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Paul Tudor Jones Reveals Big Moves In Facebook, Apple, Groupon, And More

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paul tudor jones

Hedge fund legend Paul Tudor Jones isn't the type of investor who likes to talk about what his fund, Tudor Investments, is holding (or letting go of).

But on 13F filing day, no one can avoid disclosing their long positions.

In Tudor's SEC disclosure for Q3 we noted big moves in some tech stocks.

Here's what Tudor investments has been up to:

  • Went from 102,925 shares in Apple to 9,200 shares.
  • Picked up 100,000 shares of Facebook since Q2.
  • Picked up 150,000 shares of Groupon since Q2
  • Went from 400,000 shares of Zynga to 649,578 shares since Q2.

For good measure, we also noticed that Tudor investment dumped its 293,200 share stake in Virgin Media and picked up 4,600 shares in Walt Disney.

That's almost as good as a presentation... right?

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Inside The Super-Swank Breast Cancer Charity Event Attended By Paul Tudor Jones, Glenn Dubin, And A Former Miss Sweden

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Paul Tudor Jones

Last night, hundreds of people filled the Mandarin Oriental in Manhattan's Columbus Circle for a beautiful star-studded evening benefiting the Dubin Breast Center.

Back in 2010, Glenn Dubin, the co-founder of Highbridge Capital Management, and his wife, Eva Andersson-Dubin, an in-house physician at NBC, founded the Dubin Breast Center.

The Dubin Breast Center is a 15,000-square-foot facility at Mount Sinai that uses a comprehensive and patient-centered approach to breast care.  Breast cancer affects one in every eight women.

Click here to see last night's photos>

This cause is also very personal for Andersson-Dubin, who is a breast cancer survivor.  

"I was diagnosed with breast cancer ten years ago and that kind of lead me to want to build something for Mount Sinai because I was being treated at Mount Sinai and they didn't have it and I thought that it was hard for me to go through this, but how about someone who didn't have the medical background who wasn't able to coordinate things? It would be very hard.  So I thought Mount Sinai would be the perfect place to do it. It's a superb hospital," she told Business Insider in an interview.

The the tall, blonde former Miss Sweden (1980) also told us how it was so touching to see all her friends come out and support this cause.

"It's very needed that we do philanthropy for a center like this because if you don't have the philanthropy we can't do this excellent care.  It would be adequate care, but not excellent care.  I can only say 'thank you' to all these people."

There were several hedge fund heavyweights at the event including, Paul Tudor Jones II, Julian RobertsonandLouis Bacon, just to name a few.  Jones' daughter Caroline, who is a talented singer, performed and so did Latin pop superstar Thalia.  Celebrities Martha Stewart and Michael J. Fox were also in attendance. 

In case you missed the Dubin Breast Center Second Annual Benefit, we checked out the scene last night and have included several photo highlights in the slides that follow. 

Hundreds of people including some of the biggest names in finance along with some celebrities showed up last night. This is a shot of the cocktail hour in the lobby lounge.



Dr. Kenneth Davis, the CEO of Mount Sinai Medical Center, The Ruttenberg Family and Eva Andersson-Dubin



Eva Andersson-Dubin, ABC News anchor Cynthia McFadden (center) and Dr. Elisa Port, MD



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Paul Tudor Jones Pretends To Kiss Glenn Dubin On The Cheek [PHOTO]

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We captured this funny moment between legendary hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones and Glenn Dubin, the CEO of Highbridge Capital, at last night's charity event benefiting the Dubin Breast Center at Mount Sinai.

We've included the sequence of events.  He didn't actually kiss him on the cheek.

Before...

PTJ (use once, please)

And after...

PTJ

Too funny, guys.

SEE ALSO: Inside The Super-Swank Breast Cancer Charity Event Attended By Paul Tudor Jones, Glenn Dubin And A Former Miss Sweden >

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Photo Of Paul Tudor Jones' Spectacular Christmas Lights Display

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In keeping with holiday tradition, hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones has put up another elaborate Christmas lights display at his Belle Haven estate in Greenwich, Connecticut.

The spectacular light show features thousands of lights synchronized to music.

Check out this year's "Joy to the World" theme via Twitter user @Strauzer.

Paul Tudor Jones lights

We couldn't find any videos of this year's display, but here's a taste of what last year's was like.  (That's PTJ's daughter Caroline singing).

SEE ALSO: Paul Tudor Jones Pretends To Kiss Glenn Dubin On The Cheek >

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ALERT: The Infamous Paul Tudor Jones 'Trader' Documentary Is Online Again

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Months ago, the infamous Paul Tudor Jones 'Trader' documentary resurfaced, only to disappear back into the depths internet again.

So if you missed it then, grab it now from dailymotion before it's too late — last time it was only up for about a day.

All the drama stems from the fact that PTJ does not like this movie. He asked PBS to stop airing after it premiered in 1987. He also, according to Wall Street lore, purchased almost all of the copies of the movie on VHS.

So this movie is rare. It's very, very rare. It's basically the white stag of Wall Street.

Watch it below (also, you're welcome):


Paul Tudor Jonesby totalinvestor

There's a lot of Awesome 80s Stuff in it as well... check it out here>

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A Few Possible Reasons Why Paul Tudor Jones Despises His Infamous Documentary, 'Trader'

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paul tudor jones trader

In 1987 PBS released a documentary called 'Trader' featuring legendary hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones and his firm Tudor Investments.

But the film was never given a chance to catch on. PTJ hated it, and bought up almost all the copies of the film as soon as he could. Every now and again a copy surfaces online (like yesterday — it's already down) but the question generally remains — why did PTJ hate the movie so much?

At the time it was made, the market was shooting up but PTJ and his team were (correctly) calling a crash to come. In the film, they also show a lot of care for managing risk and taking care of their clients. There's even a look into the awesome charity work that PTJ does with kids in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn.

Some speculate that PTJ felt that his trading secrets were revealed in the documentary. Others suggest that he was embarrassed of how he looked while he was trading.

Regardless, there's never been an official answer to this question so there's always room for more theories as to why PTJ killed this documentary, here are some of ours.

Because he gets super nervous.

Throughout the documentary PTJ bites his nails, shakes his hands, taps his feet and does basically anything you can physically imagine a nervous person doing. Traders are supposed to stay calm, and he acknowledges that, so maybe he doesn't like the look of himself losing his cool.



Because he screams and swears.

Traders do this all the time, but it doesn't mean they want it on tape. Plus, the man's got kids. No one wants them to hear dad drop the F-Bomb.



Because he calls his own retirement.

This obviously never happened. Tudor says, "If I make the market I want to make I'll retire, hopefully a champion."

Now PTJ is a billionaire and definitely a champion. Maybe he realized that he wasn't going to retire after he hit his mark and wanted to erase this comment from history.



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Paul Tudor Jones Is Shifting His Strategy, And Traders Are Leaving His Fund

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Paul Tudor Jones

Legendary trader Paul Tudor Jones is known as a philanthropic man who isn't big on the limelight, so it's not every day that we get reports of what's going on at his Greenwich-based hedge fund, Tudor Investments.

However, today Bloomberg reports that two Tudor Investment vets (Allen Chu and Ashwin Ranganathan) are leaving the fund after seven years — and what's interesting about that is why.

The $11.6 billion hedge fund is moving away trading equities in Asia and moving toward a more macro strategy.

Chu and Ashwin aren't the only ones to have left because of this strategy shift either (from Bloomberg):

Tudor is looking to hire traders across strategies in the U.S. and U.K., where the fund also experienced departures, one of the people said. U.K.-based macro traders Mary Davis and Christiana Toutet, who worked as a team, left in mid-January after more than four years at Tudor, as did Susan Arnott, an equities trader who joined in 2011, the people said. Michael Georgiou is another macro trader in the U.K. to leave last month, the person said.

In 2012 the Tudor BVI returned 6.3 percent last year and 2.2 percent in 2011, a far cry from the 19% average returns PTJ has been getting since 1986.

Everything needs a shake-up now and again, and hey — who doesn't want to work for a legend?

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17 Fraternities With Top Wall Street Alumni

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SAEEvery year, thousands of young men at college campuses across the U.S. rush fraternities.  

Their reasons for joining these groups might vary.  Most probably want to make more friends and have a full social calendar, while others might want to form connections with past and current brothers that could be useful in later life.

We combed through a bunch of fraternities notable members lists to find big Wall Street names, both past and present, who were brothers.  

We've included a round up of frats that have produced some of the biggest, and in a couple cases some of the most infamous, names on the Street. 

Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT)

Notable Wall Street members: SAC Capital's Steve Cohen (UPenn), former chairman of Bear Stearns Alan "Ace" Greenberg, Cantor Fitzgerald vice chairman Stuart Fraser (University of Missouri)

Founded: December 29, 1898 (114 years) City College of New York

Nickname: "ZBT" or "Zebe"

Mission Statement:"The mission of Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity (ZBT) is to foster and develop in its membership the tenets of its Credo: Intellectual Awareness, Social Responsibility, Integrity and Brotherly Love, in order to prepare its members for positions of leadership and service within their communities.

"Mindful of its founding in 1898 as the Nation's first Jewish Fraternity, ZBT will preserve and cultivate its relationships within the Jewish community. Since 1954, ZBT has been committed to its policy of non-sectarian Brotherhood, and values the diversity of its membership. ZBT will recruit and initiate men of good character, regardless of religion, race or creed who are accepting of these principles."

Size: over 140,000 initiated 

Source: ZBT



Alpha Tau Omega (ΑΤΩ)

Famous Wall Street members: Lehman Brothers ex-CEO Dick Fuld (University of Colorado at Boulder)

Founded: September 11, 1865 (147 years ago) Virginia Military Institute

Nickname(s): "ATO" or "Taus"

Mission Statement:"To bind men together in a brotherhood based upon eternal and immutable principles, with a bond as strong as right itself and as lasting as humanity; to know no North, no South, no East, no West, but to know man as man, to teach that true men the world over should stand together and contend for supremacy of good over evil; to teach, not politics, but morals; to foster, not partisanship, but the recognition of true merit wherever found; to have no narrower limits within which to work together for the elevation of man than the outlines of the world: these were the thoughts and hopes uppermost in the minds of the founders of the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity."

Source: ATO



Delta Upsilon (ΔΥ)

Famous Wall Street members: Former Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain (MIT)

Founded: November 4, 1834 (178 years ago) Williams College

Nickname:"DU"

Mission/Vision Statement: "Delta Upsilon is the premier men's fraternity committed to Building Better Men for a global society through service, leadership development, and lifelong personal growth of our diverse membership."

Size: 3,700 undergraduate and 80,000 living alumni



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15 Life Lessons From Top Hedge Fund Managers

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Paul Tudor Jones and Glenn Dubin

The hedge fund industry is full of some of the brightest people in the world who are immensely successful in trading and investing. 

While they can definitely offer some valuable advice about investing, they are also full of bits of wisdom about life in general.    

We've included a round up of life lessons, principles and advice from a few of the brightest fund managers out there. 

Paul Tudor Jones: Shame can be a lifetime companion for which you better prepare yourself."

Backstory: Right after college, PTJ was working for prominent cotton trader Eli Tullis in New Orleans. After a night of partying in New Orleans, he fell asleep at his desk and was fired.  But he earned a lesson from it. 

"Today, I will put my work ethic up against anybody's on Wall Street. Failure will give you a tattoo that will stay with you your whole life, and sometimes it's a really good thing. One other side note, to this day, I've never told my parents that I got fired. I just told them wanted to try something different.  Shame can be a lifetime companion for which you better prepare yourself." 



PTJ: 'Everything happens for a reason.'

"So here is the point: you are going to meet the dragon of failure in your life. You may not get into the school you want or you may get kicked out of the school you are in. You may get your heart broken by the girl of your dreams or God forbid, get into an accident beyond your control. But the point is that everything happens for a reason. At the time it may not be clear. And certainly the pain and the shame are going to be overwhelming and devastating. But just as sure as the sun comes up, there will come time a time on the next day or the next week or the next year, when you will grab that sword and point it at that dragon and tell him, 'Be gone, dragon. Tarry with me and I will cut your head off.  For I must find the destination God and life hold in store for me!'"

Source: Commencement Speech to the Buckley School in 2009



Glenn Dubin: Failure is inevitable

"...you will experience failures both in your personal life and career.  I hope you won’t fail as spectacularly as I did and get rejected on your first 29 job interviews, but some failures in life are inevitable. Work through them and, most importantly, learn from them."

Source: Stony Brook University



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The 36 Richest Hedge Fund Managers In The World

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Paul Tudor Jones, Sonia Jones

The annual Forbes' "World's Billionaires List" is out. 

Every year, the list is full of the biggest names in the hedge fund industry. 

This year, there are some newcomers to the list including, Bill Ackman (Pershing Square), Seth Klarman (Baupost Group) and Andreas Halvorsen ("Tiger Cub"/Viking Global). 

We've included a round up of the world's richest hedge funders in the slides that follow. 

Seth Klarman

Rank: 1332

Net-worth: $1.05 billion

Age: 55

Fund: Baupost Group

Source: Forbes



Henry Swieca

Rank: 1175

Net-worth: $1.2 billion

Age: 55

Fund: Talpion Fund Management

Source: Forbes



Thomas Sandell

Rank: 1175

Net-worth: $1.2 billion

Age: 52

Fund: Sandell Asset Management

Source: Forbes



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REPORT: Two Legendary Hedge Fund Managers Were Both Investors In InTrade

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Paul Tudor Jones

This is something we didn't know before about InTrade, the events betting site that announced yesterday that it was shutting down...

Legendary billionaire hedge fund managers Paul Tudor Jones and Stan Druckenmiller were both investors in Intrade as of 2011, the Financial Times reports citing audit documents. 

From the FT:

The documents also revealed that the company’s shareholders in 2011 included hedge fund managers Paul Tudor Jones and Stanley Druckenmiller, and a trust connected to Christopher Hehmeyer, the current chairman of the National Futures Association, a US regulatory body. None of the shareholders could be reached for comment yesterday.

Intrade, a popular Dublin-based internet betting exchange for things like the presidential election to the papal conclave, halted its operations and froze customer accounts yesterday after it discovered possible financial irregularities. 

It's not clear whether Druckenmiller or Jones remain shareholders.

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REPORT: InTrade Founder Failed To Report Millions He Got From The Company

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John Delaney Intrade

The FT's Arash Massoudi, Gregory Meyer and Jamie Smyth report InTrade founder John Delaney failed to adequately report $2.6 million he received from the company, citing documents the company recently filed.

Yesterday InTrade announced it was suspending all operations. 

Auditors flagged “significant financial irregularities” in payments made to Delaney, who died on Mount Everest in 2011, the FT says.

The documents also show Paul Tudor Jones and Stanley Druckenmiller were shareholders in the company as late as 2011 — as was a trust connected to Christopher Hehmeyer, the current chairman of the National Futures Association.

Read the full report on FT.com >

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Paul Tudor Jones Gave An Impassioned Interview About Poverty On 60 Minutes

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Hedge fund legend and billionaire Paul Tudor Jones rarely gives interviews, but last night he appeared on 60 Minutes to discuss his charity, The Robin Hood Foundation.

The organization funds charter schools, job training, food programs and more. It all started back in the 80s when Jones saw a 60 Minutes segment about another philanthropist and decided that he wanted to get involved with NYC school children. He threw money at one school for 5 years, but it was a flop.

"I felt like I had failed a great deal of those kids, but failure, a lot of times is the fire that forges the steel for success, right? There are going to be stops, there are going to be failures, there are going to be setbacks but you grow from those and you get better and it becomes transformative."

That's when Jones decided to apply quantitative goals and solutions to each charity he helped. Taking a page from Wall Street, he decided that all his charitable work should be driven by results — and so he formed The Robin Hood Foundation.

Robin Hood raised $57 million from the "1% of the 1%" at its annual charity event last year, but the point is that money isn't spent willy-nilly. Jones and his team of analyst defund 5-10% of charities a year because they're not getting results.

"It's what you have to be at the forefront of actually finding a way to kick poverty's ass," Jones told 60 Minutes, adding later "intellectual capital always more important than financial capital."

Watch the interview below:

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The Fabulous Lives Of Wall Street Offspring

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Paul Tudor Jones

Just like you and me, Wall Streeters from all parts of the  industry get the itch to settle down and start a family at some point.

That means they have kids who share their fabulous lives. We decided to track down a bunch of them and see what they've done with them.

All in all these young men and women are pretty remarkable.

Some of them are singer-songwriters, while others are going into the family business. We found a journalist and a computer game developer, too.  

Now let's meet this next generation. 

Laura Dimon, the daughter of JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon

Age: 26 to 27 (est.)

About: Laura is the middle child of Jamie Dimon's three daughters. She has an older sister, Julia, and a younger sister, Kara.

Laura recently got a lot of attention for a Daily Beast article that went viral.  The piece was about women avoiding getting caught going No. 2 in the office.

She's a master's student at Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. Her articles have been published in The Daily Beast, The Huffington Post and Morocco World News. You can check out her blog here

In the past, she worked as a program analyst for the Clinton Health Access Initiative in Pretoria, South Africa.  She has also interned at The Council on Foreign Relations. 



Matt Dalio, the son of billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio

Age: 29 (est.)

About: Matt lives in the San Francisco Bay Area and is the CEO and chief of product of Endless Mobile, a company that builds smartphone software for the needs of the developing world.

At age 16, after spending a summer working in a Chinese orphanage, Matt founded the China Care Foundation. The organization raises funds to help Chinese orphans with special needs. ABC News named him "Person Of The Week" in 2004.  

Matt graduated from Harvard in 2006 with degrees in economics and psychology.  He also holds an MBA from Stanford.

Source: EndlessM.com



Mike Swieca, the son of billionaire hedge fund manager Henry Swieca

Age: 27 (est.)

About: Mike Swieca works at his father's hedge fund, Talpion Fund Management, according to his LinkedIn profile.

It looks like he previously did internships at Goldman, Highbridge, Barclays and Antheus Capital. 

He graduated with degrees in history and economics from Northwestern University.  He completed a study abroad program at the City University of Hong Kong.  He is currently pursuing his MBA from Columbia. 



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PAUL TUDOR JONES: Babies Are The Biggest 'Killer' Of Women's Trading Success

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Dubin, Paul Tudor Jones, Sonia

Last month, legendary hedge fund trader Paul Tudor Jones made some controversial comments about why there are so few female traders at the University of Virginia symposium on a panel with Julian Robertson and John Griffin. 

The Washington Post has obtained video footage of the panel via a Freedom of Information Act request.

The footage shows PTJ explaining how in his view the biggest killers to trading are divorce and babies.

To illustrate his point, he shared an anecdote about how two women he traded with at E.F. Hutton lost their focus after having children.  

"Then they both had — which in my mind is as big of a killer as divorce is — they both had children. As soon as that baby's lips touched that girl's bosom, forget it," he said.

Here's what we've transcribed from part of the footage (emphasis ours): 

"You will never see as many great women investors or traders as men. Period. End of story. And the reason why is not because they're not capable. They're very capable. Like, one of my No. 1 rules as an investor is as soon as my manager, if I find out that manager is going through divorce, redeem immediately.  Because the emotional distraction that comes from divorce is so overwhelming. The idea that you could think straight for 60 seconds and be able to make a rational decision is impossible, particularly when there are kids involved. You can automatically subtract 10 to 20% from any manager if he is going through divorce.

"Women, when you think about why is it that I'm here today. I'm here today because as a child I played every game in the world — I played poker, backgammon, bridge, Monopoly ... Chinese checkers, solitaire. I played every game that you could imagine and that's all I did as a child. By the time I was 21, I had a PhD in probalistic theory because I loved games. It's what I did ... So I got my 10,000 reps.

"So now, let's take the typical female that enters the workforce. In my 20s, then I was exposed to the pits and I had this incredible ... I was getting all this information because I was there at ground zero during one of the most explosive times in history of the futures markets. And it was fantastic. So my most formative ages, which were 21 to 30, I was there again now 10,000 reps became 20 or 30,000 reps. Take a girl that was my age at that point in time, particularly back in the '70s. I can think of two that actually started E.F. Hutton with me.  Within four years, by 1980, right when I was getting ready to launch my company they both got married. Then they both had — which in my mind is as big of a killer as divorce is — they both had children. And as soon as that baby's lips touched that girl's bosom, forget it. Every single investment idea, every desire to understand what's going to make this go up or go down is going to be overwhelmed by the most beautiful experience which a man will never share about a mode of connection between that mother and that baby. I just see it happen over and over. I'm talking about trading, not managing ..." 

His comments ended up upseting some alumni and faculty at his alma mater.  PTJ later issued a statement to the Washington Post calling them "off the cuff remarks" at the April 26 event.

Watch below [via Washington Post]

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HEDGE FUND LEGEND: If One Of My Managers Is Getting Divorced, I'll Pull My Money Out

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Paul Tudor Jones

The Washington Post has obtained footage of hedge funder Paul Tudor Jones from a panel discussion at the University of Virginia last month with fellow fund managers John Griffin and Julian Robertson

During the panel discussion, PTJ made some comments that the biggest killers to trading success are divorce and women having babies.  

Here's what he does when on of his manager's is going through a divorce: 

"... Like, one of my No. 1 rules as an investor is as soon as my manager, if I find out that manager is going through divorce, redeem immediately.  Because the emotional distraction that comes from divorce is so overwhelming. The idea that you could think straight for 60 seconds and be able to make a rational decision is impossible, particularly when their kids are involved. You can automatically subtract 10 to 20% from any manager if he is going through divorce." 

Watch the video below: 

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I'm A Woman, And I Don't Think Paul Tudor Jones' Comments On Woman Traders Were Sexist

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paul tudor jones

Since the Washington Post published a video of Paul Tudor Jones discussing the biggest killers in trading success— divorce and having a baby — people have been concentrating on his latter point, and calling him a sexist for it.

From his speech:

"As soon as that baby's lips touched that girl's bosom, forget it. Every single investment idea, every desire to understand what's going to make this go up or go down is going to be overwhelmed by the most beautiful experience which a man will never share about a connection between that mother and that baby."

That's the part of his talk that has everyone riled up.

But we should think about all this a little harder before we go around slamming the "s" word down. In fact, simply dismissing PTJ as a sexist distracts from the most important part of what he's said — that there are social and structural expectations of women that detract from their focus in the work place.

And if nothing else, traders must be focused.

I'll say this: Perhaps PTJ should have said it more delicately, but he wasn't saying that women are innately bad traders – he just said there will never be as many stellar ones as there are men.

"...you will never see as many great women investors or traders as men. Period. End of story. And the reason why is not because they're not capable. They're very capable."

So if not capability, what's the reason? It's time, and more than that, it's our social structure.

"So now, let's take the typical female that enters the workforce. In my 20s, then I was exposed to the pits and I had this incredible ... Iwas getting all this information because I was there at ground zero during one of the most explosive times in history of the futures markets. So it was fantastic. So my most formative ages, which were 21 to 30, I was there again now 10,000 reps became 20 or 30,000 reps. Take a girl that was my age at that point in time, particularly back in the '70s. I can think of two that actually started E.F. Hutton with me. Within four years, by 1980, right when I was getting ready to launch my company they both got married."

The problem we're addressing here is a social, structural issue having to do with gender and expectation. We're belittling it by pretending it's a problem with one man. PTJ was just plainspoken enough to talk about it in public from the perspective of someone who's trying to run a successful business.

His point is that women are expected to get married, expected to have children, and expected to keep a house ... still. Because of that, there will not be as many women who choose to live the grueling lifestyle of being a trader and a mother at the same time (and become successful traders while doing it) as there are men who are successful fathers and traders.

See, women go to work, come home, and do more work.

The stats say it all. Report after report — working women still do the lion's share of household chores. They're expected to. Sheryl Sandberg said the most important part of a woman's career is choosing a husband. In this case, it's one who will take on tasks and duties that have been, and often still are, considered gender specific to women.

As a woman in her 20s in the workplace, I can see that today is different from 1980, but not by much. Women are still expected to get married, have kids, and keep a home whether or not they stay in it all day. Men are just expected to be great providers, good at their jobs, and good fathers. They enter into marriages not knowing how to boil an egg, let alone cook a meal for their kids.

Bottom line: What women fought for (and are still fighting for) is the opportunity to either stay home with the kids or get in the pits and trade without anyone raising an eyebrow. I don't fault anyone for picking either, and if more women decide to stay home and there are fewer great women traders, that's fine too — as long as they get to make the choice.

The problem is that the eyebrows still rise when a woman can't do it all to have it all. Until that changes, there won't be as many women who want to work so hard at work and at home.

Finally, where I don't agree with in PTJ's argument is that this can never change. It could, but it's got to be everyone, not just him, who let women make a choice about where they can really focus their energies.

Whatever it is, that's a personal affair.

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Hormones Have No Place In A Discussion About Women On Wall Street

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Paul Tudor Jones

If a gaffe, in the famous formulation of journalist Michael Kinsley, can be best described as when someone accidentally admits the truth, then hedge fund star Paul Tudor Jones made a doozy of one at an off-the-record chat hosted by the University of Virginia last month.

"You will never see as many great women investors or traders as men," Jones, the founder of the multi-billion dollar Tudor Investment Fund, told the audience. Why? It's the children, damnit. "As soon as that baby's lips touched that girl's bosom, forget it. Every single investment idea, every desire to understand what's going to make this go up or go down is going to be overwhelmed."The Washington Post obtained a recording and posted it online last week.

Never mind multi-tasking. We're talking the power of Oxytocin here. Ladies, a full complement of nannies and supportive husbands won't help, not when your hormones are taking charge.

Jones quickly attempted to take his words back, claiming he was only referring to "global macro traders," those traders who seek to profit from world-wide economic trends in world financial markets, where "life events, such as birth, divorce, death of a loved one and other emotional highs and lows are obstacles to success."

Ah, work-life balance. Gaffe explained. We can move on now.

Not so fast.

Jones' slip points out the truth of what is going on: men don't trust women to get this investing thing right. Things have not been going well for the ladies on Wall Street since the Great Recession – not, mind you, that the going was so good before. Disproportionately impacted by the downsizing of the financial services industry, their numbers in the business have been dropping. One day it's Zoe Cruz being held responsible for losses at Morgan Stanley, the next it is Ina Drew taking the hit for JPMorgan Chase's so-called "London Whale" trading scandal.

It's become popular among those who would like to see women's status on Wall Street improved, after the 2008 financial crash, to claim that hormones cause women to enjoy a calm and risk-averse nature and that if they worked on Wall Street in greater numbers, we'd all be in better financial shape. Think about it. Who was brought in to take charge after the falsehood of the Iceland economic miracle? Women. Who tried to bring attention to Wall Street's increasingly risky practices? Brooksley Born, who warned frantically and repeatedly about the dangers of derivatives, only to be shouted down by the men in the rooms of power.

There is a pseudo-scientific streak among lazy thinkers who believe that women just can't help it- their hormones leave them unsuited for the halls of power, be they in Washington or Wall Street. As legal historian Christine Sgarlata Chung observes, "Wall Street's prevailing narrative assumes that women lack the skills and characteristics necessary to navigate on Wall Street" and treats them as either "hapless victims" or "incompetent shrews."

Under this reasoning, women's lack of investing or leadership prowess comes down to a lack of testosterone. Testosterone, of course, is supposed to be the hormone of the alpha male, of leadership and strength and risk-taking. Cheerleaders for women's empowerment even claim this same testosterone is the problem. Yet even this is simplistic.

When John Coates at the University of Cambridge claims he began investigating the impact of testosterone on investing because he didn't meet any women who fell for the dot.com bubble, we nod in agreement. Perhaps testosterone made Coates so impulsive about his theory he forgot to do a basic LexisNexis search – and, as a result, neglected to discover Morgan Stanley's Mary Meeker, who acquired the moniker "Queen of the Net" for her role in pumping up the turn-of-the-century Internet economy.

In fact, let's look at the assertion that women are more likely to avoid unreasonable risk than men. Are women more cautious? University of Massachusetts Boston economics professor Julie Nelson recently put two-dozen such studies supposedly proving that point through the statistical wringer.

Her conclusion? The difference between men and women when it came to risk were minuscule. Researchers were simply finding the results they wanted to find.

So what about that finding by Wall Street consulting firm Rothstein Kass, which showed that, since 2009, female-owned hedge funds posted better results than those helmed by men? That doesn't mean women are better investors than men. It could mean … why it could mean anything.

Maybe it's the estrogen or the lack of testosterone. Or maybe women need to be better at investing than their male peers to even get the funding to open their doors before they place their first hedged trade. It might even be a perverse benefit of sexism: as Rothstein Kass director Meredith Jones pointed out, women-owned hedge funds have less in the way of funds than those run by men. That can cut into their profits – but it also allows them a flexibility in investing that larger firms lack.

The truth is a stereotype is a stereotype, and there is next to no evidence that hormones help women invest any more than they hinder it. All in all, Jones' gaffe reminds us that thoughts about sex and stocks have a long lineage on Wall Street – and they're not meant to be helpful to women.

So instead of relying on half-baked theories on sex and the stock market to promote women's progress perhaps we'd do better to go back to a more simple ideal: fairness. Testosterone and estrogen not required.

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

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Stephanie Ruhle's Response To Paul Tudor Jones' Women Traders Gaffe Is The Best We've Read

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Stephanie Ruhle

Bloomberg TV's Stephanie Ruhle laid down the latest word on hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones' controversial comments on Wall Street's lack of female traders, and they're the best we've heard yet.

Why? Because Ruhle's call is a call to action — she wants him to do more than talk about the lack of women trading on Wall Street, she wants him to do something about it.

In case you missed it, a few weeks ago The Washington Post published a video of Jones giving a speech at his alma mater, UVA, and here's what he said:

"As soon as that baby's lips touched that girl's bosom, forget it. Every single investment idea, every desire to understand what's going to make this go up or go down is going to be overwhelmed by the most beautiful experience which a man will never share about a connection between that mother and that baby."

The blogosphere exploded with arguments for why this comment was sexist — because (scientifically) men are just as predisposed to getting attached to kids as women, because (scientifically) women can be better traders ... and so forth.

Ruhle, who rose through the ranks at Deutsche Bank herself, isn't even touching that. She acknowledges that, science or gaffe aside, PTJ's comments are those of an experienced hedge fund manager and likely true. Women leave The Street in droves after they have kids despite every corporate effort to recruit them.

From Ruhle in The Huffington Post:

Since leaving DB, I have participated in many conferences and swish events that other financial institutions have held for their women's groups. Those institutions too have very few senior women in their senior ranks, especially in trading. So where is the disconnect?

Paul Tudor Jones' remarks were ugly and revealing...The most talented investors are animals solely focused on winning. In reality, no one on Wall Street cares about anything except performance. It isn't easy for women to navigate their way to the most coveted trading positions, especially with the lack of sponsorship, but when they do it's all about the numbers. Investing is pure....It shouldn't matter who delivers it. If that is true, why haven't more women reached the top? I challenge Mr. Jones to embrace his well-honed problem solving skills and help answer why so many resources are devoted to recruiting and retaining women when they may be destined for the pink ghetto.

In short, she wants PTJ to do something about this issue. Wall Street shouldn't just be throwing resources at women because it has to, it should be building women up so the industry will rise with them.

As Ruhle pointed out, women are the sole or primary breadwinner in 40% of households and they're graduating from college in droves, surely there are some awesome female traders out there.

Or not, but they deserve the chance to find out.

From Ruhle:

So I begrudgingly thank Paul Tudor Jones for raising the very unattractive side of this issue. We don't like to hear it. Now I must raise an even thornier dilemma. What if he's right? Is it bias that leads to the current situation or reality? Are there hundreds of women who want to be macro traders that are being held back by the men or the establishment? Or do their skills really vanish the moment they have a child? The thing about Wall Street is that people are very focused on performance. If you can put up the numbers, it shouldn't matter if you wear a dress or a tie. So let's test Paul's hypothesis. Remove the bias and see if mothers can succeed.

Ruhle's view is the only one we've heard that doesn't simply dismiss Jones' remarks as sexist without looking at the reality of their implications. He's not simply wrong, this is a complicated social problem, as Business Insider has argued, and there must be a solution. People's biases don't change over night, sometimes they need to be pushed by those who control the institutions we interact with every day.

This wouldn't be the first time that people have needed to see change in front of them before changing their minds.

So have at it, PTJ.

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19 College Frats With Big Name Wall Street Alumni

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Sigma Phi EpsilonThis week, fraternity rush is beginning at college campuses across the country.  

The reasons people join these groups might vary. Most people probably want to make more friends and have a full social calendar, while others might want to form connections with past and current brothers that could be useful in later life.

We combed through a bunch of fraternities notable members lists to find big Wall Street names, both past and present, who were brothers.  

We've included a round up of frats that have produced some of the biggest, and in a couple cases some of the most infamous, names on the Street. 

If you know of any that we're missing, feel free to send an email to jlaroche@businessinsider.com. 

Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT)

Notable Wall Street members: SAC Capital's Steve Cohen (UPenn), former chairman of Bear Stearns Alan "Ace" Greenberg, Cantor Fitzgerald vice chairman Stuart Fraser (University of Missouri)

Founded: December 29, 1898 (114 years) City College of New York

Nickname: "ZBT" or "Zebe"

Mission Statement:"The mission of Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity (ZBT) is to foster and develop in its membership the tenets of its Credo: Intellectual Awareness, Social Responsibility, Integrity and Brotherly Love, in order to prepare its members for positions of leadership and service within their communities.

"Mindful of its founding in 1898 as the Nation's first Jewish Fraternity, ZBT will preserve and cultivate its relationships within the Jewish community. Since 1954, ZBT has been committed to its policy of non-sectarian Brotherhood, and values the diversity of its membership. ZBT will recruit and initiate men of good character, regardless of religion, race or creed who are accepting of these principles."

Size: Over 140,000 initiated 

Source: ZBT



Phi Kappa Psi (ΦΚΨ)

Famous Wall Street members: Michael Bloomberg (Founder of Bloomberg LP), Bill Gross (Founder of Pimco), Orra Monnette (Founder of Bank of America)

Founded: February 19, 1852 (161 years ago) Jefferson College

Nickname(s): Phi Psi

Motto: Conjugati Amicitia,Vindicate Honore,Et Ducti Vero,Vivimus et Vigemus. United by friendship,sustained by honor,and led by truth,We live and we flourish.



Alpha Tau Omega (ΑΤΩ)

Famous Wall Street members: Lehman Brothers ex-CEO Dick Fuld (University of Colorado at Boulder)

Founded: September 11, 1865 (147 years ago) Virginia Military Institute

Nickname(s): "ATO" or "Taus"

Mission Statement:"To bind men together in a brotherhood based upon eternal and immutable principles, with a bond as strong as right itself and as lasting as humanity; to know no North, no South, no East, no West, but to know man as man, to teach that true men the world over should stand together and contend for supremacy of good over evil; to teach, not politics, but morals; to foster, not partisanship, but the recognition of true merit wherever found; to have no narrower limits within which to work together for the elevation of man than the outlines of the world: these were the thoughts and hopes uppermost in the minds of the founders of the Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity."

Source: ATO



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