Carl Icahn is 89 years old, but his portfolio moves with the urgency of someone half his age mainlining espresso. His latest 13F filing reveals a $9.14 billion book that's unmistakably his style: concentrated, contrarian, and stuffed with companies most institutional investors would avoid like a sketchy buffet. This quarter brought something unusual, though. Icahn actually reshuffled the deck.
Walking Away From Bausch: When Even Icahn Says Uncle
The headline move is hard to miss. Icahn completely liquidated his position in Bausch Health Companies Inc. (BHC), dumping all 34.7 million shares. The stake had collapsed 75%, and Icahn did something he almost never does: he capitulated. This is the guy famous for doubling down when everyone else is running for the exits. When he walks away instead, that tells you plenty about where he thinks this story is headed.
He also trimmed Southwest Gas Holdings Inc. (SWX) through significant selling, signaling he's cutting loose holdings that haven't delivered the turnaround he was betting on.
EchoStar: The New Conviction Play
The real surprise landed in his new positions. Icahn didn't just dip his toe into EchoStar Corp. (SATS)—he cannonballed in. He bought 4.35 million shares and immediately made it one of his top five holdings at 3.64% of the portfolio as of September 30. It's textbook Icahn: distressed telecom trading cheap, a messy narrative, and optionality around strategic consolidation or restructuring.
He showed similar conviction elsewhere. Centuri Holdings Inc. (CTRI) got a 32% boost, and he expanded his stake in International Flavors & Fragrances Inc. (IFF) by 26% despite the stock having a rough year. He's buying what others are abandoning, classic activist playbook.
In a rare small-cap move, Icahn more than tripled his position in Monro Inc. (MNRO), the struggling auto-repair chain that's apparently now on his turnaround list.
Still All In On His Own Empire
Despite all the portfolio shuffling, Icahn's approach remains absurdly concentrated. A staggering 98.5% of his capital sits in just 10 stocks. His crown jewel is Icahn Enterprises LP (IEP), which still represents nearly 48% of total assets. And here's the kicker: he added another 24 million shares this quarter, even though the stock is down 80%.
If conviction had a poster child, this would be it. Icahn is essentially betting half his portfolio on himself.
What This Reshuffle Really Means
Icahn's Q3 moves aren't about chasing momentum or following the crowd into tech darlings. This is about drawing new battle lines. Dumping Bausch marks a rare admission of defeat, while loading up on EchoStar signals he still sees value in beaten-down old-economy plays that others have written off.
The massive position in Icahn Enterprises reveals something else: at 89, with half his portfolio tied to his own company despite an 80% drawdown, Icahn isn't pivoting to safe harbors. He's doubling down on the empire he built, betting that his decades of deal-making instincts will prove right again.
His portfolio might look contrarian to the point of eccentric, but that's always been the Icahn way. He zigs when markets zag, buys what's broken, and holds until he's proven right or completely wrong. This quarter, he showed he's still willing to admit defeat when necessary, but his core conviction remains unchanged: concentrated bets on distressed opportunities and an unshakable belief in his own playbook.