Woman Who Helped Bring Down SAC Avoids Jail (Finalternatives)
A former hedge fund manager has been spared prison for assisting in the government’s insider-trading investigation against SAC Capital Advisors. Reema Shah pleaded guilty two-and-a-half years ago to swapping tips and illegally trading on them with former Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ:YHOO) executive Robert Kwok. She had faced up to 25 years in prison, but was hit with only two years’ probation and a $500,000 fine. She must also pay $11,750 in forfeitures and $377,000 to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Prosecutors cited her “remarkable cooperation” for the leniency, noting that her assistance helped win the convictions of several people, as well as that of SAC, which last year pleaded guilty to insider-trading charges.
US billionaire’s hedge fund dumps Sony stake (Brecorder)
US billionaire Daniel Loeb who last year tried to push Sony Corporation (ADR) (NYSE:SNE) to spin off a key part of its business, has sold his shares in the struggling firm saying “more urgency will be necessary” to get it back on track. Loeb’s Third Point hedge fund failed to persuade Sony to hive off up to 20 percent of its successful US-based entertainment division, which includes a Hollywood studio and music label, to make it more profitable. However, Sony rejected the proposal, which grabbed international headlines and was widely portrayed as a clash of corporate cultures, pitting a hard-charging foreign billionaire against one of the bedrocks of Japan’s staid corporate sector.
Strauss-Kahn’s Hedge Fund Partner Dies In Apparent Suicide (Finalternatives)
Thierry Leyne, former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s partner in a planned hedge-fund venture, has died. The 49-year-old Franco-Israeli CEO of Leyne Strauss-Kahn & Partners killed himself on Thursday at the firm’s Tel Aviv office. It is unclear whether he left a suicide note. Leyne Strauss-Kahn earlier this year announced plans to launch a global macro hedge fund with US$2 billion. The fund would rely on Strauss-Kahn’s “comprehensive economic predictions.”
Managers more serious about compliance (PionLine)
Private equity and hedge fund managers, prodded by their institutional clients, are taking compliance more seriously as federal examiners and enforcers up their game targeting practices they say put investors at a disadvantage. “This is a new environment because the SEC, especially in the private equity context, is focusing less on complying with a set of rules and more on whether a manager, without adequate explanation to its clients, is taking actions primarily for its own benefit,” said Deborah Prutzman, founder and CEO of New York-based Regulatory Fundamentals Group, a compliance consultant to institutional investors. “Managers may find that practices they considered well-settled are less accepted than they thought.”
The Best-Performing Hedge Fund Manager Of 2013 Is Making A Big Bet On Millennials With These 3 Stocks (BusinessInsider)
Larry Robbins, the best-performing hedge fund manager of 2013, is making a bullish bet on Millennials. He thinks they’re ready to take on some of the life experiences they had to defer because of the financial crisis – like buying a house and getting a dog. To play this trade, Robbins, the founder of Glenview Capital Management, is betting on the hospital operator Community Health Systems (CYH), the animal hospital operator VCA Inc (NASDAQ:WOOF), and the real estate brokerage RLGYRealogy Holdings Corp (NYSE:).
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