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Billionaire investor Leon Cooperman has warned market participants to expect stocks to struggle as long-term Treasury yields rise or remain elevated. Despite those concerns, Cooperman snapped up shares of many lesser-known stocks in the fourth quarter, according to regulatory fillings. Despite the soccer club's stock rising 3% in the fourth quarter, shares still ended 2023 down more than 12%. Shares have climbed more than 3% so far in the new year, making up some ground after sliding in the fourth quarter and 2023 as a whole. Cooperman, who spent a quarter century at Goldman Sachs before founding Omega, also made smaller additions to several holdings.
Persons: Leon Cooperman, Cooperman, Goldman Sachs, , Yun Li Organizations: Omega, Federal Reserve, Manchester United, Fidelis Insurance, Las Vegas Sands, Elevance Health, Bank of America, Citigroup, Ellington Financial Locations: Las Vegas, Bank
Longtime investor Leon Cooperman racked up market-beating returns before closing his hedge fund, and he still remains one of the most influential voices on Wall Street and a prolific stock picker. Cooperman converted his New York hedge fund, Omega Advisors, into a family office in 2018 to manage only his personal wealth. Cooperman recently said he still owns some of his favorite players in the sector, including Canadian companies Tourmaline Oil and Paramount Resources . In 2016, Cooperman and his hedge fund were charged with insider trading in Atlas Pipeline Partners by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Cooperman, who called the case "extraordinarily abusive," later agreed to a $4.9 million settlement but admitted no wrongdoing.
Persons: Leon Cooperman, Cooperman, bullish Organizations: Omega Advisors, Wall Street, CNBC, Oil, Paramount Resources, Atlas Pipeline Partners, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission Locations: York
Billionaire investor Leon Cooperman thinks that it's a stock picker's market and only individual names will offer value for investors as the overall market struggles. Cooperman became overweight the energy sector about two years ago when the group was still unloved. On the broader market, Cooperman recently said investors might not see a new high for a long time, partly because of the risk of a fiscal crisis. "Ultimately, we will have a crisis in public sector finance, and the market is not discounting a crisis. He said he would be very surprised if the S & P 500 climbs above 4,600 anytime this year.
Persons: Leon Cooperman, Cooperman Organizations: Omega Advisors, Devon Energy, Ashland Global Holdings, Cooper Group, Lithia Motors, Apollo Global Management
California teachers suspended after giving first graders a lesson on "genocide in Palestine." Citizens of the World Charter School hosts its classes at a local synagogue. AdvertisementAdvertisementA charter school in Los Angeles with classes inside a Jewish synagogue is investigating two teachers who posted online about giving lessons to first graders on the "genocide in Palestine." "After the lesson, one of the teachers proudly shared on Instagram, and I quote, 'LOL but I did a lesson on the genocide in Palestine today w my first graders,'" Schuldenfrei said. Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman, meanwhile, has pressured Harvard to suspend students for both antisemitic and pro-Palestinian actions on campus.
Persons: , Melissa Kaplan, Adat Ari El, Brian Schuldenfrei, Schuldenfrei, Hye, Clifford Asness, megadonors, Leon Cooperman, Cooperman's, Bill Ackman Organizations: World Charter School, Service, World Charter, KTLA, Los Angeles Times, The Times, Hamas, Palestinian Health Ministry, University of Pennsylvania, Omega, Columbia University, Columbia, Harvard Locations: California, Palestine, Los Angeles, Israel, United States, Gaza
New York CNN —Leon Cooperman, the hedge fund billionaire who has famously clashed with Sen. Elizabeth Warren over her proposed wealth tax, is cautioning voters against returning Donald Trump to the White House. “It would be terrible for the country if Donald Trump were reelected,” Cooperman told CNN in a phone interview late last week. “He’s a divisive human being who belongs in jail.”It’s rare for a Wall Street figure to make such critical comments about Trump, at least publicly. The Biden campaign did not respond to a request for comment. Given the ongoing risks, Cooperman argued the stock market is overvalued relative to corporate profits.
Persons: New York CNN — Leon Cooperman, Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Donald Trump, ” Cooperman, , Warren, Joe Biden, CNN he’s, Trump, Biden, Cooperman, , Republican Chris Christie’s, Steven Cheung, he’s, ” Cheung Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, Trump, Biden, Republican, Omega Advisors, Bank Locations: New York, Washington
Elon Musk, Jamie Dimon, and Ray Dalio all have serious concerns about the US economic outlook. Leon Cooperman, David Solomon, and David Rosenberg have also predicted trouble in recent days. AdvertisementAdvertisementJamie Dimon, Elon Musk, and Ray Dalio are just some of the high-profile commentators who've raised the alarm on the economic outlook in recent days. Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla"I think there's still quite a few shoes to drop on the bad credit situation. David Rosenberg, president of Rosenberg Research"I am willing to acknowledge that the recession has been delayed.
Persons: Elon Musk, Jamie Dimon, Ray Dalio, Leon Cooperman, David Solomon, David Rosenberg, , who've, Jeremy Grantham, Tesla, I'm, Rosenberg, We've, Goldman Sachs, there's, we've, Larry Fink, Fink, Stephen Schwarzman, Blackstone, we'll, Harley Bassman Organizations: Service, JPMorgan, Omega, Bridgewater Associates Locations: Israel, Ukraine, China
A billionaire Columbia grad said college students have "shit for brains" for not supporting Israel. AdvertisementAdvertisementA billionaire who gave more than $25 million to Columbia University said students had "shit for brains" for not supporting Israel, and he may have to donate elsewhere unless he sees a "change.'" Leon Cooperman, the chairman and CEO of Omega Advisors and a 1967 graduate of Columbia Business School, made the comments during an appearance on "The Claman Countdown" on Fox Business on Wednesday afternoon. He was primarily referring to a walkout at Columbia University on Wednesday, where students stepped out of their classes to support Palestinians amid worsening violence in Gaza. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe hedge fund boss said he has given "probably about $50 million over many years" to Columbia University.
Persons: , Leon Cooperman, Cooperman, Joseph Massad Organizations: Columbia, Service, Columbia University, Omega Advisors, Columbia Business School, Fox Business, Wednesday, Modern, Hamas Locations: Israel, Columbia, Gaza
Leon Cooperman warned of sticky inflation, higher interest rates, and a potential recession. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementAdvertisementShort-sighted officials have paved the way for stubborn inflation, steeper interest rates, and a full-blown recession, Leon Cooperman told Insider in an interview this week. As prices continue to jump, Cooperman suggested interest rates — which the Fed has raised from virtually zero to above 5% during the last 18 months — could rise further.
Persons: Leon Cooperman, Cooperman, , Goldman Sachs, that's, frugally, We've Organizations: Service, Reserve, Omega Advisors, Yankee, Hyundai, Treasury Locations: Bronx, Washington
The billionaire investor said he didn't expect the S&P 500 to hit a fresh high for a long time. Cooperman said a "rolling correction" was underway and house prices were likely to drop. AdvertisementAdvertisementLeon Cooperman said stocks were overpriced, and the S&P 500 wouldn't notch a fresh high for a very long time. AdvertisementAdvertisementA handful of Big Tech names, including Tesla, Nvidia, and Microsoft, have pulled the major indexes higher this year, but excluding the so-called Magnificent Seven, stocks are virtually flat. He said in February that the S&P 500 was likely to bottom around 3,100 points, or 35% below its January 2022 peak.
Persons: Leon Cooperman, Cooperman, , Jeremy Grantham, John Hussman, Goldman Sachs, Tesla Organizations: Service, Omega Advisors, Big Tech, Nvidia, Microsoft, Wall, Finance, Philanthropy Locations: Bronx
Warren Buffett wrote to Leon Cooperman about stock buybacks, taxing the rich, and Henry Singleton. When Cooperman was mulling a presidential run, Buffett joked he could "deliver Nebraska" for him. Cooperman shared a trio of messages he received from Buffett in his newly published memoir. Buffett wrote him a note after reading the letter, which Cooperman still keeps framed in his office:Dear Lee,I always enjoy both the quality of your writing and the quality of your thinking. Buffett wrote to Cooperman after his speech to express his agreement:AdvertisementAdvertisementHenry was a manager that all investors, CEOs, would be CEOs, and MBA students should study.
Persons: Warren Buffett, Leon Cooperman, Henry Singleton, Cooperman, Buffett, Goldman Sachs, trumpeted, Dear Lee, Warren, Singleton, Henry, Lee, you've Organizations: Service, Teledyne, Cooperman, Wall, Finance, Philanthropy, Omega Advisors, Business, Loews, Berkshire Locations: Nebraska, Wall, Silicon, Bronx, Iraq, Afghanistan
There's no indication that interest rates are too high, Leon Cooperman told CNBC. The billionaire investor also sees a return to this year's stock market highs as unlikely. "What's the sign that interest rates are too high?" "I don't expect we will see a new high in the market for a long time. "In 2000, everybody was hot on the internet: Cisco, Cisco, Cisco.
Persons: Leon Cooperman, Cooperman, We've Organizations: CNBC, Service, Omega Advisors, Federal Reserve, Nvidia, Cisco Locations: Wall, Silicon, Georgia
In November, one of the world's most consequential hedge funds announced a shake-up at the top of its power structure. In an internal memo, the founder of Millennium Management, Izzy Englander, said that Bobby Jain would be vacating the co-CIO role. "You can't readily find that managerial experience at other hedge funds and Goldman is a perfect place to look for those people." 8 former Goldman Sachs leaders are now Millennium execsEnglander isn't alone — firms rarely are in the copycat world of multistrats. In a statement to Insider, Abbey Collins, a spokesperson for Goldman Sachs, said, "Goldman Sachs has always been and remains a talent magnet.
The US is going through a "textbook" financial crisis, according to billionaire Leon Cooperman. That means poor returns for stocks, he added, warning the S&P 500 wouldn't hit a high again for a long time. Cooperman has warned markets of an coming recession, and said stocks could plunge 20% this year. "It's kind of like textbook," Cooperman said. Those conditions also mean tepid returns for stocks, Cooperman said.
Michael Burry and Elon Musk this week flagged the risk of a severe US recession. Experts have flagged inflation, rising interest rates, and global growth headwinds as major worries. Several of these experts blame the Federal Reserve, which has rapidly raised interest rates to curb soaring prices this year, leaving consumers facing both higher living expenses and borrowing costs. Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, Twitter, and SpaceX"Fed needs to cut interest rates immediately. Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta"We thought that the economy and the business were going to go in a certain direction, and obviously it hasn't turned out that way.
Leon Cooperman expects the S&P 500 to eke out mediocre returns for the rest of this decade. The billionaire investor predicts a US recession and stubbornly high inflation. Sign up for our newsletter to get the inside scoop on what traders are talking about — delivered daily to your inbox. "The 4,800 high this year will be the high for quite some time," he said about the benchmark stock index. Rising prices, declining growthA prolonged economic downturn and elevated inflation lie ahead for the US, Cooperman said.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCNBC Pro Week: Leon Cooperman on finding winning stocks in a down market and a 2023 recessionOmega Advisors CEO and billionaire investor Leon Cooperman sat down with CNBC Pro to explain why he's expecting a recession in 2023, and which stocks he is picking to make money despite the downturn. He also answers your questions.
Billionaire investor Leon Cooperman is still bullish on Alphabet. Alphabet , down about 30% year to date, remains a holding of Cooperman's, as does Microsoft , which has lost 24% so far this year. Alphabet, in particular, is "very cheap for what it represents," the CEO of Omega Advisors said in a CNBC Pro Talk Wednesday. However, while Cooperman calls both Alphabet and Microsoft stocks "excellent," he has turned to the options market for a little downside protection. "So they push the market into excess of fair value and they push the market down below fair value and I'm trying to capitalize on the mistakes they are making."
Fears of a recession intensified even more after data showed the economy shrank for a second straight quarter, making a strong case for defensive stocks for investors worried about slowing growth. Defensive stocks tend to provide stable earnings and consistent dividends regardless of the state of the overall stock market and the economy. They are often well-established companies in sectors like consumer staples, health care and utilities, such as Procter & Gamble , Johnson & Johnson and Coca-Cola . Berkshire also owns relatively small stakes in Procter & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson at the end of March. Major pharmaceutical companies and insurance companies are also considered defensive stocks.
Leon Cooperman ripped into Green Thumb Industries executives and accused them of insider selling. Green Thumb Industries' stock is down by 47% since January 1. During Green Thumb Industries' investor call on Wednesday evening, the hedge-fund billionaire Leon Cooperman ripped into the Chicago cannabis giant's CEO, Ben Kovler, over what Cooperman said was rampant insider selling by the company's executives. "I currently remain the largest shareholder in Green Thumb, and management continues to believe in the $75 billion to $100 billion opportunity ahead for both Green Thumb and the industry at large." Despite mixed results in the quarter, analysts are optimistic about Green Thumb Industries' long-term growth prospects.
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