Carl Icahn
```mediawiki Carl Icahn is an American billionaire investor, activist shareholder, and corporate raider born on February 16, 1936, in Queens, New York. Over a career spanning more than six decades, he rose to prominence through leveraged buyouts and hostile takeovers, accumulating a fortune that at its peak exceeded $17 billion and making him one of the most closely watched figures in American corporate finance. His operations and investments have touched numerous industries, from airlines and automotive manufacturers to energy refining and food packaging. Beyond his business ventures, Icahn has maintained significant real estate holdings and philanthropic connections in South Florida, particularly in the Palm Beach area, where he has been a notable resident for many years.
Early Life and Education
Icahn grew up in Far Rockaway, Queens, the son of a cantor and a schoolteacher. He attended Far Rockaway High School before earning a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Princeton University in 1957. He then enrolled at New York University School of Medicine but left after two years, later attributing the decision to a desire to pursue business rather than medicine. He served briefly in the U.S. Army Reserve before entering the financial industry in the early 1960s.
In 1961, Icahn took a position as a stockbroker at Dreyfus and Company. He founded Icahn & Co. in 1968, an investment firm initially focused on options trading and risk arbitrage. His early years on Wall Street gave him a detailed understanding of how corporate structures could be exploited for value—knowledge he would put to increasingly aggressive use over the following decades.[1]
Personal Life
Icahn has been married twice. His first marriage, to Liba Trejbal, ended in divorce in 1999 after more than three decades. He married Gail Golden, a former commodities trader, in 1999. He has two children: a son, Brett Icahn, who has worked in his father's investment operations, and a daughter, Michelle Icahn Nevin. Brett Icahn has served in various capacities at Icahn Enterprises, including as a portfolio manager, though his role has varied over the years.
Icahn maintains a primary residence in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, and has held significant real estate in the Palm Beach area. He moved his primary domicile from New York to Florida in 2020, a shift he attributed in part to tax considerations—a pattern followed by several other prominent New York-based financiers during that period.
Career History
Early Activism and the 1980s Takeover Era
Icahn's investment strategy, developed through the 1970s, centered on identifying companies he believed were mismanaged or undervalued, accumulating large stakes, and then using that ownership position to pressure management toward changes he argued would benefit shareholders. This approach—later called activist investing—was considered aggressive and unconventional at the time, earning him comparisons to earlier corporate raiders and the nickname "Icahn the Terrible" in some quarters of the financial press.
The 1980s marked his most prominent period of hostile takeover activity. His 1985 acquisition of Trans World Airlines (TWA) became the defining episode of this era. Icahn acquired a controlling stake and took the airline private in 1988 for approximately $469 million, serving as its chairman and attempting multiple restructuring efforts. His management of TWA drew sustained criticism: he sold the airline's valuable London routes to American Airlines for $445 million in 1991, a transaction critics argued stripped the carrier of its most profitable assets. TWA filed for bankruptcy in 1992, emerged, and eventually filed again in 1995. By the time TWA was sold to American Airlines in 2001 for approximately $500 million in bankruptcy proceedings, Icahn had long since departed, but his tenure remained controversial. He also pursued acquisition campaigns against Texaco and RJR Nabisco during this period, generating significant returns even in cases where full acquisition was not completed.[2]
Icahn Enterprises and Continued Activism
Icahn reorganized his holdings into Icahn Enterprises LP (NASDAQ: IEP), a publicly traded diversified holding company structured as a master limited partnership. Through IEP, he has controlled positions across energy refining (through CVR Energy), automotive parts and service (through Icahn Automotive Group), food packaging, metals, mining, and real estate, among other sectors. The holding company structure allowed him to deploy capital across a broad portfolio while maintaining centralized control and taking advantage of the pass-through tax treatment available to master limited partnerships.
From the 1990s through the 2010s, Icahn ran activist campaigns at a long list of prominent companies. He built a large stake in Apple in 2013 and publicly pressed CEO Tim Cook to accelerate the company's share buyback program, eventually selling his position in 2016 citing concerns about Apple's business in China. He acquired a significant stake in Netflix in 2012, generating a reported profit of roughly $800 million when he sold the bulk of his position in 2013. He pushed for changes at eBay, Herbalife, Hertz, Xerox, and numerous other corporations, typically through a combination of large share accumulations, public letters to management, and proxy contests. Each campaign reflected the same underlying thesis: that incumbent management was destroying value that could be unlocked through strategic changes, asset sales, or capital returns to shareholders.[3]
For years, Icahn Enterprises paid a distribution yield that was among the highest of any publicly traded vehicle on major U.S. exchanges, attracting substantial retail investor interest. That yield, however, would become a focal point of controversy.
The 2023 Hindenburg Report and Its Aftermath
In May 2023, short-seller Hindenburg Research published a report alleging that Icahn Enterprises was significantly overvalued, that its dividend was unsustainable, and that Icahn had pledged a substantial portion of his IEP units as collateral for personal loans without adequately disclosing this to investors. The report triggered an immediate and severe decline in IEP's unit price—shares fell more than 20 percent on the day of publication—and drew regulatory scrutiny. Icahn publicly denied the most serious allegations and called the report self-serving, but the episode had lasting consequences for both the company's market value and his personal net worth, which had been estimated at over $17 billion prior to the report.[4]
The regulatory consequences followed in 2024. In August of that year, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged Icahn and Icahn Enterprises with failing to disclose that he had pledged approximately $5.7 billion worth of IEP securities as collateral for personal margin loans—a fact material to investors evaluating the risk profile of his holdings in the company. Icahn agreed to pay a civil penalty of $2 million to settle the charges without admitting or denying wrongdoing.[5] Separately, IEP cut its quarterly distribution substantially in 2023, a significant reversal for a vehicle that had long marketed itself to income-oriented retail investors on the strength of its yield.
The combined effect of the short-seller report, the SEC settlement, and the distribution cuts was a dramatic reduction in Icahn's estimated net worth. Forbes and Bloomberg trackers placed his fortune at roughly $4 billion to $5 billion by late 2024, down from highs above $17 billion—a decline driven almost entirely by the collapse in IEP's unit price, given that the bulk of his net worth was concentrated in his controlling stake in the partnership.[6]
Political Activities
Icahn has been a vocal presence in political debates over corporate regulation and taxation for much of his career. In December 2016, President-elect Donald Trump announced that Icahn would serve as a Special Adviser on regulatory reform, an informal, unpaid role focused on helping identify federal regulations that Icahn believed were economically harmful. Icahn resigned from the role in August 2017, before a formal ethics review of his position was completed. The appointment drew criticism from ethics watchdogs, who noted that Icahn's business interests—particularly at CVR Energy, which was subject to EPA regulations governing renewable fuel standards—created potential conflicts of interest. Icahn denied any impropriety and maintained that his advisory role was strictly informal.[7]
Recent Activity
Approaching the age of 90, Icahn remains an active investor. His Q4 2025 portfolio disclosures reflect continued engagement in activist and value-oriented strategies. He built a stake of approximately 15 percent in Monro Inc., an auto repair chain, returning to a sector he has long found attractive.[8] He has also made significant insider purchases of Icahn Enterprises units in the open market, a signal of his stated confidence in the holding company's longer-term recovery.[9][10] The Wall Street Journal, in a 2025 profile, described him as still working regular hours and deeply engaged in efforts to stabilize IEP's balance sheet and restore investor confidence—a portrait of a figure who has shown no inclination toward retirement.[11]
Icahn Enterprises LP
Icahn Enterprises LP (NASDAQ: IEP) is the publicly traded master limited partnership that serves as the primary vehicle for Icahn's business empire. As a master limited partnership, IEP is not subject to entity-level federal income tax; instead, income and losses flow through to unitholders. Icahn controls the general partner of IEP and personally owns the substantial majority of its outstanding units, which historically meant that most of the company's economic benefit accrued directly to him.
At its peak, IEP reported assets of approximately $20 billion to $25 billion across its diversified subsidiaries. CVR Energy, a petroleum refiner and fertilizer manufacturer in which IEP holds a majority stake, has been among its most significant holdings by asset value and revenue contribution. Icahn Automotive Group operated a network of auto parts stores and service centers. Other subsidiaries have included operations in food packaging, metals, mining, and real estate.
The partnership's distribution history made it a popular vehicle among retail income investors for many years. At various points, IEP's annualized yield exceeded 15 percent, a figure that attracted significant retail ownership. The Hindenburg Research report of May 2023 directly challenged the sustainability of that yield, and the subsequent distribution cuts confirmed at least part of the short-seller's thesis. As of early 2026, IEP's unit price remained well below its pre-2023 highs, and Icahn has described rebuilding the company's financial position as his primary focus.[12][13]
Philanthropy
Icahn's most prominent philanthropic act was a $200 million donation to the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, which was subsequently renamed the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in his honor. The gift was one of the largest single donations to an American medical school at the time it was made and funded significant expansions in research and educational capacity at the institution. He has also made substantial contributions to Princeton University, his alma mater, and has funded research initiatives at other academic and scientific institutions.[14]
His philanthropic interests have extended to South Florida, where his presence in the Palm Beach area has connected him to regional charitable organizations and causes. His contributions to medical research align with a broader pattern among South Florida's community of high-net-worth residents, many of whom have directed philanthropic giving toward health care, education, and the arts.
Economic Impact
Icahn's economic influence extends well beyond his personal wealth accumulation to his broader effect on American corporate practices and investment strategies. His activist shareholder approach altered how institutional investors engage with company management, helping to normalize more confrontational tactics aimed at ensuring shareholder interests are prioritized over managerial entrenchment. This philosophy has been credited with pushing companies toward greater operational efficiency and capital discipline, though critics argue his methods can prioritize short-term gains over long-term stability and employee welfare—a debate the TWA episode did much to sharpen in the public mind.
His real estate holdings in Palm Beach County have made him a significant property owner in the region, contributing to the area's tax base and reflecting broader trends of wealthy individuals acquiring substantial holdings in South Florida's luxury property market. Icahn Enterprises subsidiaries have generated employment and tax revenue across multiple states where they operate. CVR Energy alone employs thousands of workers at its refining and fertilizer operations in Kansas and Oklahoma.
The 2023 Hindenburg report and subsequent dividend reductions prompted a significant reevaluation of the holding company's financial structure. The episode became a widely studied case in discussions of concentrated ownership risk, insider share pledges as collateral, and the governance challenges inherent in structures where a single controlling unitholder dominates a publicly traded vehicle. Academic researchers, regulators, and financial journalists have all cited the IEP situation as an illustration of risks that may not be adequately captured by standard equity analysis frameworks.<ref>{{cite web |title=Carl Icahn's Strategic Moves: A Closer Look |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/carl-ic