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Wells Fargo Is Hiring Ken Griffin's Former Employees And Taking Over Citadel's Investment Banking Business

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brian-maier

Citadel Securities's former investment banking co-head Brian Maier and about 2 dozen others went to Wells Fargo after Ken Griffin gave up his dreams of running the investment bank.

The fixed income guys might be going to SocGen.

Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf is said to be trying to expand the investment banking unit that he acquired with Wells' Wachovia takeover, so he and Griffin made a deal for Wells Fargo to "buy" Citadel Securities investment banking business.

The deal includes the former employees and the uninterrupted transfer of Citadel’s “related investment-banking business,” according to a PR statement (embedded below).

paul-pepeThe employees going to Wells Fargo:

  • Paul Pepe: leading a newly formed corporate finance team, reporting to Weiss and investment-banking co-head Rob Engel
  • Stavros Tsibiridis: leading parts of the mergers-and-acquisitions practice, including the corporate-defense advisory practice
  • Stephen Gerson: working in financial technologies banking
  • Aviv Laurence: working in gaming and leisure
Citadel also talked with Paris-based Societe Generale SA about taking on a team of fixed-income salesmen and traders, according to Bloomberg.

WFS Hires Bankers From Citadel_PR_FINAL

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Citadel Is Firing A 23-Year Old Engineer For Talking To This Man And Allegedly Stealing Data

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mikhail-misha-malyshev

Citadel fired one of its newest employees today after allegedly discovering that he was speaking to rival firm Teza Technologies, the firm founded by Mikhail "$150 million in 2008" Malyshev.

Malyshev and Citadel have been in legal dispute for years now. When Malyshev and a colleague left Citadel in February 2009 to start their own fund, Citadel founder Ken Griffin sued him, arguing that he signed a non-compete. (Malyshev had made Citadel over $1 billion in 2008, taking home $150 million for himself, according to legal complaints.)

Now Citadel says it has phone records proving that one of its employees, a young engineer, spoke recently with Teza Tech.

Yihao Ben Pu, a 23-year old quantitative financial engineer, was hired last year to install programs on Citadel’s systems to get around security measure meant to prevent the transfer of data to other devices, according to Crain's read of Citadel's complaint against him.

But Citadel soon found that Pu used the security bypass to transfer "massive amounts of highly confidential" information about the firm’s tactical trading business to “at least two personal external devices,” says the complaint.

The firm also discovered that he has been in recent contact with Teza, according to the complaint. 

Pu told Crains that what he did was more or less for work, and that he gave the personal devices to Citadel without being asked to. He also says that he was in contact with Teza because he was asking about hiring a lawyer. He says he thinks Citadel is "overreacting" and he hopes they can put this behind them soon.

Pu graduated from Cornell in 2009. He interned as an analyst for Kane Capital Management, and later worked atPalantir Technologies and Tradeworx.

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Check Out All Of The Wall Streeters Who Donated More Than A Million Dollars To The Koch Brothers This Year

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Griffin_Schwab

Since 2003, billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch have sponsored seminars for some of America's most successful business elite to rally around conservative and libertarian causes.

The most recent seminar was held at the Ritz-Carlton resort at Bachelor Gulch near Vail, Colorado during late June.  (Koch's description of the conferences can be found here.)

The gatherings are unpublicized, but news of the June seminar got out after Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell posted it on his travel calendar. 

These meetings are so secretive that an audio crew reportedly set up outward facing speakers around the entire meeting to emit static in order to prevent eavesdroppers from hearing anything.

That didn't seem to keep audio from leaking out though.

Mother Jones' claims that the audio they obtained of the event reveals that Charles Koch may have referred to President Barack Obama as "Saddam Hussein" during a speech saying they were going to to be fighting "the mother of all wars" during the 2012 presidential elections.  We listened and we're not so sure. Listen to it yourself below. 

UPDATE: A spokesperson for Charles Koch told Politico that Koch was not comparing Obama to Saddam Hussein.

The audio also revealed a list of 32 donors who contributed more than a million dollars.  The Wall Streeters on the list:

-- Hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin 

-- Hedge fund billionaire Paul Singer of Elliott Management

-- Financier Charles Schwab

 

-- John Childs, the founder and CEO of private equity firm JW Childs Associates

-- Foster Friess, the founder of the investment firm Friess Associates

Listen to the audio below [via Mother Jones].

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Citadel Is Up 15% This Year

Has Anyone Heard Anything About Layoffs In Fixed Income At Citadel? (WFS, SCGLY)

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ken griffin

We got a tip from a reader that says that the rest of the Citadel Securities fixed income team was let go today.

He says at least one person has already been let go.

We're not surprised, because Ken Griffin has been shutting down the entire unit since at least early August, so layoffs are inevitable.

Word is some of them (traders, sales people) will go to SocGen.

Other members of the Citadel Securities team on the investment banking team have reportedly been hired by Wells Fargo.

If you've heard anything, email Courtney. (It's anonymous - so is our tip email.)

Don't miss: More on the fall of Citadel Securities >

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Ken Griffin's Citadel Is Killing It This Year: Up More Than 15% YTD

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ken griffin

Ken Griffin's hedge funds are up 15% this year - and, his main funds didn't lose money in September.

Despite the S&P tumbling more than 7.18% for the month, while the global markets fell broadly, according to Institutional Investor [via Dealbreaker]:

[Griffin's] main hedge funds were up 0.25% in September, putting them up by about 15.10% for the year, according to sources, making them among the best performers this year.

Griffin's stellar September performance was thanks it part to the fund's global equities strategy, which was up about 2.35%, Institutional Investor reported citing unnamed sources.

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GOSSIP: Today's Wall Street Buzz in 60 Seconds (BAC)

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Courtenay Wolfe

Speaking at Fortune's Most Powerful Women Summit, Goldman's Lloyd Blankfein said he sees Warren Buffett a source of "wise counsel to policymakers" and told the Oracle of Omaha to "keep taking my calls."

Clearly September annihilated hedge fund returns.

Bank of America has decided to suspend all cash-out refinancings on FHA and VA loans, according to a product update notice provided to National Mortgage News.

The nation's big banks could see billions in increased costs if the Federal Housing Administration issues fines on insurance claims that result from soured mortgages, FBR Capital Markets said this week.

Douglas Grossberg, a Credit Suisse Group loan trader who helped create a market for derivatives tied to the debt, left the Swiss bank last month even though it hasn't been publicly announced.

Galleon founder Raj Rajaratnam, who's been convicted of insider trading, is expected to plead to a judge today that he doesn't deserve 25 years in prison because he only made $7.5 million from his insider trades.

The rumors circulating about a big hedge fund blow up at Salida Capital were "unfounded" the firm's chief executive officer Courtenay Wolfe said.

Some investors who were bilked by Bernie Madoff's ponzi scheme will start to get some of their money back.

Sen. Dick Durbin wrote a letter to Bank of America's chief executive Brian Moynihan telling him to quit his whining about card fees and to consider giving back his $9 million bonus to customers.

Richard R. Baxter, who previously worked for Cabrera Capital Markets as head of taxable fixed income, has been named head of agency trading and will work out of Gleacher's New York office.

Japan-based Mizuho Securities hired Yasuo Agemura from Nomura to head its global markets business.

Peter Westaway, the chief Europe economist at Nomura, has resigned.

Angela Merkel's chief of staff, Robert Pofalla, told a CDU parliamentarian, "I can't look at your fat face anymore.  All you say is s***."

Barclay's latest round of cost-cutting efforts include car service and late night snacks.

Barclay's midtown Manhattan offices had a terrorist scare this morning thanks to a suspicious vehicle parked outside the firm.

Deutsche Bank is expected to axe 500 positions mostly outside of Germany.

Ken Griffin's main hedge funds are up 15% YTD and did not lost any money during the month of September.

Seriously!? Bank of America's website is down for the third day.

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Check Out Last Night's Swank Party Featuring John Paulson And Ken Griffin

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Yo Yo Ma, orchestra

Yesterday was a big night on the New York City social calendar. The Whitney Museum of American Art held its annual fall gala and Carnegie Hall celebrated both its 120th anniversary and the start of its new season with an opening night soiree. Both events were attended by distinguished members of the entertainment, arts and business industry.

Those in attendance at events included John Paulson, Ken Griffin, and Sandy Weill.

According to Bloomberg, the Whitney event raised $3.2 million and treated their guests to a performance by Los Angeles band Fitz and the Tantrums after dessert. The gala honored New Yorker writer Calvin Tomkins.

Carnegie Hall, on the other hand, raised $2.8 million and started its 120th year with Valery Gergiev and the Mariinsky Orchestra of St. Petersburg, Russia. Famed cellist Yo-Yo Ma performed with the group.

At the Whitney - Ken Griffin, CEO of Citadel LLC, and wife Anne Dias-Griffin, managing partner at Aragon Global Management



John Paulson, founder of Paulson & Co, with wife Jenny Paulson on far right



Glenn Fuhrman, co-founder of MSD Capital, with wife Amanda



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Ex-Citadel Quant Engineer Arrested For Stealing The Fund's Trade Secrets

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ken griffin

Federal authorities arrested a former Citadel employee on allegations that he stole trade secret information from the hedge fund, the New York Times reported.

Yihao Ben Pu, 24, a former technology employee at Citadel, has been charged stealing stealing information from the hedge fund's trading systems.

From the Times:

Authorities contend that Mr. Pu, hired as a quantitative engineer at the firm last year, illegally uploaded sensitive information about Citadel’s computer-driven trading strategies to personal devices in August before attempting to destroy the evidence.

The reminds us of the trade secret theft executed by programmer Sergey Aleynikov, who used to work for Goldman Sachs writing algorithms. 

Aleynikov was found guilty of stealing Goldman's high-frequency proprietary trading algorithms.  He was sentenced in December to 8 years.  

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Check Out The Sanitary Canal Where Divers Recovered Citadel's Secret Trading Info

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Yihao Ben Pu

Yihao Ben PuSanitary CanalYou'll remember that Yihao Ben Pu, the 24 year-old former quant engineer at Citadel, was arrested last month for attempting to steal confidential information from the hedge fund's trading systems.

Brief refresher: the ex-tech employee at Ken Griffin's Citadel was charged with stealing the secret alpha codes and transferring them to external devices, ABC WLS in Chicago reported.

Well, in the case against him, a remarkable detail about how authorities found the evidence to arrest him has emerged.

From ABC WLS:

He was arrested after an associate of his told the company and federal agents some of the evidence had been dumped into a sanitary canal near Wilmette Harbor. Divers discovered computer equipment in the water that contained Citadel's alphas.

First of all, that sounds like a scene out of a James Bond movie. 

Second, water didn't damage the info on the hardware? Guess that's why Zvi Goffer's genius methods of destroying a tainted cell phone didn't work.

And third, how did the former Harvard research intern and Cornell graduate manage to be all smiles when he appeared in court?

Clearly the court system and/or Citadel is going after him hardcore.

And, during that court appearance, he had to agree to put his family home in Massachusetts up as bond. 

This case reminds us of the trade secret theft executed by programmer Sergey Aleynikov, who used to work for Goldman Sachs writing algorithms. 

Aleynikov was found guilty of stealing Goldman's high-frequency proprietary trading algorithms.

He was sentenced in December to 8 years.  

If you haven't learned by now, after you've seen the efforts that their former firms launched against Aleynikov, Samarth Agrawal, and Mikhail Malyshev, that firms with proprietary trading info are paranoid about people stealing it and will go to dramatic lengths to not only recover it, but prosecute the crap out of you, we suggest you learn it now. 

Don't miss: The U.S. Court system decides it's worse to steal algos from Goldman than to kill someone >

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Race Car Exec Admits To Bribing A Banker, John Thain Gets A Forest Named After Him -- Here's Today's Gossip

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Bernie Ecclestone

Formula One's chief executive Bernie Ecclestone confessed in court that he bribed a former BayernLB banker named Gerhard Gribkowsky to stay quiet and keep tax officials at bay while acquiring the rights for his auto racing sport five years ago.

Former Merrill Lynch chief John Thain, who's currently the head of CIT, and his wife Carmen underwrote the restoration of the 50-acre New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx.  The area has been named the Thain Family Forest.

Credit Suisse Group Japan CEO Paul Kuo will step down on January 1 and will be replaced by Olivier Thiriet, who currently heads the Swiss bank’s Asia- Pacific cash equities operations.

Disgraced Galleon chief Raj Rajaratnam, who was sentenced to 11 years for organizing one of the largest insider trading circles in history, was slapped with a massive $92 million civil penalty yesterday.

The Justice Department is not investigating the role former SEC lawyer David Becker, who was allowed to participate in discussions about the compensation of victims of Ponzi schemer Bernie Madoff even though he had a financial interest in the result.

Hong Kong's chief executive Donald Tsang told Pershing Square's Bill Ackman, who's betting on the $HK appreciating, to piss off, and said that the hedge fund manager will "lose a lot of money."

MF Global employees are coming to the office in much more formal attire than usual.  That's because they're going on job interviews elsewhere when they're not conducting liquidation trades. 

Ken Griffin's Citadel's Kensington and Wellington funds were up 2.32% in October and 17.67% YTD.

Speaking of Ken Griffin, here's his business card

Michael Blum, a German national and the COO of Hedgeye Risk Management, has booked two trips to outer space.

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Ken Griffin Says Citadel's Funds Handily Beat The Market In 2011

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ken griffin

Ken Griffin said today in a letter to investors that Citadel has recovered from the nearly crippling losses the firm suffered in 2008, Dealbook is reporting.

Griffin said Citadel's two flagship funds were up more than 20% in 2011 and had recovered from the almost 50% drop they suffered at the height of the financial crisis.

This is good news not just for investors, but also bodes well for Citadel's chances of survival.

With their funds below their so-called highwater mark, Citadel has been unable to collect performance fees. These fees, the industry standard is 20% of all gains but are commonly higher at funds such as Citadel, are the lifeblood of hedge fund earnings. 

Here's the full letter, also available here:
 

Citadel letter

Citadel letter

Citadel letter

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Ready, Set, Fight! Here Are 9 Of The All-Time Nastiest Feuds In Finance

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Ackman Icahn

With big money and a lot of reputation at stake, it's no surprise that disagreements and quarrels have broken out in the world of high finance.

And despite the veil of secrecy that surrounds many figures within the financial industry, there have been some high-powered individuals that have brought their private matters and personal relationships into the public spotlight.

So from seven-year old battles involving lawyers and millions of dollars to small quips that made the financial world gasp, we rounded up some of the most well known feuds in the financial industry.

Dan Loeb vs. Ken Griffin

In 2005, Citadel founder Griffin's poaching of New York hedge fund employees caught the eye of Third Point's Dan Loeb. Griffin, who charges a higher management fee than traditional hedge funders, was allegedly luring the employees away with offers of higher salaries.

Loeb, who is known for his scathing letters to CEOs when he feels that companies he has invested in are not doing well, took up his poison pen and wrote Griffin a scathing letter. In it, he called Citadel a "gulag" and forbade him from approaching any Third Point employees under any circumstances. He also told Griffin matter of factly that Citadel was "over-rated" and that Griffin does not know how to manage people.

Here's our favorite bit from the letter:

I understand your need to hire employees from other firms, something that Third Point has not had to do based on the fact that, unlike yourself, I actually enjoy and have talent in investing and am able to nurture others within my organization whom I hire from wide ranging disciplines such as graduate schools, private equity firms and medicine.

Source: Insider Monkey



Bill Ackman vs. Carl Icahn

It started with a "forgettable" deal in 2004, and became a famous feud that spanned seven years and racked up millions in dollars in lawyer fees between two activist investors.

In 2003, when Ackman's former investment firm was in trouble and he was being investigated by the SEC, he cold-called Icahn and asked him to buy his shares of Hallwood Realty, a real estate company trading for about $60, but Ackman said was worth $140. Icahn agreed to buy the shares for $80, with a deal that he would split the profit with Ackman if he sold the shares within 3 years. When Hallwood merged with another company for $137/share in 2004, Ackman called Icahn for his share of the profit. Well, Icahn reasoned that he didn't sell the shares in the merger even though he did not own them anymore.

A legal battle ensued with poisonous words, where Ackman called Icahn a "shakedown artist" whose word was "useless" and also convinced another investor to refuse Icahn's money.

Ackman ultimately won the fight, and Icahn paid out $9 million.

Source: DealBook



Jon Corzine vs. Hank Paulson

It's no secret that Corzine, who served as Goldman Sachs CEO from 1994 to 1999, was ousted from his position by then-COO Hank Paulson. Paulson later served in Goldman's top spot until 2006, when he left to become Treasury Secretary for President George W. Bush.

But when Paulson and Corzine ruled Goldman together, a civil war brewed between the two that made their reign at the bank an "unmitigated disaster," as Goldman chronicler Bill Cohan wrote. A lot of enmity stemmed from a class of personalities, and Paulson was often irritated by Corzine's ambitions to make the firm bigger.

Source: BI, Vanity Fair



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These 10 Hedge Fund Are Probably Really, Really Happy They Invested In Vivus

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ken griffin

Shares of drugmaker Vivus skyrocketed today after an FDA panel gave a favorable review for the company's weight loss pill.

The stock was last up more than 88% in late morning trading.

That's good news for a bunch of hedge fund managers who have a significant stake in Vivus. 

Here are the top ten hedge funds with the biggest positions in the drugmaker, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

1.  Chilton Investment: ~8.62 million shares (9.7%)

2. QVT Financial LP: ~8.53 million shares (9.59%)

3. OrbiMed Advisors: ~6.16 million shares (6.94%)

4.  Caxton Associates: ~5.25 million shares (5.91%)

5. Suttonbrook Capital: ~5.05 million shares (5.68%)

6.  Passport Capital: ~4.29 million shares (4.83%)

7.  Citadel Advisors: ~1.85 million shares (2.08%)

8.  Severn River Capital: ~ 1.29 million shares (1.45%)

9.  D.E. Shaw & Co.: 645,633 shares (0.73%)

10.  SAC Capital: 538,400 shares (0.61%)

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HEDGE-FUND GOD KEN GRIFFIN: Our Government Is Ruining Our Country--That's Why I'm Giving Millions To Mitt Romney And The Koch Brothers

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Ken Griffin

March 10--In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, billionaire hedge fund operator Kenneth Griffin, CEO of Chicago-based Citadel, says that he is opposed to building a downtown casino, is critical of corporate leaders who have "groveled" for tax breaks and says that he's "terrified" the country is headed in the wrong direction.

"I spend way too much of my time thinking about politics these days because government is way too involved in financial markets these days," he said in a rare interview. He later added. "Part of my sensitivity to these issues is that I now live in the middle of a hyper-regulated industry, where not only is government affecting how capital markets work, or how banks work, but (the government) is punishing savers."

The 43-year-old hedge fund manager said he has invested more time than ever before on politics since the financial crisis of 2008 nearly crippled Citadel. The firm's two flagship funds have since recovered, surpassing their so-called highwater marks this year.

Forbes magazine recently ranked Griffin Chicago's second-wealthiest citizen, behind only Tribune Co. chairman Sam Zell. Griffin's interests are vast, from collecting art to improving the city's public education system. Over time, he has accelerated his political contributions, giving predominantly to Republicans. It's a subject he rarely discusses publicly.

"I think (the ultra-wealthy) actually have an insufficient influence," Griffin said in an interview at Citadel's downtown office. "Those who have enjoyed the benefits of our system more than ever now owe a duty to protect the system that has created the greatest nation on this planet."

In the 2012 election cycle, Griffin has given $150,000 to Restore Our Future, the super PAC supporting Mitt Romney, and more than $560,000 to the Republican Governors Association. In recent years, Griffin and his wife Anne have given $800,000 to American Crossroads, founded by Republican strategists Ed Gillespie and Karl Rove.

The Griffins also have given approximately $1.5 million over time to David and Charles Koch's conservative causes, which operate under the umbrella Americans for Prosperity. Structured as a nonprofit, its donors are not disclosed, making it a lightning rod for advocates of campaign finance reform.

Despite his support of the Kochs, who are lifelong libertarians, Griffin said he understood the need to regulate some companies, such as polluters.

"When a company creates a product that directly or indirectly adversely impacts the health of people, that product must be regulated," he said. "The process by which it's created must be regulated. No company has the right to injure people. No company."

That fits with his opposition to gambling. Griffin said he has written Gov. Pat Quinn and spoken to both Mayor Rahm Emanuel and former Mayor Richard Daley about his opposition to a Chicago casino.

"There is no great city in America that has a casino (downtown)," Griffin said. "And there's a reason for it. Casinos do not represent the values of a great city."

mmharris@tribune.com

Twitter: @chiconfidential

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These 10 Hedge Funds Are Making A Fortune On Apple Today (AAPL)

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David Einhorn

Shares of Apple are exploding higher following Q2 earnings yesterday that blew past analysts' expectations.

Apple's stock was last up more than 9.7% in pre-market trading Wednesday.

Here are the ten hedge funds with the largest stake in the iPhone and iPad maker, according to the most recent (12/31/2011) 13F regulatory filing data compiled by Bloomberg

Apple's stock is up more than 38% YTD

SEE ALSO: MARIO GABELLI: Apple Could Go The Way Of Bowling Alleys, AOL And Polaroid >

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These 10 Hedge Funds Are Making A Fortune On Barnes & Noble Today (BKS)

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ken griffin

Shares of Barnes & Noble skyrocketed Monday on the news that Microsoft has invested $300 million in a joint venture

The stock was up around 80% in pre-market trading following the announcement.  

Here's a rundown of hedge funds with the greatest stake in Barnes & Noble, according data from the latest regulatory filings compiled by Bloomberg.

  • JANA Partners -- ~6.95 million shares (11.56% stake)
  • Clovis Capital Management -- ~1.6 million shares (2.76% stake)
  • Towerview LLC -- ~1.5 million shares (2.5% stake)
  • Balyansy Asset Management -- ~1.33 million shares (2.22% stake)
  • Adage Capital Partners -- ~1.12 million shares (1.88% stake)
  • Southpoint Capital -- 1 million shares (1.66% stake)
  • Buckingham Capital -- 900,000 shares (1.3% stake)
  • Scopus Asset Management -- 898,500 shares (1.49% stake)
  • Aletheia Research -- 987,554 shares (1.49% stake)
  • Citadel Advisors -- 525,979 shares (0.87%) 

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Citadel Is Accusing A Rival Firm Of Stealing Their Secret Trading Formulas

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ken griffin

Ken Griffin's hedge fund Citadel is pointing fingers at a rival firm Jump Trading, accusing the prop trading fund of stealing trading algorithms via former Citadel employees, according to Reuters.

Citadel hasn't filed an official lawsuit, but is petitioning the courts for Jump to release documents on trading strategy and records—a move that is legal in Illinois, where the two funds are based, Reuters reported.

From Reuters:

According to Citadel's petition, about 10 employees from that same area, Citadel's tactical trading group, have moved to Jump Trading since 2005.

Over that time, some of the strategies used by Citadel's tactical trading group have become less profitable. According to the fund manager's petition, the strategies are behaving in a way consistent with their having been copied by rivals.

Jump, on the other hand, has denied Citadel's claims and says the $13 billion hedge fund is just using the possible lawsuit as a tactic to get a glimpse of Jump's secret trading formulas.

Read the full Reuters report here >

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KEN GRIFFIN: This Is Not Just About The Eurozone, What's Really Important Now Is Saving The Entire European Union

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ken griffin

Ken Griffin, the CEO of Citadel, has just published an op-ed in the New York Times with University of Chicago economics professor Anil Kashyap.

Griffin and Kasyap offer a simple plan to save the euro: Germany exit and reintroduces the mark.

In short, a German exit would devalue the euro, which would suddenly make the exports of the remaining countries much cheaper and more attractive to the rest of the world. This in turn would boost manufacturing and slash unemployment in the beleaguered.

The debt wouldn't disappear, but Griffin believes that a weak euro would give the most debt-laden countries more financial flexibility, giving them "needed breathing room to restructure their economies, reform labor markets, collect more taxes and reassure investors."

Here's the most powerful statement from the piece:

While most observers, including German policy makers, believe Germany will do what is necessary to save the euro, it is more important to save the European Union, which is older, larger and more significant than the euro zone. Continuing on the current trajectory will most likely entail more bailouts, more guarantees and ultimately dramatic sovereign defaults or enormous fiscal transfers. That would mean a continued loss of human capital and dignity for southern Europe and a nightmare of an open-ended commitment of trillions of euros on the part of Germany.

Griffin thinks that a German exit can be executed gradually with limited chaos.  The bottom line is that a German exit would be much better than any of the other alternatives.

Read the whole op-ed at www.NYTimes.com.

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The 22 Biggest Poker Players On Wall Street

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poker

We're right in the thick of the World Series of Poker, which means we're right in the thick of one of Wall Street's favorite past-times.

And this year has been no exception; finance guys have already made quite the splash over the past few weeks. Hedge funder David Einhorn took third place in the most expensive tournament ever and JPMorgan VIX trader Jeremy Wien has been tweeting up a storm about his game. 

We figured it was only right to update our list of these poker-playing Wall Streeters.

Cliff Asness, AQR Capital

Asness' poker game was also brought into the limelight in the book 'Quants,' which devoted a chapter to an epic Wall Street poker night at the St. Regis hotel. Attendees also included Peter Muller, Ken Griffin and Boaz Weinstein, among others. 

Today, Asness is a member of the committee that organizes this now-annual poker night, which benefits the Math for America foundation. 

 

 



Ken Griffin, Citadel

Griffin was also a part of that 2006 Wall Street poker night and now serves as the honorary chair of the annual Math for America poker tournament. 



Chris Fargis, Toro Trading

Fargis, unlike our other choice players, came to finance by way of poker. The young Brooklyn-native caught the attention of an online poker competitor, who recommended him for a trading job with Toro. 

Although Fargis had made quite the name for himself (and not to mention some pretty good money) in the online poker circuit, it seems like he's thrown in the towel. 

From Fargis' blog "Twenty-One Outs Twice":

Good luck to all my friends playing the Main Event!
It's been two years since I posted anything here. I don't play any poker these days. However, life is very good.

 Glad to hear life is good, even without poker. 

 



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