Bill Ackman listed two of his New York City apartments for sale on Thursday at a loss worth millions of dollars, according to a report.
According to New York magazine, the billionaire hedge fund manager is looking to sell two luxurious apartments on Manhattan’s Upper West Side for $19.9 million — years after he spent $22 million on the pair. Real-estate website banned,
Ackman, founder and CEO of Pershing Square Capital Management, cut the check for apartments 8E and 8F, located in the Beresford Building at 211 Central Park West, in 2017. According to Mention Global,
Both apartments are 3,000 square feet, with three bedrooms, three bathrooms and a living room overlooking the park.
According to Curbed, an apartment has been listed for more, likely due to extensive renovations that include a new kitchen and a bathroom with a glass-walled shower overlooking the park.
Pershing Square did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The 1929 Beaux Arts luxury co-op, designed by Emery Roth, has been home to celebrity residents including journalists Diane Sawyer and Brian Williams and comedian Jerry Seinfeld, the report said.
According to Mansion Global, Ackman bought side-by-side apartments to be closer to his children — who share a landing and may be joint — who live in a $26 million duplex with his ex-wife. Lived together.
The hedge fund boss sold the co-op on the 17th and 18th floors to his ex, landscape architect Karen Ann Herskowitz, for $15 million after their split. Real estate news site TheRealDeal Reported in 2018. Both of them were married for 25 years.
Ackman, who has a net worth of $8.9 billion according to Forbes, has since acquired a penchant for rooftop penthouses atop glassy skyscrapers — including, according to Curbed, his Norman Foster-designed pad at 77th Street and 57th Street Including his $91 million digs on the street.
Ekman is suspected to have left some of his art in the staged apartment, including a 1952 oil painting jan muller In the living room of 8E.
Ackman, a staunch Trump ally, has voiced his support for the anti-DEI movement and criticized university leaders’ handling of explosive pro-Palestinian protests on campus.
harvard alumni publicly called his alma mater Blaming then-President Claudine Gay for failing to crack down on anti-Semitism on campus, she was fired.