11/5/2025
Carl Icahn, Nearing 90, Is Still Trying to Right His Empire
Wall Street Journal (11/05/25) Lombardo, Cara
Activist investor Carl Icahn says nothing compares to the thrill of being immersed in a fight. For the past few years, the 89-year-old billionaire has been playing defense on several fronts. He is trying to revive the fortunes of Icahn Enterprises (IEP), the publicly traded company that houses his investments, after a 2023 short-seller attack shaved billions off its market value and his own net worth. But a relationship with one member of the investing team recently turned contentious. And he feels it has become next to impossible for activists to wage the types of shareholder fights he loves and that have made him a fortune. On the home front, as he nears his 90th birthday, he’s faced recent health scares. Icahn remains his combative self, publicly denying he’s concerned about any of it and focused on what he sees as momentum. “I keep going,” he said in one of several interviews over the past month. “I enjoy the game.” He describes the third-quarter earnings his firm reported Wednesday as some of its “best ever,” and he plans to unveil two new investments soon. He is obsessed with a pet project focused on removing voting power from index funds, which he believes could restore activists’ bite. Shares in Icahn Enterprises, known by its ticker IEP, are down roughly 80% from before the short seller arrived. Hindenburg Research, now defunct, had alleged IEP was overvalued and vulnerable from its founder borrowing against its shares. Forbes estimates that Icahn’s net worth is now closer to $4.5 billion, down from above $17 billion years a few years ago. “They took part of my army away, like Alexander the Great,” Icahn said of the attack, which dented his capacity to make new investments. “He has to change his battle plans, but it’s not that bad.” Icahn likes to point out that the IEP stock continued paying annualized dividends of $2 a share throughout the ordeal. IEP reported net income of $287 million in its third quarter, up from $22 million a year ago. The value of IEP’s investments, its net asset value, rose to $3.8 billion, up $567 million since June 30, primarily due to CVR Energy (CVI), a small refiner it controls. The increase would have been even higher, if not for short positions Icahn has long maintained as a hedge. Soon, IEP will reveal a big stake in automotive service chain Monro (MNRO), people familiar with the matter said. IEP, which holds board seats on seven public companies excluding those it controls, is also in talks to join the board of another company, the people said. Inside IEP, succession remains murky, some recent hires have soured and blockbuster wins have been missing. Brett Icahn, Carl’s son, officially rejoined the firm in October 2020, signing a seven-year contract to lead a team of three investors he hired. Brett is expected to succeed his father as chairman and run the firm’s investment unit. Icahn says he is devoting much of his energy to targeting index funds’ voting rights. He is finishing a white paper on the topic. He rails against what he calls the “cartel” of BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street. The way Icahn sees it, with index funds controlling around 30% of most companies’ voting rights, it has become impossible for activist investors to run proxy fights for control of corporate boards. He argues such fights are good for the overall economy, but rarely win support from the index funds. BlackRock and its peers say they are giving some investors voting powers and otherwise carefully determine votes delegated to them to maximize investors’ financial interests. They also point to legal issues that currently prevent them from giving all investors the ability to vote their own shares. Icahn wants either Congress to act or President Trump to issue an executive order. One proposal from Republican lawmakers would require shares held in passively managed funds to be voted on a proportional basis according to instructions from fund investors.
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