Boaz Weinstein | |
---|---|
Born | 1973 (age 50–51) New York City, New York, U.S. |
Education | University of Michigan (BA) |
Occupation | Founder of Saba Capital Management |
Spouse(s) | Tali Farhadian, separated 2023 |
Children | 3 |
Boaz Weinstein (born 1973) is an American hedge fund manager and founder of Saba Capital Management. He rose to prominence at Deutsche Bank in the early and mid 2000s with his credit default swap and capital structure arbitrage trading strategies. He then formed a proprietary trading group within Deutsche Bank. After leaving the bank in 2009, Weinstein started Saba Capital Management as a separate hedge fund. As of September 2022, Saba manages $4.8 billion in assets. [1]
Weinstein was among the first to identify and publicize a trading opportunity that was later nicknamed the "London Whale", when a trader at JPMorgan made a number of trades that exposed the firm to about $6.2 billion in losses. The trades in turn netted several hedge funds including Weinstein's hundreds of millions of dollars after they took an opposing position in the credit default swap market. [2] [3]
Weinstein is the son of Giselle and Stanford Weinstein and grew up in a Jewish family on the Upper West Side. [4] [5] His father owned an insurance brokerage and his mother, who had immigrated from Israel, was a translator. He has an older sister, Ilana. [4]
Weinstein first enrolled in a chess workshop at the age of five. [6] At the age of sixteen, he was ranked as a Life Master by the United States Chess Federation [7] and was third in the US for his age group. [8]
Weinstein had an interest in investing from an early age and was a fan of the television program Wall Street Week , hosted by Louis Rukeyser, which his family watched every Friday night. As a junior at the Stuyvesant High School in New York City, he was a winner of a stock-picking contest sponsored by Newsday , beating out a field of about 5000 students. [8] [9] At 15 years old, he began working as an intern at Merrill Lynch, after school and during the summer. [4] [6] He attended the University of Michigan and graduated in 1995 with a degree in philosophy. [6] During one summer, he worked at Goldman Sachs and was mentored by David Delucia, a partner at the firm. [4] [6]
After graduating from college, Weinstein worked for Merrill Lynch at the firm's debt trading desk. In 1997, he joined Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, [4] [6] to which he was recruited by his early mentor Delucia who had transferred from Goldman Sachs. Weinstein began trading floating rate notes – bonds with variable interest rates – just as the credit derivatives market was gaining popularity on Wall Street, significantly changing how the finance industry operated. [10]
Weinstein joined Deutsche Bank in January 1998, following several traders who moved over to the firm. [4] [11] He became the only person at the bank trading credit default swaps (CDS), insurance policies that payout when borrowers default. Deutsche Bank was interested in expanding its operations in the CDS market having just acquired Bankers Trust, the firm that created credit default swaps in the early 1990s. [11]
During his first year at Deutsche Bank, Weinstein netted significant gains for the German bank during the chaos created by Russia defaulting on its loans and the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management, [12] a hedge fund that was heavily leveraged. [13] He was promoted to vice president of Deutsche Bank in 1999. [14] When Weinstein had begun working at Deutsche Bank, J.P. Morgan was the only other major bank trading in CDS and only a few trades a day occurred in the market. By a decade later, CDS trading had expanded into a multi-trillion-dollar market involving numerous major banks. [15]
Weinstein became one of the most successful traders in the derivatives market. His CDS trading flourished during the most volatile periods, including the 2000–01 California electricity crisis, 2001 Enron scandal, and 2002 WorldCom scandal. Weinstein took the opposite position when AOL Time Warner's stock dropped around the same period. Correctly wagering that the company would not default on its loans, he purchased bonds from the company while hedging his position by shorting the stock. [9] [16] Known as capital structure arbitrage, this is one of Weinstein's main strategies to take advantage of discrepancies in the prices of the several types of securities available for trade on the same company. He made a similar trade in 2005 with General Motors by selling protection on the company's debt using a CDS and at the same time hedging his position by shorting the company's shares. [17] The GM trade for a period appeared to go wrong when the company's stock unexpectedly rose while the CDS plummeted, indicating a loss on both sides. The positions rebounded the following year netting Deutsche Bank a profit on the trade. [18]
In 2001, at the age of 27, Weinstein was promoted to become one of the youngest managing directors in Deutsche Bank's history. [6] [14] By this point, he was managing an internal hedge fund within Deutsche Bank with about $30 billion in positions, and also managing the flow trading desk. [19] His proprietary trading group, which he named Saba in 2007, gained around $900 million in 2006 and $600 million in 2007. [20] Saba reportedly lost as much as $1.8 billion in 2008, Weinstein's only losing year out of his eleven years at Deutsche Bank. [21] By January 2009, it had regained about $600 million. [20]
In April 2009, Weinstein hired 15 members of his former team to form Saba Capital Management, a credit-focused hedge fund based out of the Chrysler Building in Manhattan. [22] [23] He had left Deutsche Bank two months before, [24] and his former employer had agreed to the move years in advance and to become one of Saba's main brokers. [6] Saba is a Hebrew word meaning "grandfather" and is a tribute to Weinstein's grandfather, a survivor of the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II. [6] [25]
Saba began trading with $140–160 million in funds. [25] [22] By November 2010, the firm had raised $1.8 billion in funds with which to trade and was up 10% that year. [25] In March 2011, Saba was listed as the fastest growing hedge fund in 2010 by Absolute Return + Alpha . [26] Weinstein was also included in Fortune's 40 Under 40 list in 2010 and 2011. [27] [28]
Weinstein profited from the 2012 JPMorgan Chase trading loss. [2] [29] The trader, Bruno Iksil, was selling billions of dollars worth of notes for the Investment Grade Series 9 10-year Index CDS. [29] Noticing in November 2011 that the price index was lower than Saba's models indicated, Weinstein began buying CDSs on the index although he did not know at the time that the seller was at JPMorgan. In February 2012, Weinstein recommended to a conference of hedge fund managers that they should also keep buying as the seller was continuing to sell. In the end, JPMorgan had reportedly lost $6.2 billion. [29] [3] Weinstein's gains for Saba's clients were estimated between $200 million and $300 million and Saba's assets under management reached a new high of $5.6 billion. [4]
In 2010, Weinstein endowed the Tali and Boaz Weinstein Foundation to focus on education, with particular attention to poverty, Jewish causes and underprivileged children in New York City. [30] [31] [32] In 2012, he funded renovation work at his alma mater, of Stuyvesant High School. [33] < [34]
In May 2020, the Weinsteins donated a total of $2 million to about a dozen nonprofit organizations fighting domestic violence during the COVID-19 pandemic, including Sakhi for South Asian Women, Arab-American Family Support Center, Womankind and Violence Intervention Program. [35]
Weinstein is a skilled poker and blackjack player. He had become interested in blackjack since the early 1990s and learned card counting after reading Edward O. Thorp's Beat the Dealer . [36] He often played with a secretive blackjack team from MIT which has been profiled in the book Bringing Down the House , later adapted into the film 21 . [4] Weinstein is reportedly on the blacklist of several casinos as a card counter. [4] [25] In 2005, Warren Buffett invited him to play in a celebrity poker tournament where Weinstein won a Maserati. [37] [38]
In 2010, Weinstein married Tali Farhadian in Manhattan. [5] The couple has three daughters. [39]
In 2012, Weinstein bought a $25.5 million property on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue, from the estate of Huguette Clark. [40] [41]
JPMorgan Chase & Co. is an American multinational financial services firm headquartered in New York City and incorporated in Delaware. It is the largest bank in the United States and the world's largest bank by market capitalization as of 2023. As the largest of the Big Four banks in America, the firm is considered systemically important by the Financial Stability Board. Its size and scale have often led to enhanced regulatory oversight as well as the maintenance of an internal "Fortress Balance Sheet". The firm is headquartered at 383 Madison Avenue in Midtown Manhattan and is set to move into the under-construction JPMorgan Chase Building at 270 Park Avenue in 2025.
A credit default swap (CDS) is a financial swap agreement that the seller of the CDS will compensate the buyer in the event of a debt default or other credit event. That is, the seller of the CDS insures the buyer against some reference asset defaulting. The buyer of the CDS makes a series of payments to the seller and, in exchange, may expect to receive a payoff if the asset defaults.
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. is an American multinational investment bank and financial services company. Founded in 1869, Goldman Sachs is headquartered in Lower Manhattan in New York City, with regional headquarters in many international financial centers. Goldman Sachs is the second-largest investment bank in the world by revenue and is ranked 55th on the Fortune 500 list of the largest United States corporations by total revenue. In the Forbes Global 2000 of 2024, Goldman Sachs ranked 23rd. It is considered a systemically important financial institution by the Financial Stability Board.
The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc. was an American investment bank, securities trading, and brokerage firm that failed in 2008 during the 2007–2008 financial crisis and the Great Recession. After its closure it was subsequently sold to JPMorgan Chase. The company's main business areas before its failure were capital markets, investment banking, wealth management, and global clearing services, and it was heavily involved in the subprime mortgage crisis.
Steven A. Cohen is an American hedge-fund manager and owner of the New York Mets of Major League Baseball (MLB) since September 14, 2020, owning just over 97% of the team. He is the founder of hedge fund Point72 Asset Management and S.A.C. Capital Advisors.
Paul Tudor Jones II is an American billionaire hedge fund manager, conservationist and philanthropist. In 1980, he founded his hedge fund, Tudor Investment Corporation, an asset management firm headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut. Eight years later, he founded the Robin Hood Foundation, which focuses on poverty reduction. As of July 2024, his net worth was estimated at US$8.1 billion.
Brian Hunter is a Canadian former natural gas trader for the now closed Amaranth Advisors hedge fund. Amaranth had over $9 billion in assets but collapsed in 2006 after Hunter's gamble on natural gas futures market went bad.
An asset-backed securities index is a curated list of asset-backed security exposures that is used for performance bench-marking or trading.
Markit was a British financial information and services company that focused on credit derivative pricing. It was founded in 2003 and merged in 2016 with IHS to form IHS Markit.
A synthetic CDO is a variation of a CDO that generally uses credit default swaps and other derivatives to obtain its investment goals. As such, it is a complex derivative financial security sometimes described as a bet on the performance of other mortgage products, rather than a real mortgage security. The value and payment stream of a synthetic CDO is derived not from cash assets, like mortgages or credit card payments – as in the case of a regular or "cash" CDO—but from premiums paying for credit default swap "insurance" on the possibility of default of some defined set of "reference" securities—based on cash assets. The insurance-buying "counterparties" may own the "reference" securities and be managing the risk of their default, or may be speculators who've calculated that the securities will default.
The Volcker Rule is section 619 of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The rule was originally proposed by American economist and former United States Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker in 2010 to restrict United States banks from making certain kinds of speculative investments that do not benefit their customers. It was not implemented until July 2015. Volcker argued that such speculative activity played a key role in the 2007–2008 financial crisis. The rule is often referred to as a ban on proprietary trading by commercial banks, whereby deposits are used to trade on the bank's own accounts, although a number of exceptions to this ban were included in the Dodd–Frank law.
907 Fifth Avenue is a luxury residential housing cooperative in Manhattan, New York City, United States.
Blythe Sally Jess Masters is a British private equity executive and former financial services and fintech executive. She is a former executive at JPMorgan Chase, where she was widely credited for developing the credit default swap as a financial instrument.
The Quants is the debut New York Times best selling book by Wall Street journalist Scott Patterson. It was released on February 2, 2010 by Crown Business. The book describes the world of quantitative analysis and the various hedge funds that use the technique. Two years later, Patterson published a follow-up book, Dark Pools: High Speed Traders, AI Bandits and the Threat to the Global Financial System, an investigative journey into the history of high-frequency trading and the spread of artificial intelligence in today’s markets.
In April and May 2012, large trading losses occurred at JPMorgan's Chief Investment Office, based on transactions booked through its London branch. The unit was run by Chief Investment Officer Ina Drew, who later stepped down. A series of derivative transactions involving credit default swaps (CDS) were entered, reportedly as part of the bank's "hedging" strategy. Trader Bruno Iksil, nicknamed the London Whale, accumulated outsized CDS positions in the market. An estimated trading loss of $2 billion was announced. However, the loss amounted to more than $6 billion for JPMorgan Chase.
The forex scandal is a 2013 financial scandal that involves the revelation, and subsequent investigation, that banks colluded for at least a decade to manipulate exchange rates on the forex market for their own financial gain. Market regulators in Asia, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States began to investigate the $4.7 trillion per day foreign exchange market (forex) after Bloomberg News reported in June 2013 that currency dealers said they had been front-running client orders and rigging the foreign exchange benchmark WM/Reuters rates by colluding with counterparts and pushing through trades before and during the 60-second windows when the benchmark rates are set. The behavior occurred daily in the spot foreign-exchange market and went on for at least a decade according to currency traders.
Saba Capital Management (Saba) is a credit relative value focused hedge fund firm established in 2009. It also has strategies in tail hedge, closed-end funds and SPACs.
Goldman Sachs, an investment bank, has been the subject of controversies. The company has been criticized for lack of ethical standards, working with dictatorial regimes, close relationships with the U.S. federal government via a "revolving door" of former employees, and driving up prices of commodities through futures speculation. It has also been criticized by its employees for 100-hour work weeks, high levels of employee dissatisfaction among first-year analysts, abusive treatment by superiors, a lack of mental health resources, and extremely high levels of stress in the workplace leading to physical discomfort.
Tali Farimah Farhadian Weinstein is an American attorney, professor, and politician. She is a former federal and state prosecutor and was a candidate in the 2021 Manhattan District Attorney race. In November 2024, President Joe Biden announced his intention to nominate her as a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.