James Telfser s Top Picks: April 20, 2021
Morgan Stanley joins bank bond bonanza with three-part sale
John Zechner s Top Picks: April 19, 2021
Teslaâs fiery crash adds to drag on already wobbly EV stocks
An ether ETF isn t even launched and already there is a fee war
Tech leads stock drop from record; dollar falls
Wall Street canât stop smashing records while pandemic lingers
Greg Newman s Top Picks: April 16, 2021
Family offices are targeting 800% returns with SPAC economics
Ark Invest s Cathie Wood thinks Shopify could be next Amazon
Christine Poole s Top Picks: April 15, 2021
Cooler heads prevailed (mostly) during COVID market mayhem: Survey
Coinbase rallies as Wall Street optimism bucks Bitcoinâs dip
James Telfser s Top Picks: April 20, 2021
Morgan Stanley joins bank bond bonanza with three-part sale
John Zechner s Top Picks: April 19, 2021
Teslaâs fiery crash adds to drag on already wobbly EV stocks
An ether ETF isn t even launched and already there is a fee war
Tech leads stock drop from record; dollar falls
Wall Street canât stop smashing records while pandemic lingers
Greg Newman s Top Picks: April 16, 2021
Family offices are targeting 800% returns with SPAC economics
Ark Invest s Cathie Wood thinks Shopify could be next Amazon
Christine Poole s Top Picks: April 15, 2021
Cooler heads prevailed (mostly) during COVID market mayhem: Survey
Coinbase rallies as Wall Street optimism bucks Bitcoinâs dip
A year before Carson Block launched Muddy Waters Capital, his hedge fund firm, he started trying to line up a prime broker an investment bank that could lend him stocks so he could then sell them short. But the task was proving arduous.
The problem, he believes: Block had made his name calling out China frauds, and Wall Street loved China.
After several bulge-bracket banks turned him down, Block decided to try his luck with Jefferies Financial Group, a scrappy up-and-comer known for its trading skill. Muddy Waters, then only a research firm, was based in San Francisco, so he arranged an interview with Jefferies CEO Rich Handler on his next visit to New York City.
Wall Street Is Donating to This D.A. Candidate. Is That a Problem?
Tali Farhadian Weinstein built up a $2.2 million war chest with help from hedge fund managers, far more than her rivals in the Manhattan district attorney race.
Tali Farhadian Weinstein says the donations from Wall Street will not influence her judgment on prosecuting cases.Credit.Sara Naomi Lewkowicz for The New York Times
April 13, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET
Even had she not raised more money than her rivals, Tali Farhadian Weinstein would be a formidable candidate in the nine-way race to become the Manhattan district attorney, perhaps the most high-profile local prosecutor’s office in the country.
Two decades before their careers converged as activist hedge fund managers, William A. Ackman ’88 and Paul C. Hilal ’88 were arguing about everything, including the physics of weightlifting in a Harvard gym. Bill recalls that he was always right. He would not have submitted a timely Social Studies thesis, however, without a kick from Paul.
The Lowell House roommates who came to invest billions together at Pershing Square Capital Management first met in their house dining hall after an introduction by a mutual friend. They reflect on finding fulfillment in finance and in the company of one another.
Filmed October 15, 2020.