersuaded directors. A prospect that should discourage the dissenter from pursuing trivial or non-fractional causes." 

Ackman, who runs $12 billion Pershing Square Capital Management, is still JCPenney's top shareholder. He owns a nearly 18% stake in the retailer's stock.  

He had reportedly threatened to sell his stake if the board didn't replace Ullman.  That doesn't seem to be the case, though.

"If I wanted to sell, I could have sold all along during the quarterly window," Ackman told Sorkin. 

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A Veteran Trader Explains Why BlackBerry Is The 'Red-Headed Stepchild' Of Activist Investor Bait

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red hair

In my time in this business I have seen some pretty interesting dust-ups between activists and the the companies that they target.

Guys like Dan Loeb of Third Point used to amuse market participants with his communications to his target companies (remember YHOO here), but he has tempered his process a bit of late, much to the financial press and onlookers dismay.  

One thing that has always struck me is what and how these activists choose to go after.  Obviously one of the first prerequisites is finding unlocked value that has been overlooked or simply mismanaged by those charged with running the company as was the case for years prior to Loeb entering his YHOO position in 2011 pushing for board representation.   Looking at his entry to the stock in 2011, when it was left for dead, the change he affected on the management and board level, his ability to refocus management & investors, and how his action resulted in a positive outcome….. the guy deserved to sell two thirds of his stake BACK to the company for more than 125% gain at multi-year highs. Bravo.

Loeb’s YHOO trade was about as close as you will come to a work of art in this business, which is why when some of these activist situations go terribly wrong, as they have for another high profile investor Bill Ackman of Pershing Square this year they garner so much attention.  Ackman has been kicked around a bit for what seems to be a precarious short in HLF, with his thesis largely predicated on hope for some negative FTC action, while another high profile position gone awry is his nearly 18% holding in beleaguered retailer JCP that is approaching death-spiral territory.   I am not going to go into the merits of each, make no mistake about it, this guy does his work and he certainly puts his money where his mouth is, but the only problem of late is that his mouth might be writing checks his fund can’t cash.

It strikes me sometimes as odd the stories that activists are willing to fight for, and none more interesting than JCP by Ackman and Carl Icahn’s ongoing (albeit petering off) battle for DELL.  When Ackman took his stake in JCP it was a very different company, possibly reflecting the fact that the value of his investment has nearly been cut in half since back in 2010.  And to be honest I have to assume the stock looked a lot more attractive when it was in the mid $20s then it does now in the low teens.  

In the last 3 months JCP has burned about $1 billion is cash as the company has done an about face on the retail strategy that was an about face on the decades long prior strategy.  The company’s market cap has shrunk to $2.9 billion, cash sits at little less than $1 billion while their debt is nearing $4 billion all with the backdrop of ballooning losses and sales declines.  The best case scenario in the near term would just be stabilization, and a Loeb style “win” seems to be years off.

Which leads me to BBRY, and why it may be perennially the ugly red headed step child of activist bait. Yesterday the company announced that they had once again hired bankers to “explore strategic alternatives, that could include a sale”.  This is a term that should be quite familiar to RIMM shareholders as it seemed that since the prior management lost their grip on the once monopoly of the smartphone market, that takeout might be their only way out.  

The problem is now that almost every strategic buyer the world over has taken a look at BBRY and passed in the last 2 years, which leaves financial buyers, the sort that would take the company private. Much like JCP, and this is the only real comparison, BBRY earnings and sales have seen a dramatic decline of late, but the company is infinitely better capitalized with 50% of their market cap in cash and no debt.  For the better part of 2013, since Michael Dell announced his intention to take the computer company bearing his name private, I have wondered aloud what makes DELL so much more attractive to private equity that BBRY?  I suppose the third time will be a charm (third “exploration”  in so many years) as media reports have picked up numerous instances where Canadian pension funds would invest in a bid to take BBRY private.  I guess sometimes situations have to be so picked over, and so reviled before they have a prayer of happening.

DISCLOSURE:  Hopefully No Red Heads were injured in the naming of this post.  

SEE ALSO: Bill Ackman Invokes An Old Line From Warren Buffett When Explaining Why He Fired Off Those Letters To JCPenney's Board

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Bill Ackman Counterblasts Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz

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Bill Ackman

Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman, who runs Pershing Square, fired back at Starbucks Howard Schultz after  the CEO ripped into the activist investor for leaking letters to JCPenney's board in the media. 

According to Bloomberg News, he says that Schultz "doesn't understand JCPenney facts." 

Those are comments that Ackman made to Charlie Rose, according to Bloomberg News.

Ackman will be on Charlie Rose tonight at 11 p.m. ET on PBS. 

Shultz recently told CNBC's Maria Bartiromo that Ackman had ruined the lives of thousands of JCPenney employees. 

"Bill Ackman was the primary engineer and architect of recruiting Ron Johnson to the company and he and Ron Johnson co-authored the strategy that fractured the company and ruined the lives of thousands of JCPenney employees and fractured shareholder value," Schultz said in the CNBC interview. 

Last week, Ackman fired off two letters to JCPenney's board demanding that they replace interim CEO Mike Ullman within 30 to 45 days.  He also sent a letter saying he had lost confidence in chairman Tom Engibous and asked that he resign, too. 

Ackman, who remains JCPenney's top shareholder, stepped down from the board this morning. 

According to Bloomberg, Ackman called JCPenney a disappointment during his Charlie Rose interview. 

He also said that he's disappointed in Dan Loeb's Herbalife trade.

Weeks after Ackman publicly revealed that he's shorting more than $1 billion worth of Herbalife, Loeb, who used to be Ackman's friend, snapped up a sizeable long position.  He exited that stake in the second quarter for a nice profit. 

We'll be tuning in tonight to see Ackman's interview. 

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Bill Ackman Says He's Disappointed In The Way Dan Loeb Handled Herbalife

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bill ackman dan loeb

Activist investor said on "Charlie Rose" on PBS that he's disappointed in the way that ex-friend Daniel Loeb handled the whole Herbalife situation.

Back in December, Ackman publicly announced that he's shorting more than 20 million shares of Herbalife, a multi-level marketing company that sells nutritional supplements. Ackman is known for being a mostly long only investor.  The last public short he had was MBIA. 

"We believe Herbalife is operating a pyramid scheme," he said in the interview, adding that he is shining a spotlight on the company so the regulatory community can investigate. 

Shoftly after Ackman disclosed his short position, Loeb, who runs Third Point LLC, snapped up an 8.2% stake in the company. He called Ackman's "pyramid scheme" accusation "preposterous."

Ackman claimed in the interview last night that Third Point had a price target in the $70s and sold the position in a few weeks. 

To be clear, Loeb actually gave the stock a price target of $55 to $68 a share in a letter to investors. 

From that letter: 

Applying a modest 10-12x earnings multiple suggests Herbalife’s shares are worth $55-$68, offering 40-70% upside from here and making the company a compelling long investment for Third Point. Given that the Company has historically traded more in the 12-14x range (and traded at 16-20x earnings through much of 2011 and early 2012), the opportunity for the Company to tell its side of the story tomorrow at its Analyst Day in New York, and the significant short interest, we believe shares could even trade well above our current price target.

Sometime during the first quarter Loeb exited his Herbalife position for a nice profit. 

Ackman admitted that it was a "good trade." 

"I'm longer term," he explained. "I'm not a trader. What we do is take large concentrated positions." 

Rose asked him if he respected Loeb.

"He has a good track record," Ackman answered. 

Continuing on, he added that was disappointed in the way Loeb handled it though by getting in and exiting shortly after.

Loeb has recently been leaving a series of taunting messages on his Bloomberg terminal targeted at Ackman. 

As for his rival, Carl Icahn, Ackman explained that Icahn is still angry at him from when he sued him years ago.  

"He's used Herbalife as really a platform to 'get back at me.'"

Since Ackman's short position was revealed, shares of Herbalife have surged more than 50%. 

The stock is going up "simply because Carl Icahn and others have been promoting it," Ackman said.

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Bill Ackman Accuses Starbucks CEO Of Hypocrisy Over Leaking Memos To The Media (SBUX)

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Howard Shultz

Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman  called out Howard Schultz yesterday evening on Charlie Rose on PBS. 

Schultz earlier ripped into Ackman for leaking letters for JCPenney's board in the press.

Schultz, who is friends with the retailer's interim CEO Mike Ullman, called Ackman's actions "despicable" and blamed him for ruining the lives of thousands of JCPenney employees.

Ackman, who said he's never spoken to Schultz, hinted that the Starbucks CEO may have leaked a memo he wrote to the press. 

"I think he doesn't really understand the facts. He's a good friend of Mike Ullman, who sits on the board. You know the reality is Howard Schultz, when he brought in the new CEO-- the board brought in Jim Donald to be the CEO of Starbucks a number of years ago and things were going poorly. Howard Schultz wrote a memo to the board that was leaked to the press and it's not clear who leaked that memo to the press." 

Back in 2007, a memo Schultz wrote to the press to then-CEO Jim Donald was leaked to the press. The board then ousted Donald and brought on Schultz again.  

BILL ACKMAN: But ultimately it led to the replacement of Jim Donald with Howard Schultz. And Howard Schultz --

CHARLIE ROSE: Or just returned to the company but he turned it around when he came back.

BILL ACKMAN: He did an absolutely fabulous job. And -- but why did that memo end up being leaked to the press?

UPDATE: It wasn't Schultz who leaked that memo. 

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Bill Ackman Says He Knows What Will Save America

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Bill Ackman

Last night embattled hedge fund manager Bill Ackman was on "Charlie Rose: The Week" explaining everything from Herbalife to JCPenney to Dan Loeb.

If you missed it, the whole thing will air tonight at 8:00 pm on Bloomberg.

"JCPanic" and the Herbalife hedge fund titan war aside, we learned a lot about Ackman the man in this interview — like how he wouldn't want to do any other job than the one he has now. He said he'd even do it for free, because restructuring companies does such a service for the American economy.

Ackman's got some ideas on that too — the American economy, that is — and those ideas led to a discussion about politics that made Ackman sound like he was stumping in Washington. He even touched on Mitt Romney (a topic no Wall Streeter has broached in a loooonnnng while).

From the transcript (via Bloomberg TV):

BILL ACKMAN: ...I think what people forget is, you know, Wall Street has unfortunately in the last -- certainly since the crisis, has gotten a pretty bad name, but Wall Street is responsible -- it’s probably the biggest engine for job creation, enabling businesses to access capital, enabling businesses to grow. You look at Howard Hughes was a creation out of thin air. It’s now a business that employs -- you know, it’s going to employ thousands of people, create a ton of jobs.

CHARLIE ROSE: Do you think the criticism of Mitt Romney during the campaign for his activities in running a private equity firm were unfair?

BILL ACKMAN: Yes, yes -- absolutely. I think good, private equity investors create a lot more economic value than they destroy.

That's when Bill, who has given money to both Republicans and Democrats over the years, and Charlie got down to solutions.

CHARLIE ROSE: What will save the country?

BILL ACKMAN: What will save the country are good economic policies that create the right incentives and an administration that is supportive of the business community. I think that’s actually very important. And, you know, policies that will make us competitive globally. It’s a global economy. The story today I think in today’s "Journal" about companies merging with European businesses to move their operations offshore from a tax point of view. We have to have a tax policy that discourages that kind of activity.

CHARLIE ROSE: So you can bring the money home.

BILL ACKMAN: Yes. I look at the United States --

CHARLIE ROSE: Is that the idea, have a tax policy so that the money will come home rather moving it offshore so you don’t have to pay taxes on it.

BILL ACKMAN: Yes. But I think if -- you know, the United States is not dissimilar to the kind of companies we invest in. We invest generally in very good companies that have lost their way. And with better management, enormous value can be created.

If you look at Canadian Pacific, this was a dying --

CHARLIE ROSE: This is one of your investments.

BILL ACKMAN: -- it was dying railroad under Hunter Harrison. And in very short order, you know, less than a year and a half he’s made dramatic changes to the business. The President is the CEO of this business that we call America. And the decisions he makes with respect to, you know, the way incentives are designed, the way he works with Congress as a leader in effectuating policy change can make an enormous difference in the growth rate of the country, in job creation, in happiness, in our safety I think that we can’t diminish the importance of business and business practices. I mean look at what Bloomberg has accomplished as the mayor of New York City. He took his for-profit mentality and has applied it to a city. And I think the city has accordingly thrived. I’d love to see the same thing happen to the country.

And here's the kicker we know some of Wall Street was golf clapping for:

CHARLIE ROSE: So we should only let rich people?

BILL ACKMAN: No, but we should -- I think that there’s a lot to be said to have someone with a business background making decisions about the economy.

Ackman closed the interview by saying that if he weren't an investor, he might go into politics — but only if he could "effectuate change" the way he does at his hedge fund.

So Ackman for President?

Leave you thoughts in the comments.

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George Soros Picked Up Stakes In Apple, JCPenney, Dumped A Bunch Of Citigroup In Q2

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George Soros

George Soros' Q2 2013 13F is out— that means we get to see the long positions his family office is holding.

Lets get to the stand outs.

Soros picked up 66,800 shares of Apple from nothing. In his previous 13F filing, he had no position in the company.

He also picked up a massive stake in the flailing retailer, JC Penney, 19,986,361 with a call on 500,000 shares. That means he expected the stock to go up. An interesting development considering that, as we know, Bill Ackman is on the board and Ackman and Soros aren't getting along well these days.

And here's one reason why — Soros picked up 5,039,175 shares of Herbalife, Bill Ackman's big short. Ackman filed a suit against Soros with the SEC over that buy, accusing him of breaking insider trading laws.

Soros also dumped a bunch of Citigroup stock, unlike David Tepper, who picked up the stock in Q2. Soros held 544,500 shares in Q1 2013 and in Q2 dropped that down to 172,7222. It's still a significant position, but doesn't sound like a vote of confidence.

He also dumped all of his SPDR Gold ETF.

Soros also dumped 15,000 shares of Netflix, bringing his position in the stock down to 40,000 shares.

And that's what's under the hood.

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Awesomely, Carl Icahn Slams The New York Times And Bill Ackman On Twitter

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Icahn's at it again, slamming the New York Times on his new favorite media medium, Twitter.

The Twitterverse is under the impression that Icahn may have gotten his publications mixed up, because it's the New Yorker that has a massive article out today called "When Shareholder Acitvism Goes Wrong."

You have to remember here that Icahn's been doing this activism thing since the 1960s — he's an O.G.... he's the O.G. and so he's not going to let journalists run around bashing his life's work.

Here's a taste of what upset Icahn so much:

The restructuring efforts that Ackman and Lampert have tried to pull off, by contrast, demand a kind of industry- or company-specific knowledge, and experience, that most money managers just don’t have. That’s why the 2008 study found that hedge funds tended to target “issues that are generalizable to all firms … rather than issues that are specific to one” company, and that this was sensible because many hedge funds “are not experts in the specific business of their target firms.” There are, to be sure, a few hedge funds that seem able to effect meaningful improvements in the operations of the companies they target—the best known is Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund—but they’re rare. In most cases, money managers would do better by sticking to what they know best—finding undervalued companies—and to traditional forms of activism. Even Loeb’s recent success at Yahoo, whose stock has risen sharply over the past year, had more to do with pursuing conventional activist strategies (bringing in a new C.E.O. and pushing for aggressive share buybacks) than with seeking a total revamp of Yahoo’s business.

You read that, right? You think Carl's going to take that lying down? No way, man. Fighting words.

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If Bill Ackman Were A Stock, I'd Be Buying Right Now

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Bill Ackman

The piling on re: Bill Ackman - I would bet - has now reached its pinnacle. If he was a stock, and I a deep value investor, I'd be buying him in size here. Okay, maybe I'd be buying calls instead of common, but still - the beleaguered Ackman is probably a bargain here.

It's not that I agree with the way he's gone about meddling with JC Penney to the point of disaster or the flamboyant rollout of his short position in Herbalife (in which his publicly-stated aim was to destroy a company and redistribute the profits to charity). It's just that I believe Ackman to be a very smart investor and, more than that, a determined businessman.

Removing himself from the board of JCP was the first sign that he is fully aware of his situation and the public perception. It may have set up his exit from the losing position or perhaps it was merely a cunningly non-linear route toward helping the stock price heal itself - the irony being that the most positive step he's taken as an activist in JC Penney's shares so far has been the removal of his own looming shadow.

If Ackman is now ready to play offense with his $12 billion Pershing Square fund, now that all of his enemies are out of the shadows and their positions illuminated, we should probably start to expect the unexpected.

In the meantime, two new reads this weekend to catch yourselves up:

Jenn Ablan and Matthew Goldstein on how it all started, just before Christmas:

How Ackman's Herbalife bet inflamed Wall Street passions (Reuters)

Also, The Economist weighed in, noting that "things change quickly" in the hedge fund world and Ackman has had the last laugh before, during the MBIA saga for example:

Hash of the Titan (The Economist)

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JCPenney Says It Has Reached An Agreement For Bill Ackman To Sell His Massive Stake

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JCPenney has reached an agreement with Bill Ackman so Pershing Square can begin to sell its stake in the retailer, according to an 8-K filed with the SEC on Friday. [via CNN Money]

From the filing: 

On August 13, 2013, J. C. Penney Company, Inc. (the “Company”) entered into a Registration Rights Agreement with Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P., PS Management GP, LLC, Pershing Square GP, LLC, William A. Ackman and certain affiliated Pershing Square funds (collectively, the “Holders”).  Pursuant to the Registration Rights Agreement, the Holders may make up to four requests to the Company to register the sale of the Company’s common stock beneficially owned by the Holders, subject to the limitations and conditions provided in the Registration Rights Agreement.  The Registration Rights Agreement also provides certain piggyback registration rights to the Holders.  The registration rights provided in the Registration Rights Agreement terminate when the Holders collectively beneficially own less than 5% of the Company’s common stock.  The Registration Rights Agreement contains customary indemnification provisions.

The foregoing description of the Registration Rights Agreement does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the full text of the Registration Rights Agreement which is filed herewith as Exhibit 10.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K and is incorporated by reference herein.

A couple weeks ago, Ackman engaged in a public fight with JCPenney's board.

He leaked letters to the media that he had written to the board demanding that they replace interim CEO Mike Ullman and that chairman Tom Engibous resign. 

Ackman, who is JCPenney's top shareholder, also reportedly had threatened to sell his stake if the board didn't replace Ullman.  Pershing Square Capital held more than 39 million shares of JCPenney as of the second quarter ended June 30, according to a 13F regulatory filing.

After all the public drama in recent weeks, Ackman was the one who ended up stepping down from the board

Ackman has been betting on a turnaround at the retailer for a few years now.  So far, he has taken a bath on the stock. Since September 28, 2010, the date of Ackman's first SEC filing on JCPenney, the stock has fallen more than 48%.

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