作者 |
了解美国系列:如果要想做交易大赚,要吃女性荷尔蒙。吃了之后,开始穿女人衣服,和他男老板have sex,。。。 |
|
所跟贴 |
这里是明报的中文报道:【人物照片】華男告上司性騷擾,稱遭強迫服女性荷爾蒙穿女裝(转帖) -- 安普若 - (1039 Byte) 2007-12-12 周三, 04:21 (2566 reads) |
安普若 [博客] [个人文集]
头衔: 海归元勋 声望: 大师 性别: 加入时间: 2004/02/21 文章: 26038 来自: 中国美国的飞机上 海归分: 4196257
|
|
作者:安普若 在 海归商务 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com
Sacked SAC Trader Alleges Boss Made Him Girlie-Man
https://nymag.com/daily/intel/2007/10/sacked_sac_trader_alleges_boss.html
Steven Cohen's hedge fund, SAC Capital Management, is weird. With the combination of the founder's Svengali-like persona (super-traders are "totally committed to their own particular style and demonstrate complete conviction when trading," he once wrote), over-the-top richness (fun things at his Greenwich mansion include Damien Hirst's shark in formaldehyde and a skating rink in the backyard), and Pentagon-level of secrecy, it's always seemed like the kind of place where the employees probably get all Eyes Wide Shut after hours. And as it turns out, that might not be so far from the truth! We're late to the party on this one, but yesterday afternoon, Charles Gasparino at CNBC reported new details in the sexual-harassment suit filed against SAC by a former junior trader, 37-year-old Andrew Z. Tong. The suit was filed in the spring but sealed yesterday by a non-fun New York State judge, on the grounds that it was too salacious for public consumption. However, CNBC was able to obtain some very juicy details.
Tong apparently alleges that his boss, star trader Ping Jiang, encouraged him to take female hormones as part of a method Jiang uses in order to make his traders "less aggressive." According to CNBC, Tong is saying that hormones caused him to start wearing dresses and, eventually, to begin a sexual relationship with Jiang. Tong was apparently fired for cause in 2006, and SAC vehemently denied the "scurrilous" accusations in a statement. We had no idea "scurrilous" could also mean "totally awesome."
Low-Profile In Courage
Steven Cohen
SAC Capital Management
* Published Jan 17, 2000
https://nymag.com/nymetro/news/bizfinance/biz/features/1842/
Hedge-fund managers generally dodge the klieg light of the press, but word was going to get out about Steven Cohen's 70 percent 1999 returns. And if the curious are curiouser, that's just too bad: The secretive 43-year-old makes employees at SAC Capital Management in Stamford, Connecticut, sign confidentiality agreements said to be thicker than the Yellow Pages. Mystique is an alluring perfume, and those who could afford the price of admission should know the fund is now closed to new investors. Started in 1992, it has $1.3 billion in assets. Its worst year in the past five was 1996 -- when it was up 42 percent.
For his labors, Cohen charges 50 percent of the profits on the funds he trades most aggressively -- that's more than double the 20 percent industry standard. (His staff of 150 charges anywhere from 20 to 35 percent.) Cohen, who toiled for fourteen years at Gruntal & Co. after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, operates with all the attention deficit of a seasoned day trader -- it's not unusual for him to go long on a stock, sell it, and then short it minutes later. On a busy day, SAC accounts for more than one percent of the volume on both the nasdaq and the NYSE. A ranking of Wall Street's highest-commission-generating accounts puts SAC at No. 19, a slot behind Soros Management. With brokerage firms in deep kowtow, Cohen isn't shy about taking advantage: Every morning, SAC sends a fax to firms it trades through, listing stocks the firm is interested in. The unspoken message is, Give us the best information or we'll take our business elsewhere. A sell-side analyst recalls getting twenty phone calls in one day for information on a single stock. "They hound you," he says. "That's just the way they are."
Living Dangerously "Steve can hear the rhythm of the markets," says a longtime SAC client. "When it comes to other things, he's not as talented. I could see how I could tell him to meet me on such and such a corner, and he might have trouble getting there." Not that Cohen doesn't know a thing or two about having a blast: This past Christmas, he threw a seventies-themed office party at a Westchester yacht club. And his Greenwich neighbors have complained about his plans to turn fourteen acres of his $15 million estate into a mini Chelsea Piers, with an ice rink, a golf course, and an indoor basketball court.
Moneymaking Mantra Super-traders "are totally committed to their own particular style and demonstrate complete conviction when trading," the sphinxlike manager wrote in a foreword to the book Trading to Win, by Dr. Ari Kiev, a psychiatrist on retainer at SAC.
Where He's Headed In 2000 One of SAC's principal traders, ex-Goldmanite Tom Grossman, is leaving to set up a $200 million emerging-market hedge fund in which SAC will be a signifcant investor. As for the U.S. equity market, Cohen believes it's overvalued and highly dangerous for the novice. But his clients shouldn't have to worry.
作者:安普若 在 海归商务 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com
|
|
|
返回顶端 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
您不能在本论坛发表新主题, 不能回复主题, 不能编辑自己的文章, 不能删除自己的文章, 不能发表投票, 您 不可以 发表活动帖子在本论坛, 不能添加附件不能下载文件, |
|
|