Each business day HedgeCo.Net keeps you informed with the top hedge fund industry news, opinion and insight from around the globe. From the latest hedge fund launches, to the impact of regulation, competition, and investor activism - we track the topics and people that make a difference to you.
Courthouse News Service – The founder and general partner of a $5 billion hedge fund used the company’s CFO as a scapegoat when investors found out he used their money to buy a private Gulfstream jet, the former CFO claims in Federal Court. Perry Gruss claims that Daniel Zwirn, of D.B. Zwirn and Co., told him he had to leave the company so Zwirn could remain ”pearly white” and ”bullet proof.”
Zwirn and Co. once managed more than $5 billion in assets. Gruss claims its founder began to live the life of an ”investment magnate,” including the private jet, ”scores of professional and personal assistants,” and a vacation home on the East End of Long Island.
New York Daily News – An enthusiastic math whiz plus hands-on exhibits multiplied by deep-pocketed investors equals a math museum.
This formula may one day lead to every school kid’s nightmare – a museum dedicated to nothing but mathematics – thanks to a Long Island man who quit his hedge fund job to dedicate himself to the project.
"Math is an ongoing, living and developing thing that is beautiful and can be a lot of fun," said Glen Whitney, 40, of Stony Brook.
Newsday – Maybe you heard the one about the phony multibillion-dollar Long Island hedge fund that was actually performing a public service.
No? Well, apparently neither did four confidence men, according to federal prosecutors.
The four were convicted yesterday in federal court in Central Islip after walking into a federal sting operation in which they thought they were about to collect $3 billion from a hedge fund. The money was to be used to build what they said was a pipeline through the Russian Republic of Buryatia, prosecutors said.
The unnamed fund was a creation of FBI agents and the Postal Inspection Service, Assistant U.S. Attorney James Miskiewicz said during the seven-day trial.