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Billionaire Steve Cohen Wants 57 Of His Ex-Wife's Emails From 2006

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steve cohen

The drama never ends in the Steven and Patricia Cohen divorce saga.

Steve Cohen, one of the richest hedge fund managers and the founder of Point72, (formerly SAC Capital) is trying to get a hold of 57 of his ex-wife's emails from 2006 and 2007, according to Bloomberg's Patricia Hurtado.

The billionaire says the email exchanges will "help him defend a fraud suit she filed against him," according to the report.

The emails in question were exchanged between Patricia Cohen and attorney Michael Bowe in 2006 and 2007.

Bowe previously sued Steve Cohen twice when he was representing both Biovail Corp. and Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd., also back in 2006. In the suits, Steve Cohen and SAC Capital were accused of insider trading.

Although the suits were eventually dismissed, SAC Capital ended its investment advisory business after pleading guilty to insider trading last year. It later changed its name to Point72 Asset Management LP.

So what does Patricia Cohen have to do with all of this?

Although the pair officially divorced in 1990, the fighting never stopped.

In 2009, she sued Steve Cohen claiming that he concealed assets worth upward of $5.5 million during their divorce to cheat her out of money in the settlement.

Some of those assets, she said, were "reaped through insider trading.

Her 2006-2007 emails with Bowe (who represented firms that accused Steve Cohen of insider trading), therefore, look suspicious. 

Originally, Patricia's 2009's lawsuit was dismissed by a federal judge because she waited too long to file the case. She argued that she hadn't learned about the issue at hand until 2006, and the case was reinstated by an appeals court.

Again, that's about the time that she exchanged these emails with Bowe.

In the past, Patricia Cohen refused to give up her emails with Bowe. She says "they're covered by the attorney-client privilege because she was discussing hiring him as her lawyer," according to Bloomberg.

But Steve Cohen's lawyer doesn't agree. He argues that because Bowe never actually represented Patricia Cohen, the attorney-client privilege does not apply to them.

And Steve Cohen wants these emails to help win the "fraud suit she filed against him" in 2009. He says the emails will "help prove that Patricia Cohen waited too long to file her lawsuit," according to the report.

Perhaps, Steve Cohen is hoping that that will be enough close the case once again.

For the full story head to Bloomberg>

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It's Hardly A Surprise Who Paid $101 Million For This 'Chariot'

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9219 Lot 25 Giacometti, Chariot

Hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen is the man who paid $101 million for Alberto Giacometti's "Chariot" scultpure at Sotheby's last week, the NYT's Carol Vogel reports. 

This is hardly a surprise: Cohen is well-known for paying nine figures for coveted pieces of art for his collection. Cohen bought Picasso's "La Rêve" from casino magnate Steve Wynn in a private sale (later confirmed by his art adviser, Sandy Heller) back in 2012 for $155 million. He's one of the only collectors to rival the Al-Thani family of Qatar in the super-high-priced art space.

But while this latest big purchase ranks among the highest prices ever paid (publicly) for a work of art, it actually seems like Cohen got a deal on it.

Sotheby's estimate (which was only given out on request) was "in excess of $100 million." While the final sale price ticked up beyond that, estimates are of the hammer price, which is the amount that gets called out in the sale room and is the final price less the auction house's fee. In this case, bidding never went over $90 million, largely because there was only one bidder beyond the guarantor (who promises the auction house to buy the work if bidding doesn't reach a certain price).

Further, Sotheby's was really looking for a new record for Giacometti sculpture, something above the $104.3 million that Lily Safra paid for a different work in 2010. 

Thus, in the end, the sale was a disappointment, and a relatively good $100 million deal for Cohen.

SEE ALSO: This Is What Makes A Sculpture Worth $100 Million

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Even Hedge Funds That Don't Exist Anymore Have To File With The SEC

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Today, hedge funds have to disclose their equity holdings in a Form 13F with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Here's the new 13F filing from SAC Capital, the namesake fund founded by legendary trader Steven A. Cohen. 

sac capital

That's right. It's blank. Reminder: They're now called Point72 Asset Management

In the summer of 2013, SAC was criminally indicted on insider trading charges. Federal prosecutors charged the fund "with criminal responsibility for insider trading offenses committed by numerous employees and made possible by institutional practices that encouraged the widespread solicitation and use of illegal inside information."

SAC pleaded guilty in November 2013 and agreed to pay a $1.8 billion fine

SAC also agreed to no longer manage outside capital and to operate as a "family office" instead. The fund then changed its name to Point72 Asset Management. 

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The Price On Steve Cohen's Unbelievable NYC Upper East Side Penthouse Has Been Chopped ... Again

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Steve Cohen Penthouse

Billionaire hedge-fund manager Steven A. Cohen still can't find a buyer for his NYC penthouse.

The duplex penthouse at One Beacon Court just had its price reduced to $82 million, Curbed reports.

The apartment has been on the market since 2013. It was originally listed for $115 million and then dropped to $98 million.

Cohen, who now runs Point72 Asset Management (formerly SAC Capital), purchased the apartment in 2005 for $24 million. He hired the late architect Charles Gwathmey to transform the space.

We've included the details of the 9,000-square-foot, four-bedroom, 5.5-bathroom apartment at One Beacon Court in the slides that follow. It's definitely impressive. Look and see for yourself.

The apartment features a stunning living room with 24-foot ceilings.



Here's another angle of the living room.



There's a chef’s kitchen with stainless-steel appliances.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Steve Cohen's Still Got It

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steve cohen king graphic

Steve Cohen's new family office, Point72 Asset Management, had a good year.

Matthew Goldstein at Dealbook reports that the firm, which now manages only Cohen's family money, made a gross profit of $2.5-3 billion in 2014 after launching in April with about $10 billion.

The $2.5-3 billion figure doesn't take into account operating costs, but it's pretty good for a guy who just got out from under the thumb of federal prosecutors eight months ago — particularly since hedge funds averaged a return under 4% last year. 

SEE ALSO: Saudi King Abdullah's Health Could Be A Game-Changer For Oil Policy

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Check out the $35 million mansion Steve Cohen is buying in Beverly Hills

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steve cohen

It seems that hedge fund titan Steve Cohen is adding to his extensive catalog of luxurious real estate, this time in Los Angeles.

According to Variety, rumor has it that Cohen is in the process of buying a $35 million mansion in Beverly Hills. 

The property used to belong to the actor Glenn Ford, but has since grown from 8,800 square feet and one bedroom to 12,664 square feet, with nine bedrooms and 13 bathrooms.

Other impressive purchases by Cohen include a $115 million Manhattan penthouse and a $62.5 million East Hamptons estate. Variety also lists another two mansions in New York City's West Village that Cohen bought for $23.4 million and $38.4 million, as well as his 35,000 square foot home in Greenwich, Connecticut.

His newest property is filled with flat-screen TVs, fireplaces, glass panel walls and has an outdoor saltwater swimming pool with its own special amenities, including color-changing lights and an underwater sound system.

The mansion spans more than 12,000 square feet and includes 9 bedrooms, 11 bathrooms and two half baths.



It's located right by the luxurious Beverly Hills Hotel.



The outdoors include a huge, tiled, saltwater swimming pool with a waterfall.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen is recruiting at colleges

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steve cohen anthony scaramucciBOSTON (Reuters) - Billionaire Steven A. Cohen, who oversees only his personal fortune after decades of running one of the world's biggest hedge funds, wants to recruit newly minted college graduates into his army of hundreds of investment professionals.

Less than 16 months after Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors pleaded guilty to insider trading charges, the successor firm, Point72 Asset Management, is shifting its focus from hiring seasoned investors to bringing in talent that it can shape in-house, a spokesman for the firm said.

The $10 billion firm, which employs 850 people, including 350 investment professionals, expects a new website, Point72.com to help recruiting.

At the same time, Cohen, 58, is not looking for outside clients, his spokesman Mark Herr said in an e-mail, noting that the website makes clear on every page that the firm is a family office. SAC was prohibited from managing outside capital and invests only Cohen's personal fortune.

Cohen's style of stock picking has always been labor intensive and the firm has long had been among the industry's largest, with staffing near current levels. But as employees leave, some to start their own hedge funds, Cohen is looking to replace them with industry newcomers.

"We've launched a campus recruiting program for undergraduates unique among hedge funds," Herr wrote.

Cohen traditionally hired analysts and portfolio managers with long resumes who had often worked at other hedge funds to deliver the 25 percent average annual return that attracted scores of big-name investors to SAC.

At Point72, Herr said, three-quarters of the firm's portfolio managers are now "homegrown" compared with seven years ago, when 80 percent joined from elsewhere. Last year Point72 hired 78 analysts.

Many of Cohen's long-time employees, including Sol Kumin and Gabe Plotkin, have left and are launching their own hedge funds, where they can collect management and incentive fees.

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The incredible toys of hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen

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Billionaire Toys - Steve Cohen

When you run one of the world's most successful hedge funds, you can probably afford some pretty amazing stuff. 

So it makes sense that Steve Cohen, with an estimated net worth of $10.3 billion, has a long list of incredible personal purchases.

Cohen started SAC Capital in 1992, and became a Wall Street legend after his firm saw returns of 70% for two consecutive years.

Cohen is known for his love of art, having spent lavish amounts on famous artwork by Pablo Picasso, Jasper Johns, Damien Hirst, Andy Warhol, Jeff Koons and more. He also enjoys buying up real estate, and owns several properties, each worth millions of dollars.

In 2013, an SEC probe into insider trading allegations at SAC Capital cost Cohen $616 million, and in the past couple years, the billionaire has started unloading some of his more expensive items. Cohen himself wasn't charged, and restructured SAC Capital into a new family office firm called Point72 Asset Management.

But the SEC settlement doesn't necessarily mark the end of Cohen's extravagant spending. Cohen's still in the game – Point72 Asset Management has been doing well since its creation and pulled in $2.5 -$3 billion for 2014.

Cohen once spent $100,000 for Food Network star Guy Fieri to spend the day with him.

Source: Page Six



He's dabbled in sports – Cohen bought a 4% stake in the New York Mets for $20 million.

Source: Reuters



He also made an unsuccessful bid for the LA Dodgers, during which he hired an architect for the Dodgers stadium.

Source: Business Insider, Bloomberg



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A hedge fund reportedly fired a trader because he was IM'ing another trader at Steve Cohen's firm

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Nicholas O'Grady

Last month, energy trader Nick O'Grady sued his former employer, hedge fund giant BlueCrest Capital Management, over an unpaid $1.28 million bonus.

In the complaint, he said he was fired "without cause" on June 4, 2014, after six months at Michael Platt's $14 billion firm. 

Bloomberg News is reporting that BlueCrest accused O'Grady of sharing information over instant message with a portfolio manager at Steve Cohen's Point72 Asset Management (formerly SAC Capital), according to unnamed sources.

O'Grady, 36, used to work at Sigma Capital Management, an SAC Capital subsidiary. A representative for Point72 Asset Management told Bloomberg News that there was "nothing improper about communicating about trading positions after they occurred." 

O'Grady was hired by BlueCrest in October 2013 amid turmoil at SAC. 

In summer 2013, SAC was criminally indicted on insider-trading charges. SAC pleaded guilty in November 2013 and agreed to pay a $1.8 billion fineSAC also agreed to no longer manage outside capital and to operate as a "family office" instead. The fund then changed its name to Point72 Asset Management. 

O'Grady was offered a base salary of $250,000 at BlueCrest, and his bonus would be 18% of his performance, Forbes reported, citing the complaint. O'Grady's attorney, Jonathan Sack, told Bloomberg that O'Grady made the fund $9.2 million during his time there. 

He is now a portfolio manager at Hudson Bay Capital, which told Bloomberg it was aware he was fired. It also said it was "satisfied" with his explanation for the termination. 

We reached out to O'Grady's attorney for further comment.

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Steve Cohen's fund is going quant

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steve cohen anthony scaramucci

Steve Cohen's Point72 Asset Management is moving into quantitative investing.

According to Bloomberg, the firm has 30 new hires dedicated to building investing models that use computer analysis of public data. A spokesman for Point72 Asset Management said the new project was called Aperio.

He said Aperio would work with all seven of the firm's equity units to provide a technological and data-driven edge.

"People who can read the signals most accurately and analyze them are the ones who will generate returns," the spokesman told Bloomberg.

Cohen managed astronomical returns way before data was widely used and available. The hedge fund giant actually got his start as a "tape reader," which relies on intuition and understanding the movement of stock ticker numbers, rather than math or algorithms.

President Doug Haynes is leading the project, but Point72 is still working to hire a manager to oversee Aperio's operations.

Another notable hedge fund, Ray Dalio's Bridgewater Associates, also recently announced a foray into computer-based investing. Dalio's hedge fund is building an artificial-intelligence team that will launch next month.

Cohen launched the hedge fund SAC Capital in 1992, but he closed the firm after he was charged for insider trading. He now runs Point72, a family office fund, out of Stamford, Connecticut.

Read the full story at Bloomberg >>

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A Russian oligarch's trust is suing his art dealer after he overpaid for a painting he anonymously bought from Steve Cohen

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dmitry rybolovlev

Last year, Steve Cohen made a great deal. He sold a nude painting by Amadeo Modigliani to an anonymous buyer for $93.5 million.

But now that buyer, Russian oligarch Dmitry Rybolovlev, is suing the art broker, Yves Bouvier, for fraud and money laundering because he unknowingly paid $22 million more than market value, Forbes reports.

Rybolovlev, who paid $118 million for the piece, reportedly found out about the price discrepancy from Steve Cohen's art advisor at a New Year's Eve party last year. The advisor had no idea that Rybolovlev  who was already having a pretty bad 2014 after a judge awarded his ex-wife $4.5 billion in a very public divorce battle was the anonymous buyer.

The Russian billionaire’s family trust then filed a suit in Monaco, and in February, he helped police set up an ambush to arrest Bouvier. (Bouvier thought he was meeting Rybolovlev to discuss purchasing a Mark Rothko painting.)

In another incident, Bouvier allegedly flipped a Leonardo Da Vinci piece, purchasing it for $75-80 million and reselling it to Rybolovlev for $127.5 million.

Stay tuned for more details as the scandal continues to unfold.

Get the full story from Forbes>>

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Bill Ackman has little to fear from the Herbalife stock-manipulation investigation, experts say — at least for now

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Bill Ackman

Hedge fund manager Bill Ackman has little to fear from a government investigation into Herbalife stock manipulation, legal experts say — at least based on what has been reported about the inquiry so far.

The investigation centers on Ackman's billion-dollar short of Herbalife with his hedge fund, Pershing Square. To be liable for stock manipulation, these experts say, prosecutors would have to prove not only that Herbalife's stock was illegally manipulated but also that Ackman and Pershing Square knew about the illegal acts and sanctioned them.

Looking back on how the US Attorney's Office in the Southern District of New York — the one Preet Bharara heads — has handled similar cases, legal experts say the path to Ackman, if there is one, will first go through outsourced consultants and lieutenants if it is to prove wrongdoing at Pershing Square. Bharara's prior investigations into other Wall Street power players, from now-jailed Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam to Steve Cohen, another hedge fund executive who has paid a fine but did not admit criminal culpability in an insider-trading case, took a similar route.

A grand jury has subpoenaed people and documents related to Ackman's investment in an effort to determine whether to pursue a case. One of the people who received a subpoena from the grand jury in New York late last month was a Connecticut-based hairstylist named Israel Alvarez, the Hartford Courant reported, citing an unnamed attorney. According to the Courant, Alvarez said he could not discuss the matter.

Investigators are following a standard playbook in the Herbalife investigation, experts say. They are starting with the "little fish" with the aim of working their way up to the "big fish" at the top.

But so far there is no indication that the big fish, Ackman and his colleagues at Pershing, knew what some of the people hired by Pershing's consultants were doing, much less colluding with them.

Ackman has loudly, repeatedly, vigorously proclaimed his innocence.

"Market manipulation is when someone intentionally makes false or misleading statements about a company for the purpose of driving down the stock or driving up the stock. I have made only truthful statements backed up by enormous research," Ackman told Bloomberg TV.

Ackman has also said he has had no contact with the FBI or anyone else involved in the examination of his bet against Herbalife, a multilevel marketer that sells nutritional shakes and supplements. Ackman believes the company operates as an illegal "pyramid scheme" that targets lower-income people. He's betting the stock goes to $0.

But what if Ackman is wrong about Herbalife? What if he made some statements that were inaccurate? What's the worst that could happen?  Legal experts told us the following.

At the crux of an investigation into market manipulation is not just whether someone did something that illegally affected a stock's value, but whether anyone else — like a hedge fund manager — colluded with him or her to make that happen.

Details about the investigation remain murky, and a representative in the US Attorney's Office in the Southern District of New York would not comment.

Without proof or irrefutable testimony, it will be difficult to move forward with a market-manipulation case, experts say. However, looking back at Bharara's successful prosecution of Galleon Group founder Raj Rajaratnam, legal experts and sources see parallels between the insider-trading case and a market-manipulation investigation. 

The worst-case scenario for Ackman and Pershing is much more than a headache, though Ackman is most likely prepared for this.

The attorneys of the Southern District of New York successfully pursued an insider-trading case against Rajaratnam and, separately, SAC Capital traders. A source said Bharara had displayed a tendency to work cases "up," offering less-senior employees deals in exchange for testimony. 

Raj RajaratnamAckman, for his part, recently hired a former US attorney who worked securities cases in New York. He already has half a dozen lawyers working at Pershing Square.

"It's not easy to make a market-manipulation case," said one lawyer who asked to remain anonymous and had previously battled Bharara in court. "You're inevitably going to have to have a witness." 

Absent of that witness, there is little reason to expect that Ackman or Pershing even has anything to sweat. 

In previous interviews, Ackman has said no current or former Pershing Square employee had been subpoenaed in relation to any ongoing investigation. It suggests that, if any government arm is looking into trades, an investigation is only in the early innings and unlikely to yield anything anytime soon, one legal source said.

Prosecutors combing through evidence chasing a market-manipulation case have their work cut out with them — particularly when it comes to short-sellers.

John Coffee, a professor at Columbia Law School, notes that while pump-and-dump schemes are more easily identified, prosecutors would have to prove Ackman (and not just a third party or employee) willfully aimed to artificially drive the price of Herbalife shares down. 

"There has to be some evidence he tried to push the stock beneath what he thought it was worth," Coffee said. 

Given that Ackman has repeatedly and publicly said Herbalife stock is headed to $0, that could prove difficult.

If a grand jury investigation does proceed, it will have to bring forth a charge against someone, anyone — especially if the inquiry really is aimed at Ackman. 

Steve Cohen SAC CapitalIf the investigation does not lead to criminal charges, it could still head to civil court after being handed off to the Securities and Exchange Commission. While the US Attorney's Office failed to put Steve Cohen behind bars, it did manage to put a serious dent in his abstract art budget, when the SEC later slapped him for a fine of about $1.8 billion.

One legal source privately chided the SEC for a perceived unwillingness to take a case that appeared to be anything less than "a slam dunk," but Coffee points out that the burden of proof is different when prosecuting a civil case. 

"A civil case would be easier [to prove] than a criminal case," Coffee said.

The lawyer who spoke with Business Insider on background said that beginning the probe with a hairdresser signaled that the investigation was not a "top-down case" and instead aimed to flip witnesses against higher-value targets. 

Business Insider reached out to Alvarez, the hairdresser, but he did not respond to requests for comment. 

"This is the way Preet operates, but it's also the way a lot of prosecutors operate," the source said. 

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Hedge funder Steve Cohen is starting a venture capital fund

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Billionaire Toys - Steve Cohen

Legendary hedge fund manager Steven Cohen is starting a venture capital fund. 

According to a report from Bloomberg News, Cohen's Point72 Asset Management has started a unit called Honeycomb Ventures that will "mainly invest in growth equity opportunities."

Bloomberg's Saijel Kishan reports:

Honeycomb will invest in global media, technology and telecommunication companies, including those that focus on cloud computing, payments and security technology and e-commerce, according to Point72 spokesman Mark Herr ...

Honeycomb is leading a second round of financing for a wine app called Delectable, which instantly recognizes any wine from a photo and allows users to get opinions, see what friends are drinking, buy wine and keep track of their favorite drinks, according to [a] Point72 memo.

Point72 is what Cohen renamed SAC Capital, his previous hedge fund, after SAC plead guilty to securities fraud and paid more than $1 billion to regulators as part of its settlement.

Point72 now operates only as a family office and manages the wealth of Cohen and its employees.

Read Kishan's full report at Bloomberg here » 

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All of the sudden, Steve Cohen's super-secretive hedge fund is doing a bunch of publicity

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SAC Capital, Point72 Asset Managment, Cohen's trading floor, traders

Notoriously press-shy fund manager Steve Cohen appears to be trying to rebrand his super-secretive hedge fund after a couple of difficult years.

In a surprising move, Cohen's Point72 Asset Management (formerly SAC Capital) allowed reporters in its Stamford, Connecticut offices on Wednesday. 

CNBC's Kate Kelly was even able to do two live hits from the trading floor too.

Unsurprisingly, Cohen, 58, didn't appear on camera or do an interview. He was at his desk somewhere off in the background making trades, according to Kelly.

Now here's the thing, according to Bloomberg News, Point72 isn't doing all of this publicity to raise outside capital. 

This media push is happening because Point72 wants to leave the past behind and move forward with a cleaner image that enables it to hire top talent. That said, Bloomberg News did notice that some of the traders are still wearing their SAC embossed fleece vests.

In the summer of 2013, SAC was criminally indicted on insider trading charges. Federal prosecutors charged the fund "with criminal responsibility for insider trading offenses committed by numerous employees and made possible by institutional practices that encouraged the widespread solicitation and use of illegal inside information." In November 2013, SAC pleaded guilty and agreed to pay a $1.8 billion settlement

As a result, SAC also agreed to no longer manage outside capital. The fund changed its name to Point72 Asset Management and it currently operates as a "family office" hedge fund that manages Cohen's wealth and money of its employees, which comes to about $11 billion in assets under management right now.

There have been a number of changes at the firm since it had closed its doors to outside investors and renamed itself following an insider trading guilty plea about 19 months ago. 

Most notably, some of the firm's executives have left and it's now under a new management team working alongside Cohen. One of the key hires has been former McKinsey & Co. director, Doug Haynes, who originally joined the fund has the head of human capital and was responsible for implementing a surveillance program. Haynes is now the fund's president.

At the same time, the firm has increased its headcount by about 100. This year, Point72 was recruiting on college campuses and there are more than two dozen job openings being advertised on the fund's recently launched website

Point72 has also made changes aimed at making the firm a better work environment. Some of those tweaks include an updated gym and as well as lactation room and nap room.  

Cohen rose to prominence in the first place for his consistent, grand slam returns. It looks like he's still posting good numbers. Point72 was up more than 13% last year, beating the S&P 500, according to Kate Kelly's report. For comparison, the average hedge fund returned just above 3% in 2014.   

So far this year, the fund is up about 8.5% through the first week of May, according to Kelly.

SAC Capital 

SAC Capital

 

 

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Turns out hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen DID have a large pig living in his Connecticut mansion

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Tattooed Pigs by Wim Delvoye

A couple of years ago, we reported a rumor based on a source who said billionaire hedge fund manager Steven Cohen had a very large pig living in his 35,000-square-foot Connecticut mansion.

Page Six is now reporting that Cohen did in fact have a large domesticated swine named Romeo living in his home.

The Cohens reportedly took in Romeo as a piglet. The pig even had his own room in the mansion.

Romeo apparently grew too big, and they had to find him a new home. According to the New York Post, he has been sent to live on a vegan farm in Florida (phew!).

Our source said the pig had a tattoo on his face and that he appeared to be a walking piece of art. That's not entirely clear though.

Cohen is a huge art collector. His expansive collection includes pieces by Monet, Picasso, Jasper Johns, Jeff Koons, Damien Hirst, Willem de Kooning, Francis Bacon, and Andy Warhol, according to a 2010 Vanity Fair profile. He recently purchased Alberto Giacometti's 1947 masterpiece "Man Pointing" for $141.3 million at Christie's.

Cohen is the founder of SAC Capital, which is now called Point72 Asset Management after SAC pleaded guilty to insider-trading charges in November 2013 and agreed to pay a $1.8 billion settlement. Point72 Asset Management operates as a "family office" hedge fund that manages Cohen's wealth and money of its employees, which comes to about $11 billion in assets.

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Watch hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen eat chorizo on Guy Fieri's Food Network show

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Cohen

Notoriously private and press-shy hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen was spotted on a recent episode of Guy Fieri's Food Network show "Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives."

In the episode, Fieri heads to Los Angeles to grill up homemade chorizo in a Yucatan-style restaurant called Chichén Itzá.

Fieri, who has eaten Super-Duper Weenie hot dogs at Cohen's house in Connecticut before, compared the chorizo to a "Yucatan hot dog" with a "great meat to fat ratio."

Cohen seemed to enjoy it too.

"Just intense flavor," Cohen said. "Something different like I've never had before." 

Cohen, 58, is the founder of Stamford, Connecticut-based Point72 Asset Management, an $11 billion "family office" hedge fund formerly known as SAC Capital.

(Cohen can be spotted at 2:15 and 3:54) [via Dealbreaker]

Cohen

Cohens

chorizo

chorizo  chorizo

Fieri

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Steve Cohen's baller NYC penthouse that he can't sell just went back on the market for $79 million

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Steve Cohen Penthouse

Billionaire hedge-fund manager Steven A. Cohen still can't find a buyer for his NYC penthouse.

The duplex penthouse at One Beacon Court has just been relisted for $79 million after briefly being taken off the market, New York Daily News reports.

The apartment has been on the market since 2013. It was originally listed for $115 million, then dropped to $98 million, then reduced to $82 million before being delisted briefly.

Cohen, who now runs Point72 Asset Management (formerly SAC Capital), purchased the apartment in 2005 for $24 million. He hired the late architect Charles Gwathmey to transform the space.

We've included the details of the 9,000-square-foot, four-bedroom, 5.5-bathroom apartment at One Beacon Court in the slides that follow. It's definitely impressive. Look and see for yourself.

The apartment features a stunning living room with 24-foot ceilings.



Here's another angle of the living room.



There's a chef’s kitchen with stainless-steel appliances.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The 15 most expensive houses for sale in America

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935 Hillsboro Mile Hillsboro Beach, FLWhen it comes to the most expensive homes in the US, there are only a handful of cities in the game. And behind each lavish listing is a rich and famous homeowner like Demi Moore, Tommy Hilfiger, or Steve Cohen. 

Using data from Zillow and StreetEasy, part of Zillow Group, the largest real estate network on the web, we've narrowed in on America's 15 most expensive listings. As expected, the third most expensive real estate market in the world, New York City, makes a strong showing, but not strong enough to scoop the top spot — which is reserved for an idyllic, 1930s estate in the Hamptons. 

Keep scrolling to see the gorgeous homes and find out who's selling them. 

SEE ALSO: 27 of the coolest new buildings on the planet

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15. 145-146 Central Park West #PH26C, New York, New York

Price: $75 million

The penthouse of the San Remo, one of Manhattan's most celebrity-filled buildings, sits atop one of the building's distinctive twin towers. The listing notes that Penthouse 26c is a triplex, rising high over Central Park's green expanses. Owner Demi Moore listed the property earlier this year.

See the listing for more photos and information



14. 10 West Street PH, New York, New York

Price: $75 million

At the height of The Ritz-Carlton Battery Park, this duplex penthouse at 10 West Street looks down on the neighboring Financial District. The listing is actually for two penthouses (one at 7,500 square feet and one at 3,600 square feet) being sold as one. According to the listing they can be "seamlessly" combined.

See the listing for more photos and information



13. 1 Central Park South #1809, New York, New York

Price: $75 million

The Dome Penthouse at The Plaza Hotel is rarely offered for sale. The duplex has fantastic views of Central Park and 24-hour "luxury white glove" service (read: valet, maid, and food service) courtesy of the hotel. Recently featured in the book "Living in Style New York," fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger re-listed the property in May after it failed to sell a year ago.

See the listing for more photos and information



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Here are some incredible toys hedge fund boss Steve Cohen has bought with his billions

It looks as if Chris Christie's got himself another billionaire

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Chris Christie

Steve Cohen, the billionaire hedge fund manager and founder of Point72 Asset Management, has donated $1 million to the "super PAC" supporting New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), according to government filings.

His wife, Alexandra, who runs the Cohen family charitable organization, has also donated $1 million to the group, America Leads.

The donations come as good news for Christie, who announced his campaign last month to the sound of crickets from deep-pocketed Wall Street donors.

Billionaires who had supported Christie financially in the past — like Daniel Loeb, founder of Third Point Partners, and Paul Singer, founder of Elliott Management — have yet to declare their support.

And then there are those who have defected from Christie's camp, like New York Jets owner Woody Johnson. He has declared his support for Jeb Bush, and records show he donated to the Right to Rise super PAC supporting Bush.

There are a few Christie loyalists in billionaire land, though, like Home Depot founder Ken Langone.

"The guy every day confirms in my mind why I think he'd make a great president," Langone said on "Wall Street Week"last month. "He tells it like it is. Three weeks ago he talked about entitlements ... the third rail of politics. Now Jeb Bush is talking about entitlements."

Langone has given $100,000 to the Christie-supporting super PAC so far, records show.

The only other donation to America Leads comparable to the Cohens' was from Nevada's Winecup-Gamble Ranch Inc. So far, the super PAC has raised $11 million, according to the group's filings. That's chump change compared to the more than $100 million that the super PAC supporting Bush has raised.

Christie is currently fighting for one of the last two spots in next week's primetime Republican primary debate, which will feature the top 10 candidates in an average of national polling.

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