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There's A Big Warning About Acquisitions In David Einhorn's Latest Investor Letter

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Greenlight Capital CEO David Einhorn sent out his Q2 investor letter this week, and the big takeaway is about how low interest rates are impacting corporate acquisitions.

In a nutshell: Low interest rates are transforming acquirers into bad shoppers. In Einhorn's view, acquirers are paying too much for the companies they're buying because they want to take advantage of these low rates.

This has impacted Greenlight's performance on the short side of the fund's portfolio. Companies that Einhorn thinks are over-valued are simply being purchased for way too much, driving up their stock price and losing Greenlight money.

"Companies we are short often have serious problems of which boards and management are probably aware," said the letter. "This makes them more eager than usual to sell at any sort of premium. The prospective buyers ought to discover these problems during due diligence, which should make them walk away. But in the current environment, debt financing is so inexpensive that buyers can pay premiums and have the deals be accretive to EPS, making them more willing to ignore any problems they discover."

On pages 2-4 of the letter, Einhorn takes us through a sort of Acquisitions Hall of Shame — a list of the company's short positions that have been acquired in spite of their issues.

Greenlight, for the record, is up 6.4% year to date compared to the S&P, which has returned 5.2%.

Check out the full letter below (via ValueWalk):

Greenlight Capital Q2 2014 by ValueWalk

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David Einhorn Cuts Apple, Micron Stakes (AAPL, SUNE, TIME, AER, APC, NOK, RAD)

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david einhorn

David Einhorn trimmed his stake in Apple, bringing his total holdings in the iPhone maker to about 9.4 million shares on a split-adjusted basis, according to his latest 13F filing with the SEC

In June, Apple executed a 7-for-1 stock split, and Einhorn's holdings in the company are worth about $878 million. 

Einhorn also added substantially to his holding in Sunedison, adding more than 9 million shares to bring his take to above 21 million shares worth more than $480 million. 

A 13F requires hedge funds to disclose their long positions within 45 days after a quarter ends, and so Thursday's filing represents Einhorn's holdings as of June 30.

Einhorn also initiated new stakes in AerCap holdings and the recently-public Time Inc., which houses the print assets formerly bundled under Time Warner. 

Among the stakes Einhorn reduced were his holdings in Anadarko Petroleum, which he sold down by 50% leaving him with a stake of 1.1 million shares worth $122 million. Einhorn also pared his holdings in Micron Technology, selling 3.6 million shares worth, though he still holds more than 40 million shares worth $1.3 billion in the semiconductor manufacturer. 

Einhorn also sold out of his stake in Nokia and Rite Aid. 

(Update: An earlier version of this report incorrectly stated at Greenlight added to its stake in Apple.)

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32 Wonderful Yearbook Photos Of Wall Street's Biggest Players

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Lloyd Blankfein high school yearbook

School is back in session. 

Before they were masters of the universe, the biggest names on Wall Street were once just regular high school kids, too.  

They were members of sports and academic teams.  They were on the homecoming court.  They entered essay contests, edited the school's literary magazine and starred in musicals.

We combed through a number of high school yearbooks and have compiled photos and accomplishments of some of the Street's most recognizable names. Some of them still look the same, while others have drastically improved their hairdos. 

We even found Goldman's CEO Lloyd Blankfein in his swim trunks.  Enjoy! 

Credit Suisse CEO Brady Dougan ran varsity cross-country for Hillcrest High School in Illinois.



The Credit Suisse CEO was also in his high school's concert band.



Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan's senior portrait at Marietta High School in Ohio. He was a member of the French Club, National Honor Society and the football, baseball and track teams.



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Wall Street Has A New Worry Now That The Economy Is Recovering

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old people

Business Insider is at the annual Bloomberg Markets Most Influential Summit on Monday, and this year  guest after guest has talked about the same worry.

It's not entirely new, but we've never heard it repeated so much before.  

Everyone on stage is worried about America's savers in our current low interest rate environment.

Early in the conference Carlyle CEO William Conway, hedge fund legend Julian Robertson, and William Dudley CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York all voiced their concern separately. Its the band wagon everyone is getting on.

Before the Federal Reserve lowered rates to keep money flowing during the recession, it was easy for people to retire on their savings. The interest on their money could fund visits to grandchildren and tennis club memberships — life was good.

Now, not so.

And the longer rates stay low without a clear sign from the Fed as to when that policy will change, the more people are beginning to think that savers need saving.

While Robertson has been saying this for some time, this hasn't always been an issue people felt they needed to take up. Now it's as if there's a new sense of urgency about it.

"I want to get off the lower bound as soon as possible, in part because it will benefit savers," said Dudley.

Back in 2012 David Einhorn blasted Ben Bernanke for this issue in a column that used The Simpsons and jelly donuts as an allegory for why the Fed's policy could be unhealthy in the long run.

"I know this isn't conventional thinking, and it certainly isn't the way the Fed looks at it, but I believe that raising short rates -- not to a high level, but to a still low level of 2 or 3% -- would be much more conducive to both growth and stability," Einhorn wrote.

It's a different story now. The economy is recovering so an accommodative monetary policy isn't as necessary to maintain that "growth and stability" Einhorn talked about. Now it's easier to make the argument that the Fed's policy is doing more harm than good. Savers are a perfect example of who that harm is impacting.

There's always something. 

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David Einhorn Makes $92 Million From Bagels (BAGL)

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Black Seed Bagels, NYC 1

David Einhorn just made over $92 million on a bagel company.

Einstein Noah Restaurant Group announced on Monday that it reached an agreement to be acquired for $20.25 per share in cash, or approximately $374 million.

In afternoon trade on Monday, shares of Einstein were up more than 50% to about $20.15.

David Einhorn's hedge fund, Greenlight Capital, is the largest stockholder of Einstein Noah Restaurant Group and owns more than 35% of its shares, according to the company.

According to data from Bloomberg, Einhorn owns more than 13 million shares of Einstein, a stake worth more than $270 million at current prices.

Einhorn called the deal a "win-win for all parties."

Einstein Noah Restaurant Group, or ENRG, is the largest operator of bagel bakeries in the US. The group owns three independent brands: Einstein Bros Bagels, Noah's New York Bagels, and Manhattan Bagel.

And we've decided to take a look at some of the bagels offered at these different chains.

Einstein Bros Bagels

First up, Einstein Bros Bagels. There are over 600 Einstein Bros Bagels found in 40 states, according to the ENRG website.

Here's what an Einstein Bros Bagels breakfast looks like. This one is a ham and Swiss omelet on a sesame bagel (plus the coffee).

breakfast einstein bagels

Just like many other breakfast chains, Einstein Bagel Bros recently embraced the autumnal pumpkin craze.

This customer snapped a photo of a pumpkin latte and a pumpkin bagel. Happy fall.

And although bagels tend to be major calorie bombs with little nutritional value, Einstein Bros Bagels actually advertises the healthiness of their bagels. 

They also offer very skinny bagels called "Thintastic Bagels", and they're about half the calorie value of the traditional bagels.

They look more like English muffins than bagels, though.

einstein bagel

Noah's New York Bagels

Noah's are only located in California, Oregon and Washington.

According the ENRG website, "Noah's New York Bagels are designed to whimsically imitate an authentic New York deli."

Here's what Noah's thinks that looks like:

This is one of their breakfast sandwich bagels. 

noahs bagels

This one's an onion bagel with tomatoes, cucumbers and onions.

noah bagel

Here are two more bagels from one of their San Francisco locations. The one on the right is a cheese-bagel hybrid.

bagels

And last but not least...

Manhattan Bagel

Manhattan Bagel offers 24-fresh baked bagel varieties. It's "an East Coast favorite for those with discriminating tastes," according to the ENRG website.

Look at all those bagel varieties. There's even a chocolate chip bagel in there.

many bagels

Here's a Manhattan Bagel lunch sandwich. Complete with a pickle.

bagel

And here are some unique green-colored (we're guessing that they were St. Patrick's Day themed) from one of their New Jersey locations.

green bagels

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David Einhorn Pitched SunEdison At A Conference And The Stock's Going Gangbusters

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Billionaire hedge fund manager David Einhorn, who runs Greenlight Capital, just pitched his best ideas at the Robin Hood Investors Conference—one of the most stacked investing events of the year.

It's closed to the media, but we have a source inside the conference. 

According to our source, Einhorn pitched SunEdison (SUNE) as a long.

The solar power semi-conductor's stock has jumped about 5%, and has been the best performing solar stock of the year. 

According to our source, Einhorn said the stock's mispriced now. 

Einhorn also mentioned Terrform Power (TERP) as a long. That stock's up about 10% today.

We're told that Einhorn also talked about Greece. He mentioned Alpha Bank and Piraeus Bank. Einhorn said get long with warrants, our source says.

He said to short French debt. 

Here's a chart of SunEdison: 

sunedison

Here's a chart of TerraForm: 

terraform

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DAVID EINHORN: Long Greece, Short France

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syriza supporters greek election

David Einhorn just finished presenting at the annual Robin Hood Investor Conference, and he recommended a Europe trade — long Greece, short France.

Einhorn recommended going long Greek banks, Alpha Bank and Piraeus Bank using warrants, our source says. 

Last week investors in Greece got absolutely demolished. The Athens Stock Exchange fell 7.3% before staging a big rally on Friday. Bank stocks were the brightest spot that day, gaining 6.4%.

There were two main reasons why Greece got clobbered, both were political. First, the market got uneasy about the rising popularity of Syriza, an anti-austerity radical political party. Second, the country's Prime Minister, Antonis Samaras, said he wanted to end the Greek bailout early without taking over $8 billion more dollars available.

France was no picnic last week either. The country has a serious demand issue — as in there isn't enough. Unemployment is high. Deflation is at 0.4% with core inflation at 0. It's got a big debt problem, and the country's economy simply isn't growing.

The CEO of UK retailer John Lewis recently said the country was "finished."

To change all of this, France would have to implement serious reform. Greece, on the other hand, needs to stay the bailout course to stabilize, at least relatively. 

It isn't hard to see why the latter may be more likely than the former.

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This Is What Happens When The Market Remembers That David Einhorn Is Shorting A Stock

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Sometimes it just takes a gentle reminder from a key player to get a stock moving.

On Tuesday, the stock was athenahealth, the player was Greenlight Capital's David Einhorn, and the reminder was that Einhorn is short the company.

And here's what happened:

athenahealth chart

David Einhorn started speaking with CNBC's Scott Wapner outside of the annual Robin Hood Investor Conference at about noon, and once he reminded viewers that he was still short athenahealth, the stock started sliding.

Einhorn announced that he was shorting the healthcare technology company back in May at the Sohn Investment Conference.

"Jonathan Bush likes to compare athenahealth to Amazon because they both have websites," he said during his presentation, following that comment with brutal clip after clip of a giddy Bush ("yes, that Bush family," Einhorn said) talking about the company's wildly optimistic future.

Since then the stock is up 1.5%.

SEE ALSO: Read David Einhorn's Brutal Presentation On Athenahealth That Had A Room Full Of Investors Laughing Out Loud

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David Einhorn Gave 2 Trade Ideas At An Elite Wall Street Conference — Here's The Full Presentation

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While everyone is worried about Greece, they should be more worried about France. French seven‐year paper yielding 71 basis points is a unicorn – it should not exist.

Greenlight Capital CEO David Einhorn gave two ideas on Monday at the Robin Hood Investors Conference.

One was a long position — in the solar company SunEdison. And the other was a long/short — long Greek banks, short French government debt.

We've got the full presentation for you here.

It starts off with Einhorn's long thesis on SunEdison (slide Nos. 1 to 37). It's the best-performing solar company of the year, and he thinks it can only get better. The stock currently trades at $19.22 per share, but he thinks it's worth $32 per share. 

At about slide 38, Einhorn sorts out some of the mess that is Europe, focusing on Greece first. He argues that the worst is behind the country. The hardest decisions about austerity and the country is now "living within its means." He recommends going long Greek banks — Alpha, Piraeus, NBG, and Eurobank.

France, on the other hand, is just starting to look ugly (that starts on slide 67). It's overbudget, suffers from high unemployment, and needs reform. Once the bond market realizes all of that, Einhorn says, it's time to short French government debt.

Einhorn Robin Hood Presentation



Einhorn Robin Hood Presentation



Sixty years ago, the first photovoltaic solar cells were used to make a toy Ferris Wheel turn.



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David Einhorn Is Done Shorting Green Mountain Coffee

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david einhorn

Hedge fund manager David Einhorn, who runs Greenlight Capital, has closed out the rest of his famous Green Mountain Coffee short position, according to an investor letter. 

He called it an "ultimately unsuccessful short." 

"We closed out a number of positions including the remainder of our short position in Keurig Green Mountain (GMCR). While it should be tempting to write an entire book on our experience with this ultimately unsuccessful short (our average sale was at $47.59 and our average cover was at $67.02; we had many opportunities to trade this position to a successful result, but failed to do so)..." Einhorn wrote in a third-quarter letter to Greenlight investors.

Einhorn first disclosed his famous Green Mountain short position in October 2011 at the Value Investing Congress. His 100-plus slide-deck pointed out questionable accounting methods and possible limited demand for its K-cup products. 

He still stands by his thesis about the company's accounting. 

"As far as we can tell, everything we said about the shenanigans is unrefuted and accurate. In any case, time ahs passed and these misdeeds are now dated. The SEC spent four years looking into the allegations — or, rather, four years passed between when it opened an investigation and closed it. 

Shares of GMCR were last trading down about 0.28% at around $151.68 per share.

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David Einhorn Added Amazon To His Infamous 'Bubble Basket' Of Stocks

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David Einhorn

Hedge fund manager David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital added Amazon to his "bubble basket" of short positions, according to his fund's Q3 investor letter. 

The "Bubble Basket" is a collection of tech stocks that Einhorn believes are overvalued. He announced that Greenlight had created the basket at a conference in May.

"We added to our exposure of "Bubble Basket" shorts, AMZN's recent disappointment is notable in that for years, the story has been that AMZN isn't profitable because it is growing so fast. Now growth is slowing, but rather than unleashing higher profits, the slower growth is leading to even greater losses. One of the principal bullish assumptions supporting many bubble stocks is, "the company is growing too fast to be very profitable." We think AMZN is just one of many stocks for which this narrative will ultimately prove false," Einhorn wrote in the letter.

Amazon was last trading around $301.51, or down -$1.30, or -0.43%. 

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David Einhorn Added Amazon To His Infamous 'Bubble Basket' Of Stocks

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David Einhorn

Hedge fund manager David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital added Amazon to his "bubble basket" of short positions, according to his fund's Q3 investor letter. 

The "Bubble Basket" is a collection of tech stocks that Einhorn believes are overvalued. He announced that Greenlight had created the basket at a conference in May.

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David Einhorn Is Raising Cash For The First Time Since 2012

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David Einhorn, founder and president of Greenlight Capital, smiles as he speaks at the Sohn Investment Conference in New York, May 5, 2014.  REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

BOSTON (Reuters) - Superstar investor David Einhorn is raising cash for the first time since 2012 following three straight years of lagging performance - and some customer redemptions from his $10 billion hedge fund, Greenlight Capital.

Einhorn has delivered an average 19 percent annual return over 18 years. But slower annual growth in the last years, plus the fund's restrictive redemption policies, have raised questions among some of his clients about Greenlight's prospects.

Einhorn’s fund has returned 4.9 percent this year through October, compared with a 13 percent gain by the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 Index. Similarly, he trailed the S&P 500 by 13 percentage points in 2013 and by 8 percentage points in 2012.

"We haven't had a quarter this thin in about three years," Einhorn wrote to investors regarding the recent third-quarter period. "We just got ground down gradually."

Some of Einhorn's short positions have weighed on performance this year, investors said. He recently closed out his short bet against Keurig Green Mountain Inc. with a loss. "We had many opportunities to trade this position to a successful result, but failed to do so," he wrote in the quarterly letter, which was seen by Reuters.

Also hurting performance: bets against U.S. Steel and Mallinckrodt and a bet on Marvel Technology Group Ltd, which lost 9 percent in the last six months.

While the average hedge fund returned only 3 percent this year, some of Einhorn's more direct competitors are doing better. William Ackman has posted a 35 percent return at his $18 billion Pershing Square Capital Management through the end of October, Ackman said in a letter to his investors.

Einhorn, Ackman, and Third Point's Daniel Loeb, who also has about $18 billion in assets, have long been seen as equally skilled by investors - and for a time the trio had a lot of overlap among clients.

One disadvantage for Einhorn going forward: he has more restrictive conditions than most other top-tier funds. No withdrawals are permitted for at least 25 months, and a 5 percent penalty is imposed on redemptions requested within three years, according to investors and documents reviewed by Reuters. After the lockup period expires, investors get only one chance a year to request an exit.

A spokesman for Greenlight declined to comment.

Greenlight Capital David Einhorn

ASSET HUNTING

Greenlight last raised money in April 2012, when Einhorn accepted about $1.2 billion in new money, roughly half of what investors wanted to give him. That was designed to replace some redemptions that had occurred then - and also to boost the fund's capital by 10 percent, people familiar with the move said.

This year, all of Greenlight's capital was freed from lock up – with roughly half available for redemption by June 30, and the remainder by December 31, according to the sources and documents. The deadline to exit by year's end passed earlier in November.

STILL THE ONE

Despite some withdrawals detailed by investors contacted by Reuters, Greenlight remains an industry favorite with consultants. Investors have in the past lined up to give Einhorn money because of his track record – meaning the new fund raising effort could be oversubscribed as well.

Brian Shapiro, whose firm Simplify performs due diligence on hedge funds for wealthy clients, said Einhorn's reputation is still solid, calling his returns "reasonably consistent."

Einhorn made a name for himself in 2008 during the height of the financial crisis when his short bet against Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc added 7.3 percent to his returns that year. Even though Greenlight lost 23 percent in 2008, Einhorn fared better than other hedge funds which lost roughly 27 percent.

lehman brothers

SECOND THOUGHTS?

The call against Lehman was considered bold and paid off when the bank filed for bankruptcy. But fast forward to 2014 and some investors said some recent picks look a little less interesting.

Greenlight's biggest position at the end of the third quarter was iPhone maker Apple, the company Goldman Sachs researchers say is the single most widely owned company among hedge funds.

In its October 16 letter soliciting fresh money, Greenlight said the fund had identified new investment ideas.

"While we have been fully invested for some time, it has been hard to find new opportunities. Given the current turmoil in the markets, this is changing quickly," the firm wrote.

Some of the new money is likely to come from people who already know and like Greenlight, industry analysts and investors said. They also said the money raising could follow the same pattern as two years ago where some replaces money that was redeemed and more is raised to deploy on new bets.

"Who will put money with Einhorn now?" Shapiro said. "People who buy brand name funds."

Greenlight's current investor line up includes pension funds, foundations and endowments which make up about one quarter of the assets, according to the documents. Funds of funds and high net worth investors also each make up about one quarter. The firm's partners and employees are also invested.

The last deadline to fund new investments was November 24 but the firm has not yet said how much new money it will accept. It couldn't be determined how much investors asked to get back at the two deadlines.

But this much is clear. Einhorn wants more money to cover some redemptions and make new investments to increase his hedge fund's returns. Said Simplify's Shapiro: "Einhorn has a lot of tail risk with some of his bigger bets and he needs to broaden his diversification which means he needs more cash."

(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Richard Valdmanis)

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David Einhorn Discloses A New Position In Time Warner

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david einhorn

David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital returned a respectable 8% in 2014 compared to the Standard & Poor 500's 13% rise, according to the fund's fourth-quarter investor letter posted by ValueWalk

For the most part, 2014 was an incredibly underwhelming year for hedge funds. 

According to research firm Preqin, hedge funds on average returned just 3.78%, the lowest annual return since their 1.85% loss in 2011. 

In the fourth quarter, Greenlight Capital returned 5.6%, the letter said. 

Einhorn also disclosed a new position in Time Warner.

"Since 2009, TWX has refocused its business into a collection of high quality assets including basic cable networks (Turner and CNN), a movie studio (Warner Brothers), and the world's largest most valuable premium cable network (HBO)," Einhorn wrote.

He continued: "In July, Rupert Murdoch launched an opportunistic take-over bid and the shares soared. The TWX board refused to engage, Murdoch walked away and the stock returned to pre-takeover levels. We purchased a position in TWX at an average price of $72.72, believing that management would have to respond forcefully to fend off another advance. In particular, we believed that TWX had an opportunity to more aggressively monetize HBO and to reduce costs across the entire company. Management subsequently announced that HBO would be offered as a standalone streaming product in the U.S., along with various other initiatives that have led to an increase in earnings estimates and a rally in the shares, which ended the year at $85.42." 

New positions aside, Einhorn's Greenlight made money on a stock that had a wild ride this year. Shire, the Irish pharmaceutical company, is a bet that a number of hedge funds took a beating on. 

Back in October, Shire's stock plummeted after Chicago-based pharmaceutical company AbbVie scrapped its $55 billion takeover bid. Einhorn used that as an opportunity to buy.

"We subsequently purchased a small-sized stake in SHPG at an average price of $174.35 and a small-sized state in Covidien/Medtronic arbitrage at an average spread of $8.79," he wrote in his investor memo. "After positive quarterly earnings and an investor day, SHPG shares recovered and we exited the position at an average price of $211.65. Metronic reaffirmed its commitment to buy Covidien and the deal spread narrowed, ending the year at $1.93." 

Not too shabby. 

 

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Greenlight Capital had a rough start to 2015


The 26 hottest power couples on Wall Street

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Man Repeller

In honor of Valentine's Day, we've decided to feature some of the hottest power couples on Wall Street. 

The range here is wide. We have fund managers who date well-known actresses. We have bankers who are married to attorneys and television anchors. We even have someone who is married to a princess.

We wish them all a Happy Valentine's Day.  

Princess Madeleine and hedge funder Chris O'Neill

Status: Married

Him: O'Neill is a partner and head of research at Noster Capital, a value investing hedge fund. He doesn't have a royal title. 

Her: She's a Swedish princess. 

Fun Fact: The couple has a daughter, Leonore, and they are expecting their second child this summer.



Socialite Pippa Middleton and stockbroker Nico Jackson

Status: Dating 

Her: She's the younger sister of Kate Middleton, the Duchess of Cambridge. The socialite is a contributing editor for Vanity Fair and writes pieces for The Spectator and Waitrose Kitchen.

Him: He's a stockbroker for Deutsche Bank who recently moved to Switzerland for work.

Fun Fact: The couple is currently trying long distance with Pippa in England and Nico in Switzerland.  



Chelsea Clinton and hedge funder Marc Mezvinsky

Status: Married

Her: Chelsea is the daughter of President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton. She has previously worked for Mckinsey & Co., Avenue Capital, and was a correspondent for NBC

Him: He's a partner at Eaglevale Partners LP. He has previously worked at Goldman Sachs and New York-based hedge fund G3 Capital. 

Fun Fact: The couple welcomed a baby girl, Charlotte, in September 2014.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

David Einhorn sold 566,500 shares of Apple

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david einhorn

Hedge fund manager David Einhorn has trimmed his Apple stake in the last quarter of 2014, according to his fund's latest 13F filing. 

During the fourth quarter, Greenlight Capital sold 566,500 shares of Apple. Still, the fund held just over 8.6 million shares even after the sales, according to the filing.

In his fourth quarter letter to investors, Einhorn wrote that Apple was one of the fund's "significant winners."

Apple remains one of Greenlight's top stock holdings.

Hedge funds only have to disclose their long equity holdings in 13Fs. These filings come out 45 days after the end of each quarter. 

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The 40 richest hedge fund managers

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Andreas Halvorsen

Forbes' magazine has just released its annual world's billionaires list.

This year, we've counted 40 names in the hedge fund industry. A few of these titans have retired in recent years. 

Fund managers are paid through a compensation structure commonly known as the "2 and 20," which stands for a 2% management fee and a 20% performance fee charge. More specifically, "2 and 20″ means a hedge fund manager would charge investors 2% of total assets under management and 20% of any profits.

Overall, 2014 was an incredibly underwhelming year in the hedge fund world. According to research firm Preqin, hedge funds, on average, returned just a mere 3.78%, the lowest annual return since the 1.85% loss in 2011. Still, there were a few fund that delivered impressive returns such as Bill Ackman's Pershing Square.

We've included a round up of the richest fund managers in the world. 

Rob Citrone

Rank: 1741

Net-worth: $1 billion

Age: 50

Fund: Discovery Capital

Source: Forbes



Brian Higgins

Rank: 1533

Net-worth: $1.2 billion

Age: 50

Fund: King Street Capital

Source: Forbes



Richard Chilton, Jr.

Rank: 1533

Net-worth: $1.2 billion

Age: 56

Fund: Chilton Investment Company

Source: Forbes



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David Einhorn says he only hires 'nice people' — here's what that means

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David Einhorn

Landing a job at David Einhorn's hedge fund, Greenlight Capital, would be a dream job for many people on Wall Street.

Not only is Einhorn well-respected for his investment acumen, but he's also a nice guy. 

In a recent speech Einhorn gave to high schoolers entitled "Helping People Get Along Better," he explained that he only hires "nice people." 

"...For one thing, Greenlight only hires nice people. By that I don't mean that we avoid hiring jerks. I mean we actively look to hire people who are nice. And if you walk into the Greenlight office at 6 P.M., you'll find that most people have left for the day. In an industry that celebrates personal sacrifice as a symbol of commitment, you might not consider 'making sure everyone gets home for dinner' to be a mark of success, but creating and maintaining that culture is one of the things I'm most proud of," Einhorn said in a copy of the speech seen by Business Insider. 

When Einhorn graduated from Cornell in 1991, he went to work for an investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, or DLJ. During undergrad, Einhorn had interviewed with banks, consulting companies, and the CIA, but he said that he liked the people who interviewed him at DLJ.

However, Einhorn was in for a culture shock.

"Often, the senior employees let the junior employees sit around all day with nothing to do, then at dinner time assigned a full day's work that would keep us in the office late into the night and sometimes 'til morning. The half-joke was, 'If you aren't coming in on Saturday, don't even think about coming in on Sunday.' That gratuitous meanness was a stark contrast to the values I'd been raised with." 

To Einhorn, those early years on the Street felt more like "hazing." 

"DLJ was a...shall we say...challenging work environment. Obviously, I wasn't expecting Wall Street to be a laid-back place. I was prepared for hard work. Sadly, much of the work the new guys were asked to do and the insane hours we were expected to keep had little to do with making the bank more productive. It felt more like hazing. I did develop some finance skills at DLJ, but what I really learned was that I didn't want to work in an environment like that again. I wanted to work for and with people who respected one another and valued being nice."

After two years at the investment bank, Einhorn joined a hedge fund where he learned how to conduct investment research. He later went on to launch Greenlight Capital with a colleague with less than $1 million in assets. 

Today, Greenlight Capital employees 68 people in four countries. The fund now manages $12 billion in assets. 

Einhorn credits his parents, Stephen and Nancy Einhorn, for how they helped shape Greenlight's culture and his own parenting. 

"My parents are nice people, and they also made a point to have dinner as a family every night."

It's a good reminder that family always comes first. 

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Showtime just picked up a TV drama about a hedge fund co-written by Andrew Ross Sorkin

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Damian Lewis

Showtime Networks has just picked up a new hedge fund drama called "Billions," according to a press release.

The 12-episode series "is a complex and contemporary drama about power politics in the New York world of high finance."

The show was written by Brian Koppelman, David Levien, and financial journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin. 

The series stars Damian Lewis, who plays a hedge fund titan Bobby "Axe"Axelrod, and Paul Giamatti, who plays US Attorney Chuck Rhoades.

Lewis appears to have been doing his homework in preparation for the show.

Earlier this year, he was spotted with a copy of David Einhorn's book "Fooling Some People All of the Time." 

Production is scheduled to begin later this year. The show is set to debut in 2016. 

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