How a little-known Goldman Sachs partner took over the LSE and orchestrated an industry-rattling $27 billion buyout
As CEO of the London Stock Exchange, David Schwimmer has agreed to buy Refinitiv, the financial-data company behind Eikon terminals that's owned by Blackstone and Thomson Reuters, for $27 billion.
Schwimmer is taking a bold step, assuming the $12 billion in debt that the Blackstone-led investors piled on the company and betting he can navigate a shareholder vote and a thicket of regulatory reviews to get it approved.
To succeed will mean diversifying the LSE away from its focus on equity trading and establishing it as one of the biggest global purveyors of financial data. To fail will mean following in the footsteps of a predecessor who met an embarrassing end.
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The SEC is stepping up scrutiny of mutual funds that have poured money into unicorns like WeWork and Airbnb
The Securities and Exchange Commission is stepping up scrutiny of mutual-fund investments in private companies, according to people with knowledge of the agency's interest.
Mutual funds have been loading up on companies like Airbnb and WeWork, but the valuation they give these private shares can vary wildly from fund to fund, and the stakes can be hard to sell.
In some cases, mom-and-pop investors in the fund may not even know that their cash has been invested in private companies. Now, the SEC is trying to figure out whether it needs to do more to protect small investors.
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Humans are beating machines, and Pershing Square and Greenlight are crushing it. Here's how hedge funds performed in the first half.
The market-beating human stock-picker is far from dead.
Quant funds now dominate hedge-fund flows and assets, but the biggest winners midway through 2019 are funds run by old-school investors who take large, concentrated bets.
Systematic strategies haven't exactly flopped and still attracted significant assets. But stock-pickers like Bill Ackman, David Einhorn, and Gabriel Plotkin turned in a blistering first half, proving that the era of the star investor is not completely over.
The average hedge fund returned 7.58% through the first half of the year, according to HFRI.
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JPMorgan doesn't want to get burned by AI and machine learning. Here's how it avoids costly mistakes.
The first thing Samik Chandarana needs you to understand is that machine learning will not answer all your prayers.
That may be unwelcome news to the thousands of executives who have seized on the buzzword and its cousin, artificial intelligence, to make their old companies sound new again. And it certainly sounds odd coming from someone like Chandarana, who has worked in JPMorgan's corporate and investment bank since 2017 as head of data analytics, applied artificial intelligence, and machine learning.
But it's a key lesson when one considers the increasingly lofty expectations for new tech. Wall Street saved $41.1 billion using AI in 2018, and AI's business value is set to reach $300 billion globally by 2030, according to an April report from IHS Markit.
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Elizabeth Warren's attack on private equity could have a surprising group of backers: Investors in private equity
Warren wants to wage war on private equity. One group is sure to benefit: the small club of lobbyists and advocates representing the industry and its investors on Capitol Hill.
Warren wants to impose a 100% tax on the fees private-equity firms charge for managing a company and change bankruptcy law to protect American workers who lose jobs in buyouts.
The industry is racing to illustrate the good that private-equity firms do. Some lobbyists see Warren's plan as an in for investors in private-equity firms, or "limited partners," to also push for change.
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Lone Pine Capital stock-pickers explain why they're investing in Tiffany and Nintendo and how they value 'disruptors' like Beyond Meat
What do Nintendo, WWE, and Tiffany & Co. have in common?
Lone Pine Capital, a $19 billion legendary stock-picking hedge fund, owns shares in all of them and sees "long runways" for their growth, according to a recent investor letter seen by Business Insider.
Lone Pine Capital has divided the market into three segments: young disruptors such as Beyond Meat; disrupted firms like banks, ad agencies, and legacy technology companies; and "compounders" like WWE and Tiffany.
The firm is long the compounders, short the companies it considers already disrupted, and both long and short young disruptors, and it thinks judgement about the overall market misses the "nuance of underlying extremes," according to the letter.
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