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Dick Bove Is Joining Rafferty Capital Markets After Rochdale's Bad Apple Trade

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Dick Bove

Dick Bove is leaving Rochdale Securities to join Rafferty Capital Markets in Garden City, New York, Bloomberg News reports

The 71-year-old bank analyst will lead Rafferty's research on financial services companies, the report said.  

He's not the only Rochdale employee to join Rafferty.

Rochdale's co-heads of trading, Kristen Talgo and Hal Tunick, had already left Rochdale to join Rafferty. 

Back in November, it was revealed that a Rochdale trader, identified as David Miller, made unauthorized stock purchases of $1 billion in Apple shares on October 25. 

Earlier this month, Miller was arrested and charged with wire fraud.

According to the complaint against Miller, Rochdale had 1.6 million shares in Apple.  It got out of the position and lost around $5 million.  

Since that bad trade, the 37-year-old Stamford-based brokerage firm has been seeking a lifeline to stay afloat. 

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Chicago Wealth Manager Dies After Falling Onto Glass Coffee Table

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Brian Baker

This is terrible...

Brian C. Baker, the founder of Chicago-based wealth-management and investment firm Vestor Capital, died after falling onto a glass coffee table in his home, Bloomberg News reports.  He was 58. 

"We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of our founding partner, business associate and dear friend Brian C. Baker," Vestor Capital said on its site. 

The Chicago Tribune reported that he died in the early morning on December 16 after accidentally falling on a glass coffee table at his Wilmette home sustaining multiple sharp force wounds to the back.

According to his company bio, Baker founded Vestor Capital in 1984.  Before that, he was a vice president in acquisitions with Balcor/American Express.  

He graduated with a bachelor's degree in business administration, accounting and finance, from Georgetown University. He earned his J.D. from Notre Dame. 

He is survived by his wife Linda Baker nee Wolf and children Brian, Jr., Matthew, Carolyn and Katherine Baker, according to a funeral notice.

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Banks Spend Way More On Info Tech Than Any Other Business

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"Measured as a percentage of revenues, financial services firms spend more on IT than any other industry," writes Deutsche Bank's Heike Mai.

Here's a look:

it banks

"The reasons for a higher use of IT in the banking industry are manifold," writes Mai.  "Financial service firms have to fulfil exacting regulatory requirements which translate into IT costs that do not contribute to the firms’ earnings. Furthermore, banks rely heavily on IT in their back offices as well as their distribution channels."

The banks don't break out exact IT expense figures, but some of the top consultancies have offered estimates.  And the numbers are huge:

it banks

SEE ALSO: Wall Street's Biggest Geniuses Reveal Their Favorite Charts Of 2012 >

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Art Cashin's Wall Street Version Of 'Twas The Night Before Christmas'

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The legendary Art Cashin, UBS's director of floor operations at the NYSE and author of the must-read newsletter Cashin's Comments, wrote a poem to get the Street in the Christmas spirit.

Here's Cashin:  

'Tis four days before Christmas

and at each brokerage house

The only thing stirring 

was the click of a mouse

 

Down on the Exchange

the tape inches along 

Brokers bargained and traded

as they hummed an old song

 

The Fed struggled and twisted

but few jobs did appear

They'll keep pushing that button

we'll have QE all year

 

In sports it was Giants

from East Coast and West

Who stunned fans and detractors

to prove they were best

 

The Mayans once told us 

this would be the last year

But they miscalculated 

for it seems we're still here

 

Lady Gaga bulked up

Honey Boo Boo appeared

Our public taste levels 

may be worse than we feared

 

A cruise ship keeled over

in seas that were mild

There was also some good news

Princess Kate is with child

 

At the movie box office

Hunger Games was a smash

Lindsey can't seem to help it

she's still doing things rash

 

There was flooding and riots

they brought little to cheer

But it's Christmastime, Alice

and Santa is near

 

So stop looking backwards

have a cup of good cheer

And kiss you aloved one

raise your hopes for next year

 

And amidst all the trading 

Christmas themes we will heed

And share our good fortune 

with families in need

 

And Monday they'll pause 

as we wait on the bell

To sing a tradition

a song for old "Nell"

 

Don't let this year''s problems

impede Christmas Cheer

Resolve to be happy

throughout the New Year

 

And resist ye Grinch feelings

let joy never stop

Put the bad a the bottom 

keep the good on the top

 

So count up your blessings 

along with your worth

You're still living here 

in the best place on earth

 

And think ye of wonders

the light children's eyes

And hope Santa will bring you

that Christmas surprise

 

So play ye a carol

by Mario Lanza

Unless you are waiting 

to celebrate Kwanzaa

 

Hanukkah's just ended

and Ramadan's gone

Different folks, different holidays

yet each spirit lives on

 

Whatever your feast is

we hope you all still

Find yourself just surrounded

by folks of goodwill Monday, as the bell rings hart to your heart's call

And as Santa would shout Merry

Christmas to All! 

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Is Goldman Sachs' New Tower Falling Apart?

A Charming 2012 Christmas Poem, For Wall Streeters, By Wall Streeters

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bad santa

The Street Before Christmas 2012

by Eddie Braverman

‘Twas the Street Before Christmas Two Thousand and Twelve
And everyone on Wall Street was hustling like elves

We’ve got a Mayan apocalypse we have to deal with
And if that doesn’t pan out there’s a big fiscal cliff!

It’s been a strange year, these twelve months gone past
A year marked by scandals and fortunes amassed
Let’s take a random walk down Memory Lane
Recounting the moments, both losses and gains.

We’ll start with the big stuff; the moments of pith
Like the New York Times Op-Ed by Goldman’s Greg Smith
He resigned citing greed running through the whole clan
I guess he stayed there twelve years for the great dental plan.

And speaking of Goldman, I’ll bet Lloyd was hangdog
At the retirement party for Lucas van Praag
The Vampire Squid will never be the same
Without LvP’s gift for shifting the blame.Morgan Stanley proved that we have much to learn
About IPO pricing and money to burn
If you want Morgan Stanley to give you the goodies
You better start with Asperger’s and a wardrobe of hoodies

What about Citi? That smelly dumpster fire.
They got beat on Smith Barney and forced Vik to retire
It’s a mystery to me how those guys avoid jail
We should just break them up; you can ask Sandy Weill

Who should we hit next? Whose epic fail?
How ‘bout Jamie Dimon and his big London Whale!
Iksil bought SWAPs with reckless abandon
When he was done JP Morgan was barely left standin’.

And while we’re discussing losses a-mounting
Who the hell was doing MF Global’s accounting?
“Where’s all our money?” the customers whined
Congratulations, you fools, you all got Corzined!

For the rest of the poem, head to Wall Street Oasis>

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The Majorly Bullish Wall Street Analyst Who Is Also A Distributor Drops Her Coverage Of Herbalife (HLF)

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Interesting...

B Riley Caris analyst Linda Bolton Weiser, who is an Herbalife distributor and also covers the company for her firm, dropped coverage on Monday of the multi-level marketing company that sells weight loss and nutritional supplements.  

She didn't drop it because Bill Ackman blew her away with his short thesis either. 

The Wall Street Journal's Steven Russolillo reports:

B Riley analyst Linda Weiser — who had a $101 price target on the stock — told clients that she is dropping coverage of Herbalife. The decision, however, is not because her bullish thesis on the company’s fundamentals have changed.

“Herbalife’s share price has been impacted significantly by market speculation related to high-profile short sellers,” she says, even as the company has reported better-than-expected sales, earnings and cash flow over the last few quarters.

“We believe the business fundamentals and near-term financial performance of the company will not be the key drivers behind share price performance for the foreseeable future,” Weiser says.

It's interesting that Weiser is dropping her coverage, especially since she was so bullish on the company.  What's more is the reason given for dropping her coverage doesn't seem to ring true. 

Weiser was present at Bill Ackman's brutal three-hour long 342-slide short thesis on Herbalife at a special Sohn Conference event in Midtown Manhattan last week where he called the company a "pyramid scheme."

During the Q&A session, Weiser revealed that she was an analyst who covered the stock and that she was also an Herbalife distributor.

Ackman asked Weiser how long she had been a distributor and she responded that she had only been following the stock since a "little while ago." 

She didn't tell Ackman how long she had been a distributor, but only that she buys Herbalife for her "own personal use." Of course, buying Herbalife products for "own personal use" is exactly what Ackman suggests most of the company's distributors do.

Weiser also told Bloomberg News that being a distributor helps her get access to company information, Duane D. Stanford reported.

She didn't seem impressed with Ackman's presentation telling Bloomberg News that it was "light." 

Shares of Herbalife have been pummeled since Ackman confirmed that he is short. The stock fell $1.21, or 4.44%, yesterday to close at $26.06 a share.

Herbalife responded to Ackman's thesis saying that he used "outdated" and "inaccurate" information.  We called Herbalife last week to specify what outdated and inaccurate information was used, but have not received a response.

The company said it will host an analyst day in January to rebut Ackman's claims.

SEE ALSO: We Have Never Seen Anything Like Bill Ackman's Dizzying Takedown Of Herbalife >

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TED TALK: Algorithms Are Controlling Your World

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In an insightful TED Talk, by tech entrepreneur Kevin Slavin on how algorithms have reached across industries (from finance to Hollywood) and into every day life (h/t dailymotion).

Problem is, we may be building whole worlds we don't really understand, and can't control.

One of our favorite quote:

Algorithmic trading evolved because institutional traders had the same problems the U.S. Air force had, which is that they're moving these huge positions... and they're moving a million shares of something through the market, and if you do that all at once it's like playing poker and going all in, you tip your hand. So they have to find a way... to break up that big thing into a million little transactions, and the magic and the horror of that is that the same math you use to break up the big thing into a little things can be used to find a million little things and sew them back together and find out what's actually happening in the market. So if you need to picture what's happening in the stock market now... is a bunch of algorithms that are programmed to hide and and bunch of algorithms programmed to go find them and act. And all of that's great... and that's 70% of the operating system formerly known as your pension... what could go wrong? What could go wrong is that a year ago 9% of the entire market just disappears in 5 minute, they call it the Flash Crash of 245...and nobody to this day can agree as to what happened, because nobody ordered it, nobody asked for it, no one could control what happened. All they had was a monitor in front of them that had the numbers in front of it, and a button that said STOP... We're writing things that are illegible, we're rendering things illegible.


TED Talk: Kevin Slavin: How algorithms shape our...by TED

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Forget The 'Vampire Squid' — Goldman Sachs Made An Incredible Comeback In 2012

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Goldman Alley

Almost everyone loves to hate on Goldman Sachs, a.k.a the "Vampire Squid".

Goldman's image and that of its CEO, Lloyd Blankfein, have been bruised by the criticism they have received over the bank's role in the financial crisis as well as the hefty compensation packages.

It's been a rough last three years.

However, we've noticed that Goldman and Blankfein have made quite a comeback in the last year in terms of boosting their public image.  

Click to see Goldman's best moments >

While other big banks that have seen the whale trade, the LIBOR and money laundering scandals, Goldman has avoided all of that making them look much better by comparison.

At one point back in May, following the London Whale trading loss, JPMorgan's brand perception dipped making it the most negatively viewed bank on Wall Street -- a spot normally held by Goldman, according to YouGov BrandIndex.  

Of course, we'll get a more accurate read in January on how Goldman's brand perception did in 2012 when YouGov releases that data. 

It appears to us, though, that Goldman has had several bright spots in 2012.  

Of course, that's not to say the bank isn't dealing with legal issues.  It still is.  And the bank has only delivered an 8.8% return on common shareholder equity in the first three quarters of 2012 compared to 19.2% in the same period in 2009, according to Bloomberg News. 

All that aside, the bank is still making steps in the right direction. 

It's been an awful year for the financial industry in terms of scandals.

We've had the London Whale, the LIBOR scandal, insider trading and money laundering. 

Goldman has avoided all this and looks much better by comparison.  



A lot of other big banks on the Street had to pay big fines and settlements this year. Not Goldman.

Reuters' Ben Walsh, formerly a writer for Clusterstock, put together a massive rundown of investigations, lawsuits and fines the big banks faced this year.    

Scanning this list, it's clear that Goldman wasn't really singled out for being the worst on the Street.

Goldman is facing an ongoing FHFA fraud case and a class action lawsuit over MBS going forward, the list shows.  

We also have to point out that Goldman was also ordered to pay $1.5 million civil penalty by the CFTC earlier this month for failing to supervise a trader who hid a $8.3 billion position in 2007.



In 2012, Goldman hired a new PR chief with a major Washington, D.C. pedigree.

On March 13, Goldman said it had hired Jake Siewert, a former Tim Geithner aide and Clinton administration press secretary, as its new PR chief. 

He's been tasked with turning around Goldman's image. 

Source: DealBook



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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The Public Is Enforcing Wall Street's Sentence

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Madoff Guilty

There are times when a confluence of events can bring clarity to seemingly complicated issues.

I recently read an article in the leading business daily that somewhat smugly reported on the lack of indictments of business leaders as a result of the financial crisis of ’08.

Within days, there was the announcement of eleven thousand Citi bank employees to be fired. In that same week, there was a day when the trading volume on the Big Board was about half of the normal billion shares or so.

Although I’m well-educated and have had a lengthy career in finance, I tend to break down complex issues to basic facts. I’m a simple guy despite my occasional use of the word confluence.

Contrary to my favorite paper's claims, the jury has spoken and the verdict is in. Wall Street is guilty. The public is now enforcing the sentence. The masters of the universe are hereby remanded to years of decreasing relevance.

The crime was bad business.

The system does work, capitalism works. There are undeniable truths in this world. Don’t mess with Mother Nature, getting old sucks and markets balance out.

Consumers being far smarter than Wall Street takes them for have decided to shop elsewhere. When we are sold rusty nails from the hardware store or buy skunky beer at the deli, we don’t come back.

Like the auto industry or the steel industry before it, the financial world has become lazy and greedy. They became so insulated that they lost track of the basic concepts of commerce.

Selling something that is modeled to decrease in value is a bad thing, no matter how “sophisticated” the purchaser is.

Don’t take me for a righteous Wall Street condemner. As a former floor trader there is no bigger capitalist pig than I, but a line has been crossed. It’s just not wise to mess with people’s money.

I’m sure the chattering classes and the pedestal thumpers will never be satisfied. I see it differently. I see it as poetry or better still, a fable.

Wall Street was the goose that laid the golden eggs. This marvelous market place financed the schools you went to and the bridge you drive over. Businesses grew, and our country’s growth was financed by the innovation and drive of Wall Street professionals.

Unfortunately, the goose wasn’t just cooked. It was leveraged to a gaggle, roasted on a spit and the pieces sold to the masses.

The capitalist system that enabled Wall Street to rise to such power is now leading the charge toward its undoing.

I know it’s always fun to see a man in an expensive suit led away in handcuffs, and it’s disappointing for some to have not seen that show, but justice is being handed out every day.

The cleansing has begun. Our capitalist system will wash away the bad actors using the harsh detergent known as supply and demand, leaving a cleaner more efficient system.

It won’t be long until we have a market based on value and rational pricing, where long-term goals and fundamentals are openly discussed without fear of derision. It’s coming, sooner than you may think.

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What Wall Streeters Look Like When They're Not Wearing Their Uniforms

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ray dalio

When Wall Street's masters of the universe dress down, you can hardly recognize them. 

Let's just say some of the biggest names on the Street don't make the best fashion choices either — ill-fitting jeans, white sneakers, a tank-top undershirt, and one even rocked cut-off jean shorts in his younger days. 

In other words, given how the Masters Of The Universe dress when they're not dressing up, it's a really good thing that they have to wear their uniform. Use these as examples of what not to wear at your firm's next casual Friday. 

Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein was photographed in baggy blue jeans, an oversized gray t-shirt and work boots doing Hurricane Sandy relief in the Rockaways. He looks like a completely different person.



Bill Ackman rocked a light-washed denim and some white sneakers when the Pershing Square team built a playground in Newark.



Jamie Dimon wore these dark washed jeans, red golf shirt and sneakers when the U.S. women's rowing team stopped by the bank. Also, is that a tank top undershirt he's wearing?



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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A NYC Money Manager Is Selling His Private Island Estate In Connecticut For $12.9 Million

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Tavern Island Estate Zesiger

Money manager Barrie Zesiger is selling his private island estate in Norwalk, Connecticut for $12.9 million — a home he and his wife have shared for 26 years (h/t WSJ).

The house basically sounds like the life. Zesiger and his wife have a money managing firm in Manhattan, but from Thursday to Monday they sail from their island to the city and then take a train to work.

Another huge plus: Since the property is so close to the mainland, its utilities are all underwater and the house went virtually unscathed during Super Storm Sandy. A part of their floating dock ended up in the front yard, but the Zesiger's considering building a helipad on the island, so that may not be an issue for the next owner anyway.

The 3.5 acre estate boasts a 6 bedroom 4 bathroom (with 3 half bathrooms) main house. There's also a 2 bedroom caretaker's cottage, 1 bed room boathouse, a tea house, and an in-ground pool. Doug Werner of Sotheby's International Realty has the listing.







See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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The Best Thing About Having A Big Mouth On Wall Street

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Megaphone

On Wall Street, investors and money managers usually like to keep the things they do pretty quiet. Tons of super successful people like Tom Steyer, Louis Bacon, and Bruce Kovner eschew the spotlight almost entirely.

But as the NYT points out, rock star investors that disclose exactly what they're doing (even when they don't have to) are on to something. Think about what happened last month when Bill Ackman announced his massive Herbalife short — the Street started attacking the stock with a vengeance.

That alone convinced an analyst at B. Riley & Company who was once bullish on the stock to reverse course citing pressure of copy-cat short sellers.

From the NYT:

There is a culture of worship around Mr. Ackman and a small circle of hedge fund deities like Mr. Einhorn, John A. Paulson of Paulson & Company and even Steven A. Cohen at a somewhat tarnished SAC Capital Advisors. When one of them says or does something, it quickly reverberates in the market.

We have seen this before with Warren E. Buffett, when a new investment by him pushes the stock of the company up instantly. But more often these days, it is the bets of hedge fund managers that a stock will go down that move share prices.

You can tick off the list: Mr. Einhorn and St. Joe Company; Steve Eisman and the profit-making education sector; Carson Block of the investment firm Muddy Waters Research and Olam International...

We'd add Jim Chanos to that list too. These are investors that can cause a stock to go into panic mode when they announce a short position. The NYT suggests that maybe it's time for the SEC to require investors to disclose short positions like they do long ones (quarterly, in 10K filings). That way the market won't be caught by surprise.

But isn't surprise half the fun?

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Wall Street Wins Big In Fiscal Cliff Negotiations

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cigar banker

For all the haranguing about what the fiscal cliff could do to Wall Street's wealthy, now that the deal's been done, it actually looks like things didn't work out so badly for them.

Think about the issues that really matter to the financial world — capital gains (especially carried interest) tax, income tax, and estate tax rates. In all these cases, the Democrats negotiated down from the Street's worst case scenario, or in carried interest's case, didn't touch the current policy at all.

Take the tax on dividends. The top rate increased to 20%, not the 39.6% some Democrats wanted. This is good news for investors as well as bankers getting their bonuses paid out in stock (as they have been more and more since the financial crisis).

Not everyone will remember this, but back in 1986, Ronald Reagan himself raised the dividend tax rate to the same rate as regular income tax in his massive tax overhaul. They weren't lowered again until George Bush Sr. took office.

Under the capital gains umbrella falls another Wall Street darling, especially for hedge funds and private equity firms — the carried interest tax rate. It's the percentage of an investment fund's profits that a general partner is allowed to take home after the fund has reached a certain "hurdle" rate of return (the 20 of the infamous "2 and 20" investment firm payment structure), and it was taxed at 15%.

Late last year Carlyle Group's David Rubenstein said he wouldn't be surprised if the rate, which some consider a "loop-hole" went up. In fact, some money managers, like David Tepper, seemed okay with getting rid of it all-together. Even Mitt Romney admitted that carried interest should be considered when he was running for President.

However, Democrats didn't try to tinker with this item beyond the 5% capital gains dividend rate increase.

Then there's ordinary income tax. The Bush tax cuts are over for anyone making over $400,000 (and couples making $450,000), so they'll be paying $39.6% instead of 35%, but the Democrats lost on their initial attempt to get that rate raised for individuals making $200,000.

Lastly, there's estate tax, an issue close to the heart of anyone passing on a small business (like, say an investment firm). The top rate went up to 40% (from 35%), increasing revenue from this policy by $19 billion, but Democrats also wanted to kill the exemption for estates under $5 million during these negations.

That could've happened easily too, had a 2010 measure setting the exemption at $5 million been allowed to expire on January 1. Instead the exemption was kept in place for estate and gift purposes.

So see, everything going to be okay... right?

 

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A Man Will Attempt To Break The World Record For Fastest Pizza At A Financial District Restaurant Next Month

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If you're in the Financial District, you might want to check out this pizza making battle next month at Harry's Italian Pizza — we know Wall Street loves a challenge.

The NY Post reports that Westchester pizza maker Bruno DiFabio, is going to try to break the 28 second world record for making a pie. He won an award for the best pizza at an international culinary competition in Paris in November, but the top spot for speed has consistently eluded him.

Of course, the final product can't have any holes in it or anything like that.

From the NY Post:

He (DiFabio) hopes to beat his “arch rival and nemesis” Brian Edler, an owner of four Domino’s franchises in Ohio who set the current record in 2004 and made history in 2010 by churning out 206 pizzas in an hour — the only speed mark that Guinness recognizes.

DiFabio’s edge is his “New York hand-slap,” a quick, back-and-forth flipping of dough, which gives him a read on its elasticity.

Check out a video of DiFabio below (via the NY Post):

 

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Almost All Of The Wall Street Journal's 'Biggest Losers Of 2012' Are Wall Streeters

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JPMorgan facebook ipo flag

Maybe you lost this in the New Year's shuffle like we did, but the Wall Street Journal blog, Deal Journal put out its list of the biggest losers of 2012 and almost all of them are Wall Streeters.

There are only 4 people/companies on the list, and three of them come from Wall Street. The list starts with Jamie Dimon (citing the $6 billion trading loss in JP Morgan's chief investment office, of course), and then moves on to Facebook, Steve Cohen and his hedge fund SAC Capital, and then finally trading firm Knight Capital.

To be fair, one could argue that Facebook is also a story of Wall Street failure because Deal Journal cites the company's IPO disaster as the reason for presence on this list. So of course, the company that took the company public gets a shout out.

From Deal Journal:

It was the second-biggest IPO in U.S. history and Mark Zuckerberg and Co. were made instant billionaires by the $100 billion valuation. But Facebook fell for its own hype. The company and its lead underwriter Morgan Stanley overestimated the demand for the offering, increasing both the number of shares in the offering and the price just before the IPO. The fallout has been severe, no matter where the blame should lie. As shares slumped, regulators have fined the banks and confidence in the IPO system and markets in general has suffered.

And it wasn't just Morgan Stanley that rode the hype of the IPO deal either. JP Morgan flew the Facebook flag at its office (as you can see above) had a huge banner welcoming in the company on IPO day, and even had its bankers rocking Facebook jackets.

So instead of Wall Street claiming 3/4 of 2012's fail spots, it could be fair to say that it gets something like 3.2/4.

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REPORT: Knight Capital Is Selling Itself To Getco

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tom joyce

It looks like trading firm Knight Capital will sell itself to Getco Holding company, sources tell Reuters.

From Reuters:

Though Virtu had offered an all-cash deal, Getco and its private equity firm General Atlantic increased its offer to above $3.60 a share in cash and stock in the combined company, one source said. Under Getco's plan, Knight Chief Executive Thomas Joyce would give up his role.


Joyce leaving is a pretty big deal. He's respected on Wall Street, and saved the company after it suffered a $400 million loss due to a bug in one of its trading programs this summer.

Then again, the loss was under his watch so it is what it is.

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Vanity Fair Is About To Release A Salacious Look Into The Life Of Late Billionaire Investor Teddy Forstmann

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theodore forstmann

We can't wait for this.

The February issue of Vanity Fair will include The Ghost In The Gulf Stream, an intimate look at private equity investor Teddy Forstmann. He was a black jack player, an art collector, a philanthropist, and a larger-than-life figure during Wall Street's infamous leveraged buy-out era.

In fact, he plays a role in Barbarians at the Gate, the infamous story of RJR Nabisco's massive leveraged buy-out.

Forstmann died of brain cancer in 2011 at age 71. Before his death however, Vanity Fair writer Rich Cohen was taking on a task that other writers before him had found themselves unequal to — acting as ghost-writer for Forstmann's life story.

What Cohen took from that experience was the portrait of a man who felt alone in crowds of people, whose conception of himself was different from his appearance to others, and who very much felt like the paterfamilias to everyone around him.

From Vanity Fair's preview.

Cohen traveled to Paris, London, Southampton, and New York with Forstmann. While watching the French Open from IMG’s box at center court Forstmann spots a pretty girl. “What do you think if I went over and just told her, Hey, my name is Forstmann, and I happen to own the biggest modeling agency in the world.” Soon after, he decides that he should write her a note and that Cohen should take it to her. Cohen thinks better of it. “Yeah, yeah, you’re right. Stupid idea,” Forstmann says, then he gets on the phone to New York. When a man in the adjoining box hushes him, Forstmann replies “You are completely correct, sir. What I’m doing is incredibly rude. I apologize.” He resumes his phone conversation, saying, “Oh, I don’t know. Some f**king British assh*le in the next box.”

In London, Forstmann tries to get Cohen to play blackjack with him at a private gambling club where the bets go into thousands of pounds. “I’ll play for you,” Forstmann says when Cohen refuses, “and your wife—what’s her name?” Jessica, Cohen tells him. “Good, I’ll play for Jessica too. And the kids.” Cohen recalls watching Forstmann at the table: “It was like seeing into his brain, his talent at work, the same mechanism that always discovered the hidden value.I was watching an artist.” When he finishes, he drops a pile of chips into Cohen’s hand, saying: “You and your kids lost, but your wife, she did pretty well.”

Rest in peace, Teddy. We can't wait to read more about your life.

And if you're not familiar with Forstmann's incredible life and career, click here>

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The Love Triangle Between Padma Lakshmi, Teddy Forstmann, And Adam Dell Was More Complicated Than We Thought

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theodore forstmann and padma lakshmi

Next month's Vanity Fair is going to include a deep dive in to the world of late billionaire private equity investor, gentleman and philanthropist Teddy Forstmann.

Naturally, we can't wait, and to ramp up anticipation, Vanity Fair has released some juicy details about a man who was no stranger to big names and scandal.

During his life-long bachelorhood, Forstmann was connected to fascinating women like Princess Diana and model Elizabeth Hurley.

In his last years, though, he was connected to celebrity chef Padma Lakshmi, and according to Vanity Fair, he wanted her daughter with billionaire venture capitalist Adam Dell to be raised as his own regardless of who the father was.

Lakshmi reportedly started seeing Dell while she and Forstmann's relationship was on ice. When she took a paternity test, found out the child was in fact Dell's and decided to tell him, Forstmann felt "heartbroken."

From Vanity Fair:

Forstmann was very bitter about “losing” the baby to Dell—Cohen describes him as “heartbroken” over the whole thing, and he could be sensitive about the topic. At one point in Cohen’s interviews, a fashion-designer acquaintance approached their table at a restaurant, casually asking Forstmann, “Teddy, how’s your baby?” Forstmann, who icily replied “just fine” to her at the time, later flew into a profane rage. “My baby? She knows very well it’s not my baby. The b*tch! The f*cking b*tch! The g*dd*mn b*tch!”

Forstmann died in 2011 of brain cancer. He was 71 and had two adopted sons.

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This Is The Call That Made Deepak Narula The Most Successful Hedge Fund Manager In 2012

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Deepak Narula

Deepak Narula, founder of Metacapital Partners, is the most successful large hedge fund manager in 2012, and he did it trading mortgage bonds, says Bloomberg Markets Magazine.

In a year when the hedge fund industry returned an average of 1.3%, Narula, a former Lehman Brothers mortgage trader, returned 34%. Since launching his fund in 2008, he's returned 500% and his firm now manages $1.4 billion.

And here's the trade that gave Narula a boost this year (from Bloomberg Markets Magazine):

Narula’s edge in 2012 was in reading the tea leaves of Washington policy makers. Toward the end of 2011, government- backed mortgage securities dropped in value as Obama expanded programs to help owners refinance and bonds without insurance fell amid the euro crisis.

Narula took advantage. He later concluded that the Federal Reserve was going to help homeowners and bought bonds ahead of its September announcement that it would buy $40 billion a month of agency -- that is, Fannie-, Freddie- and Ginnie Mae-backed -- mortgage bonds.

Narula came to the United States from New Delhi in 1985 to get a in Ph. D. in Management Science from Columbia University (he teaches as an adjunct at Columbia Business School now). He joined Lehman after graduating in 1989 and became known as one of the best mortgage minds on the Street.

He founded his fund, Metacapital Management, in 2001, but had to return money investors in 2007 because he was a little too early on his mortgage trade. He re-opened in 2008 and the rest is history — Narula killed it.

Check out this 2010 video where he talks about mortgages like most people talk about the weather. That year, by the way, he returned 53%. (from CNBC):

And to see who else made the 2012 Top 100 hedge fund managers list, click here>

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