R
ribozyme
Guest
One manager, John Paulson, made $3.7 billion last year. He reaped that bounty, probably the richest in Wall Street history, by betting against certain mortgages and complex financial products that held them.
Mr. Paulson, the founder of Paulson & Company, was not the only big winner. The hedge fund managers James H. Simons and George Soros each earned almost $3 billion last year, according to an annual ranking of top hedge fund earners by Institutional Investor’s Alpha magazine, which comes out Wednesday.
Do people like Soros, Paulson, Simons, and Falcone produce anything useful while making money? I am not asking whether they use the money the make for a magnanimous purpose. Of course, I know Soros and Simons donated their money to worthy causes. But to reiterate, did they actually produce anything at all? Did they do anything more than study the market and place successful bets on outcomes? The only thing of value that they might produce is that might help certain pension funds that turn over their assets to them to manage.Like Mr. Paulson, Philip Falcone, who founded Harbinger Partners with $25 million in June 2001, cast a winning bet against the mortgage market. He pulled in returns of 117 percent after fees in 2007 and made $1.7 billion. The trade thrust him from relative obscurity to hedge fund heavyweight: he now manages $18 billion. Harbinger recently won agreement from The New York Times Company to add two members to its board
I am not asking this because I have malice against them, but because someone mentioned that George Soros created nothing in another thread. Of course, I will concur with that. However, I do not admire Soros because he is a billionaire, but I admire him for his philanthropic work, and his personal philosophy. Unfortunately, if George Soros did not earn his money, his philanthrophy would be rendered impossible.
But I did not ask this question to talk about George Soros - I asked if these people actually produce anything or “work” for their fortunes.