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In today's big story, billionaire Ken Griffin has some advice for President-elect Donald Trump, including a suggestion for his Treasury pick . While speaking Thursday at the Economic Club of New York, Griffin said he appreciates the importance of those issues to Americans but said aggressive tactics to address them could make things work. Griffin is one of the biggest donors to the Republican Party, but declined to publicly endorse either presidential candidate this year. AdvertisementModeration hasn't been the name of the game for Trump with some of his proposed policies. AdvertisementHe said he'd be open to selling a minority stake in his hedge fund to the right partner.
Persons: it's, Ken Griffin, Donald Trump, Trump Ken Griffin, Mike Blake, Insider's Bradley Saacks, Michelle Abrego, Griffin, Manny Roman, Trump, Marc Rowan, Rowan, Alexander Tamargo, Thoma Bravo Griffin, he'd, Zalubowski, Chelsea Jia Feng, Elon, Paul, Tyson, Megyn Kelly, Tucker Carlson Ron Antonelli, Chip Somodevilla, Rebecca Zisser, Tucker Carlson, Bari Weiss, BI's Peter Kafka, Chris Balfe, Ridley Scott's, You've, Dan DeFrancesco, Jack Sommers, Grace Lett, Ella Hopkins, Amanda Yen, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Treasury, Trump, Citadel, Milken, Global Conference, Reuters, Economic, of New, Republican Party, Citadel Securities, Sequoia, Millennium Management, BlackRock, Chelsea, Getty, Netflix, Bank of America, NY Daily, Fox News, Auto, Ford, GM, Volkswagen Locations: Beverly Hills , California, U.S, of New York, Montreal, New York, London, Chicago
The hedge fund is run by co-CEOs Carter Lyons and Scott Hoffman, who took over for Two Sigma's billionaire cofounders in September. The firm is planning to continue to invest in its core strategies, a person close to the manager said. Related Video How tech layoffs could affect the economyNo portfolio managers were eliminated, a person close to the manager told Business Insider. AdvertisementThe goal is to be more disciplined as the firm grows going forward, the person close to Two Sigma said. AdvertisementIn this light, the latest cuts could be seen as a clean-up of balance sheet bloat — but the person close to the firm said that a listing has not been discussed in any form.
Persons: Carter Lyons, Scott Hoffman, cofounders, cofounders John Overdeck, David Siegel, Lyons, Hoffman, Lazard's Organizations: Sigma, Business, Bloomberg, shepherding Locations: New York
AdvertisementCitadel founder Ken Griffin said on Thursday that he's "open" to selling a stake in his hedge fund. Griffin had previously sold a minority stake in his market maker to VC funds Sequoia and Paradigm. BlackRock's potential investment into Izzy Englander's Millennium might have Citadel founder Ken Griffin thinking. Griffin said Sequoia has pushed Citadel Securities' leadership in the boardroom, making them a better company. AdvertisementAs for who he'd want as a minority stakeholder of Citadel, Griffin clearly has a type.
Persons: Ken Griffin, Griffin, Izzy Englander's, Larry Fink, Sam Bankman, he'd, that's, it's, Sequoia Organizations: Citadel, Sequoia, Economic, of New, BlackRock, Millennium, Financial Times, Bloomberg, Citadel Securities, Apple, Nvidia Locations: of New York, York
AdvertisementBillionaire Ken Griffin cautioned the incoming Trump administration from adopting extreme policies. Speaking in New York Thursday, Griffin lauded the work of immigrants and warned against cutting taxes. AdvertisementGriffin's plea to Marc RowanGriffin is not the first Wall Street leader to push for a more moderate immigration and tax policy approach. AdvertisementRoman said that tax cuts and tariffs will increase the government deficit, leaving the Trump administration with less room for error in choosing policies. In a Reuters article two days after the election, an unnamed Wall Street leader hoped Trump's aides would rein in extreme policies that could increase the deficit.
Persons: Ken Griffin, Griffin, Marc Rowan, Donald Trump, I'm, Peng Zhao, Marc Rowan Griffin, Manny Roman, Bloomberg's Erik Schatzker, Trump, Trump's, Rowan Organizations: Trump, Treasury, Billionaire Citadel, Republican Party, Economic, of New, Citadel Securities, Reuters Locations: New York, of New York, American, Illinois, California, Florida
AdvertisementSpeaking at the Sohn conference in London, Muddy Waters founder Carson Block said he was short E.L.F Beauty. Notorious short-seller Carson Block has a new target: discount cosmetics company E.L.F. AdvertisementUsing import data and referencing conversations the Muddy Waters founder and his team had with E.L.F. "Its reported inventory also appears materially inflated as a result — i.e., to account for cash that has not really come in." AdvertisementBlock and his firm, Muddy Waters, have been a thorn in the side of plenty of companies, big and small.
Persons: Muddy, Carson Block, E.L.F, Block, Muddy Waters, Block's, Blackstone Organizations: Sohn, Muddy Waters, Sohn Conference Locations: London, California, Muddy, China
AdvertisementTiger Management and $4 billion hedge fund Hound Partners are in a legal tussle. Tiger, the legendary investment manager founded by the late Julian Robertson, seeded Hound in 2004. Hound saw assets fall from $4.6 billion at the end of 2017 to $1.8 billion at the end of 2022, according to Tiger's suit. "There is no instance of which Tiger is aware where Mr. Auerbach sought a positive reference for his funds that Tiger declined to provide," Tiger's suit states. Auerbach did not work for Robertson's fund but was seeking capital to start his fund in 2004 when he met the billionaire.
Persons: Julian Robertson, Hound, Jonathan Auerbach, Tiger, Gabrielle Wesley, Auerbach, Robertson, Alex Robertson, it's, Julian Robertson's Organizations: Tiger Management, Partners, Hound Partners, Mars, America, Tiger, Tiger Cubs, Viking Locations: New York, Mars Wrigley
The former employees took "secret information at the heart of Yipit's business" to use in their roles at MScience, Yipit says in its lawsuit. The lawsuit does not name MScience, only Alex Pinsky, Zachary Emmett, and 10 John Does, who "conspired" with the two named defendants. Carlyle-backed data giant Yipit's lawsuit against two former employees — and 10 unnamed "individuals or entities who have conspired" with them — is the talk of the alternative data industry. AdvertisementEmmett tried to conceal the transfers of Yipit's client data when he left the company, according to the lawsuit. Advertisement"Yipit is making sure these guys don't work in alt data ever again," a data executive at a hedge fund said.
Persons: Yipit, Alex Pinsky, Zachary Emmett, John, Carlyle, Sam Bankman, Emmett, Pinsky, MScience, Yipit's Organizations: Jefferies, MScience, Facebook, Apple Locations: Manhattan, Yipit
Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. "The backdrop is already a more volatile FX market," Webb said, comparing markets now to when Trump was inaugurated in January 2017. But market volatility is at its lowest level since July, based on the VIX Index, Wall Street's favorite measure of uneasiness. Universa has demand for its strategy, Yarckin said, but it's coming from "a small subset of people." "I wonder if this is being underestimated" by the markets, Webb said.
Persons: Warren Buffett, , Donald Trump, Jonathan Webb, Webb, Trump, Wall, Brandon Yarckin, Universa, Warren, Berkshire Hathaway, Yarckin, Simon Aninat, haven't, Mark Spitznagel, Aninant, Mattias Eriksson, Eriksson, Elon Musk, It's Organizations: Universa Investments, Service, Twitter, C8 Technologies, Jefferies, Business, Oracle Locations: Omaha
download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . The rotational associates program lets new hires work for different teams in different roles so new employees can get a sense of where they fit best. Academics, doctors, and veteransThe end result is that driven people find their place in the firm, one way or another. Shaw Research, a computational drug discovery company led by Shaw, which put the hedge fund on their radar. Willenken, the doctor of philosophy, appreciated that his role included the parts of academia he enjoyed most without the siloed approach academic research roles typically require.
Persons: Shaw, , Tim Willenken, hadn't, Gabrielle Wesley, I'd, D.E, David Shaw, Charles Ardai, Jeff Bezos, Jeremy Reff, Reff, Willenken, Don Quixote, Ana Díaz Rivero, Lindsay Temes's, Dr, Omar Ali, Lindsey Temes, Shaw Temes, Pat Tillman, Ali, Díaz Rivero Organizations: BI, Service, Mars, Amazon, Big Tech, Harvard, D.E, undergrad, Air Force, MIT, Pat Tillman Foundation, National Health Service, NHS, Shaw Research Locations: D.E, Mars Wrigley, America, New York, quants, Silicon Valley, Big
Schonfeld is up by 15.5% for the year in its flagship fund. They said the flagship fund had been up in 17 of the past 18 months. AdvertisementOctober was a strong month generally for the large multistrategy managers that have dominated industry headlines in recent years. Ken Griffin's Citadel was up by 1.2% last month in the firm's flagship Wellington fund, a person close to the Miami-based fund told Business Insider. AdvertisementMillennium, meanwhile, made 0.4% last month, pushing its annual return to 10%, a person close to Izzy Englander's firm said.
Persons: Schonfeld, , Ken Griffin's, Izzy Englander's Organizations: Citadel, Service, Schonfeld Strategic Advisors, Partners, Equity, Microsoft, Business, Ken Griffin's Citadel Locations: York, Wellington, Miami
Who Wall Street thinks will win the election
  + stars: | 2024-11-04 | by ( Bradley Saacks | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +3 min
A survey of 119 investors found that 53% think former president Donald Trump will defeat Kamala Harris. Investors believe fossil fuel and industrial companies should do well under Trump, the survey said. AdvertisementMany of the bigwigs of finance have picked their sides, but Wall Street seems to believe one candidate has the upper hand in this year's presidential election. Betting markets have leaned toward former President Donald Trump, and the financial markets have already priced in a Trump win, according to billionaire investor Stan Druckenmiller. One of the world's most accurate economists, Christophe Barraud, for instance, is putting his credibility on the line for a Trump win.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Stanley Druckenmiller, , Stan Druckenmiller, Emmanuel Cau, Trump, SumZero, Divya Narendra, Ken Griffin, Griffin, Druckenmiller, Hillary Clinton, Elon Musk, Christophe Barraud Organizations: Investors, Trump, Republican, Service, Barclays London, Billionaire Citadel, Future Investment Initiative, Tesla Locations: Saudi Arabia, Riyadh
Business Insider selected 25 young professionals 35 and under for its rising stars of Wall Street list. AdvertisementThere's no shortage of colorful characters depicting Wall Street. Two of those are fictional movie characters, and one was based on real person, but they have all shaped the public's perception of what working on Wall Street could be like. We asked up-and-comers on Wall Street about the shows, movies, or books that best represent their daily lives. Here are the shows, movies, or books that give a flavor of what it's like to work on Wall Street.
Persons: , Mark Zhu, There's Organizations: Service, Blackstone
A former Avenue Capital fundraiser claims Marc Lasry offered her a $5 million settlement in May. Earlier this month, Lasry filed a lawsuit against Gina Strum, claiming she was trying to extort $50 million. AdvertisementBillionaire Avenue Capital cofounder Marc Lasry offered a former female employee who accused him of years of sexual harassment a $5 million settlement in May, according to new legal filings from Gina Strum's lawyers. The suit included texts and emails from Strum that Lasry's legal team said demonstrated Strum's obsession with her billionaire boss. AdvertisementDays after Lasry filed his suit, Strum responded with her own lawsuit, claiming years of sexual harassment and unwanted touching from Lasry.
Persons: Marc Lasry, Lasry, Gina Strum, , Gina Strum's, Plaintiff Lasry, doesn't, Strum, CK, Marc Lasry's, Hoffler Organizations: Capital, Service, Milwaukee Bucks, Democratic, Strum Locations: New York
Justin Lubell, Citadel's Global Equities head, said shorting has been a big driver of returns. There's less competition in the space compared to going long on stocks, he said. Anthony Bozza, the founder of Lakewood Capital, called those who know who to short stocks a "dying breed." AdvertisementWhile some big bets against specific stocks have blown up in hedge funds' faces in recent years, there's still a focus on shorting at Citadel's longest-running equities unit. Related storiesEven investors known for bold short bets have moved away from the practice.
Persons: Justin Lubell, shorting, Anthony Bozza, , there's, Ken Griffin's, Lubell, Robin, Gavin Baker, Lee Ainslie, Steve Cohen's Point72, Gabe Plotkin's Melvin Capital, Pershing, Bill Ackman, Bozza Organizations: Citadel's Global, Service, Citadel's, Citadel Global, Robin Hood Investors Conference, Business, Management, Lakewood Capital, Maverick Capital, GameStop, Lakewood Locations: Lakewood Capital, New York
The space has exploded in the US as dozens of states have legalized online gambling. Just as quant traders have changed equity markets forever, sports betting might be next. AdvertisementThrough the second quarter of this year, online gambling site FanDuel averaged 3.3 million bettors each month. AdvertisementAlready, the smartest Novig users are sanding away the easiest returns. There's demand from Novig users for the exchange to release software that would allow traders to program a bot to trade for them.
Persons: , Ed Thorp, Jim Simons, Ken Griffin, AQR's Cliff Asness, PDT's Peter Muller, Bill Bentley, Kelechi Ukah, Jacek Dmochowski, Paddy, Dmochowski, Jane, Ukah, sportsbooks Organizations: Service, Renaissance Technologies, MIT, Business, City College of New, Sports, UCLA, Paddy Power, MGM Locations: Dublin, City College of New York, Vegas
D1's Dan Sundheim and SurgoCap's Mala Gaonkar spoke about investing in AI a Chicago conference. Sundheim said it won't be private companies leading this tech change for once. Gaonkar said the most promising industry for short-term AI advances is the medical technology field. Sundheim, whose portfolio has billions invested in both public and private companies, believes the best way to tap into the AI frenzy is through public companies. PitchBook notes that the firm has made 228 investments in private companies since six years ago.
Persons: Dan Sundheim, Mala Gaonkar, Sundheim, Gaonkar, , Lone, medtech, Julian Roberston's, Elon Organizations: Service, D1 Capital Partners, Tuesday's Invest, Kids, Business, Lone Pine, SurgoCap Partners, Institutional Investor, Tiger Cub, Viking Global, Tiger, Elon Musk's SpaceX, D1 Locations: Chicago
The lack of uniformity allows both firms and employees to present themselves in the best light. This lack of uniformity and the relentless war for talent has firms and employees alike taking advantage of the ambiguity. Rokos has two dozen employees with the title "investment officer" in their LinkedIn profiles. At Coatue, executives sign off on what employees put as their title on LinkedIn, people familiar with the firm's operations said. Members of Tiger Global's front-office team use "investor" as their title on LinkedIn instead of a more specific role.
Persons: , David Einhorn's, James Fishback, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Ken Griffin, Gerald Beeson, Sjoerd, Google's Paul Darrah, Jose Gamez, Rokos, Chris Rokos, Paul Enright, Townie Wells, Enright, Jain, Tiger, Marshall Wace, D.E, Shaw, allocators, Elliott, Don Steinbrugge, Steinbrugge Organizations: Service, Goldman, Bloomberg, Business, Industry, Citadel, Citadel Securities, Jain, Townie, Viking Global, Sigma, Fund, Talent, Agecroft Partners Locations: Greenlight, Miami, Palm Beach, London, Wells, Coatue
Gina Strum, the former Avenue Capital employee accused of blackmailing her boss, countersued. AdvertisementIn response to Avenue Capital's lawsuit against her, former fundraiser Gina Strum has countersued, accusing her former bosses, including billionaire Marc Lasry, of sexual harassment and gender discrimination. A spokesperson for Avenue said: "Ms. Strum's allegations are completely false and represent her further attempt to malign the reputations of Mr. Lasry, Ms. Gardner, and Avenue for financial gain." Related storiesUnlike Lasry's suit, which accused Strum of "blackmailing" him, Strum's lawsuit does not include extensive written evidence, such as texts or emails of the harassment. AdvertisementOther eye-catching bits of Strum's suit include accusations that Lasry:
Persons: Gina Strum, Marc Lasry, , Sonia Gardner, Daniel Kaiser, CK Hoffler, Jesse Jackson, Lasry —, Strum, Lasry, Gardner, Strum —, Jane, Martin Gantz, Lasry's Organizations: Capital, Service, Avenue, Milwaukee Bucks, Lasry, New York Locations: New York, Instagram, New York City
The lawsuit alleges that Strum was demanding $50 million from Lasry or she threatened to make things "really, really, ugly." In the suit, Lasry, the former owner of the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks and a longtime Democratic megadonor, alleges that his former employee, Gina Strum, was trying to extort him for $50 million. The suit states that Lasry rebuffed Strum's advances, but that did not stop the flow of texts. "Ms. Strum wrongly asserted that Ms. Gardner's 2022 surgery should have been disclosed to Avenue's investors, because according to Ms. Strum, Ms. Gardner was in poor health and had not been working for the last two years," the suit reads. "When Ms. Strum received the attention and the money she sought, she routinely complimented Plaintiffs," the suit states.
Persons: Marc Lasry, Gina Strum, Strum, , Sonia Gardner, Democratic megadonor, Lasry, Gardner, Daniel Kaiser, Kaiser, Strum's, doesn't, Gardner's, Strum vindictively, Strum — Organizations: Capital, Service, Milwaukee Bucks, Democratic, Bloomberg Locations: New York
The biggest worry for allocators to hedge funds is crowding, according to a new Bank of America survey. AdvertisementAllocators are growing more worried about crowding at hedge funds. The survey — which spoke to 160 allocators with roughly $680 billion invested in around 4,300 hedge funds globally — found that the biggest hedge fund managers in the industry are still gobbling assets and market share despite their investors bickering about costs. This flavor of hedge fund brought in $10 billion in net flows in 2024's first six months, and the average multimanager firm runs $1.7 billion. Despite this, allocators, paradoxically, have grown even more concerned about crowding risks in their hedge fund portfolios.
Persons: Organizations: Bank of America, Service, Citadel
The world's largest asset manager, though, is focused on growing its private markets business. Now, the $11.5 trillion behemoth wants to put high-fee private market strategies in your portfolio. "This is a meaningful accelerant to our private markets capabilities," he said. Comparatively, retail allocation to the private markets is in the "low-single digits," according to Small, giving BlackRock another territory to expand into. "We've never shied away from taking big bets," Fink said, and private market strategies are the latest roll of the dice.
Persons: BlackRock, , Martin Small, We're, Larry Fink, Fink, " Fink, We've Organizations: Service, BlackRock, Global Infrastructure Partners
In the past five years, four other alums have either shuttered or stopped trading hedge fund strategies. It's the latest spinoff from long-running Tiger Cub Lone Pine Capital to shutter. Lone Pine, the $16 billion firm led by co-chief investment officers Kelly Granat and David Craver, was founded in 1997 by billionaire Steve Mandel. Inside the Lone Pine family treeGaonkar's experience is far from the norm for Lone Pine alums though. Firms like Lone Pine, Tiger Global, Coatue, Viking Global, Maverick, Light Street, and others have lasted for decades and minted billionaires along the way.
Persons: Scott Coulter's, Mala Gaonkar, , Coulter, Cowbird, Pine, Kelly Granat, David Craver, Steve Mandel, Mandel, Julian Robertson's, Lone, Coatue, redemptions, Gaonkar, David Byrne, SurgoCap, Abobe, David Stemerman's, Scott Phillips, Matt Iorio's, Li Ran's, Brian Eizenstat's, Paul Eisenstein's, Nikhil Trikha, Arthur Wit, that's, Andreas Halvorsen's, Dan Sundheim's, Ben Jacobs, Ning Jin, Marco Tablada, Robertson, Tom Purcell Organizations: Service, Business, Lone Pine, Julian Robertson's Tiger Management, Cubs, Roberston's Tiger Management, Tiger, CNBC, Nvidia, GE, Figma, Pine, Latimer, Elm, Sky Capital, CenterBook Partners, Ampersand Capital Group, Global, Fund Research, Tiger Cub, Tiger Management, Viking Global, Viking Locations: Lone, Lone Pine, Granat, Texas, Li Ran's London, California, Viking
For others, such as the $3 billion hedge-fund platform Crestline Summit, it is a part of their expansion plans. One such manager is former Citadel PM Josh White, who started trading at his London-based Regents Gate earlier this year with capital from Crestline. Advertisement"Some of our competitors are kind of an indentured servitude model," said Scott Nelson, who runs the client partnership group. The brand the firm is trying to push externally is that they are "capital partners, not capital providers," Nelson said. AdvertisementA person familiar with the manager's flagship strategy said Crestline was up nearly 12% in 2023, besting funds such as Point72 and Millennium.
Persons: , Caroline Cooley, Crestline, we're, ExodusPoint, Michael Gelband, Neilson Arbour, multimanagers, Arbour, Cooley, Josh White, Scott Nelson, Nelson Organizations: Service, of, Crestline Summit, Texas, Citadel Locations: Texas, The Texas, of Texas, New York, London, Crestline
Wall Street's top performers are hard workers who tend to work long, intense hours. Business Insider asked its 2024 class of Wall Street stars about how they stay mentally sharp. Here's what we learned about the hacks, habits, and routines that help top talent on Wall Street stay on their game. The routine helps him stay present with his home life as well as work, he added. But I think those two things help me to at least stay recharged and stay ready each day," he said.
Persons: , Mark Zhu, Craig Kolwicz, Goldman Sachs, Corey White, Nina Gnedin, Blake Cecil, Chi Chen, Robert Sapolsky, Justin Elliott, Read, Palmer Osteen, KKR's, I've, That's, Daniela Cardona, America's White, Ben Carper, it's, there's, Matthew Eid, Holm, Reinhard Dirscherl, Melissa Ding, Wells, Annie Cheslin, she's, Margaret Williams, Morgan Stanley, Williams, Apollo's Austin Anton, Erica Wilson's, deadlifted, Harrison DiGia, Patrick Lenihan, barre, Elizabeth Stone Redding, Stone Redding, Matt Gilbert, Thoma, Gilbert, I'm, Dan, Feroz Khosla, isn't Organizations: Business, Service, Blackstone, Finance, Goldman, of America, Man Group, Productivity, Bridgewater Associates, Bank of America, Fidelity Investments, RBC, Bank, America's, Jefferies, Capital Advisory, Ares Management, Getty, BlackRock, Blue, General Atlantic, JPMorgan Asset Management, TPG, Thoma Bravo, Citadel Securities Locations: Blackstone, Chicago, San Francisco, Coast, Boston, Silicon Valley, New York, I'm, Maldives, he's, Thailand, Central Park
James Fishback, the former Greenlight analyst who said he was the head of macro, filed an arbitration claim against his old firm. AdvertisementThe age discrimination claim, according to the filing, is based on a flippant comment Fishback alleges Einhorn made. Fishback told potential backers of his firm he was the head of macro when he was at Greenlight, which prompted the now-viral dispute. The latest legal filing uses the titles "head of macro trading" and "head of macro" interchangeably. Advertisement"I pulled every penny I had invested in Greenlight and put it in Tesla," Fishback wrote on Twitter in September.
Persons: James Fishback, Fishback, David Einhorn, Greenlight, , he's, Einhorn, Toby Haselberger, Mr, Einhorn dismissively, Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Fine, outperforming Einhorn, Azoria, Ben Shapiro, Vivek Ramaswamy, Steve Rosen, Nikki Haley's, Dean Phillips, Tesla Organizations: Service, American, Association, Twitter, overpriced Ivy League, Greenlight, Azoria Partners, Democratic Locations: Greenlight, Manhattan, Tesla
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