Bangkok Post

BIZ TITANS SCOLD ACKMAN OVER HIS VIEWS ON DEI

Execs take fund manager to task on diversity creed.

- By Simone Foxman

While money managers were inking deals, talking about AI and hanging on Elon Musk’s every word at last week’s premier business conference in Beverly Hills, a passionate debate over diversity was taking place behind closed doors. In a small side room, roughly 40 people, including some of Wall Street’s most senior executives of colour, crowded around a rectangula­r array of tables for an invitation-only panel and confronted hedge fund manager Bill Ackman for his attacks on diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, initiative­s, according to five attendees.

For about an hour, Mr Ackman was criticised for his public denunciati­on of DEI and for expressing views that participan­ts said were detrimenta­l to the progress of women and people of colour in America.

The money manager, who has labelled DEI “inherently a racist and illegal movement,” faced backlash from both panelists and audience members, the attendees said. The discussion­s were part of an event on DEI at the Milken Institute Global Conference on Monday.

Along with Mr Ackman, panelists included Jarvis V Hollingswo­rth, chair of the $200 billion Teacher Retirement System of Texas; Dina DiLorenzo, president of Guggenheim Investment­s which manages more than $300 billion; and John Hope Bryant, the head of Operation Hope Inc, a non-profit dedicated to improving financial literacy.

Mr Ackman, the billionair­e founder of activist investment firm Pershing Square Capital Management, began his high-profile assault against DEI initiative­s last year after accusing elite colleges, including his alma mater Harvard University, of failing to respond to allegation­s of antisemiti­sm on campus.

At the panel last week, Mr Ackman blamed DEI staff members for fostering ideas that deem some “oppressed” and others, including Jewish people, as “oppressors,” according to the attendees.

Most who spoke pushed the money manager to recast his attack on DEI, arguing that his message threatens to undercut diversity programmes across America, the people said.

At least one speaker said his attack on DEI reflected a poor understand­ing of the civil rights movement, including the Jewish community’s role in it.

Others said they’d witnessed his previous efforts to support diverse talent and businesses, but that his message on DEI is being co-opted by those who seek to diminish opportunit­ies for people from disadvanta­ged background­s.

“We’re talking about expanding the table and adding a chair,” panelist Bryant said after the event. He declined to comment on the discussion directly.

Supporters of DEI need to more forcefully argue that diversity has aided US economic growth, he said.

“I have written thousands of words about my nuanced views on this important topic. I would ask that people read them to fully understand my perspectiv­e,” Mr Ackman said on Thursday when asked about the discussion­s at the panel.

He pointed to his lengthy post on X from January. In that post, he said he had concluded “that DEI was not about diversity in its purest form, but rather DEI was a political advocacy movement on behalf of certain groups.”

The debate at the conference reflects a broader dispute taking place across corporate America over the role of DEI.

Comments by Mr Ackman, Musk and former president Donald Trump have added fuel to a crusade led by conservati­ve activists trying to dismantle DEI initiative­s in schools, colleges and companies.

The arguments around DEI spread beyond the panel with Mr Ackman to other conversati­ons at the Milken conference, which wrapped up on Wednesday.

Several speakers on the main stages voiced criticism of diversity initiative­s. Argentine President Javier Milei said at a luncheon Monday that “a promising future for the species is impossible if we sacrifice merit, competitio­n and results on the altar of diversity.”

Citadel founder Ken Griffin said he’d continue withholdin­g funds from Harvard until the school “recommits itself to meritocrac­y in a very public and profound way.” He’s previously attacked the school’s “DEI agenda” for failing to respond to antisemiti­sm on campus.

“It would be a mistake for Jewish funders and trustees to align against campus DEI efforts,” said Simone Friedman, who leads giving at EJF Philanthro­pies, the family foundation of hedge fund manager Manny Friedman.

In an interview with Bloomberg News, she advocated expanding diversity programmes on campus to more comprehens­ively include Jewish identity.

 ?? ?? DIVERSITY DRIVE UNDER FIRE: Bill Ackman, during a Senate committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, on April 27, 2016.
DIVERSITY DRIVE UNDER FIRE: Bill Ackman, during a Senate committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, on April 27, 2016.

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