George Soros
Wall Street's Wealthiest:
No. 8 GEORGE SOROS
At least $100 million
Appreciates the value of freedom more than most. During World War I,
his father
was captured by the Russians but managed to escape. Then during World
War II,
his family hid from the Nazis after Hungary allied itself with Germany.
Came to
U.S. in 1956 with economics degree in hand. In 1969, started Quantum
Fund with
James Rogers, who broke with him in 1981. Today, as a 70% owner of $2.1
billion
Quantum, the world’s largest offshore investment fund, Soros and the
other six
managing directors split 15% of the annual profits. He spends most of
his time
in his home in England and helping fellow Hungarians and other Eastern
Europeans
reacquaint themselves with capitalism. To bankroll that effort, he
created the
Open Society Fund in 1979 and the Soros Foundation-Hungary in 1984.
Known as
"an alternate ministry of culture," the foundation helped establish a
management training center in an old castle outside Budapest. Now there
are
foundations in 10 Central and Eastern European countries aimed at
cultural and
economic revitalization. Soros, 59, is the author of The Alchemy of
Finance,
published in 1987, in which he outlines, somewhat circuitously, his
"theory
of reflexivity," which holds that perceptions change events which in
turn,
change perceptions. This is not his first attempt at writing. Soros did
extensive work several years earlier on a philosophical book that was
never
completed. His new book, Opening the Soviet System, is due out this
month.
Financial World
The Wall Street 100
By Stephen Taub and David Carey with Alison M. Smith
July 21, 1992
Page 40
No. 1 GEORGE SOROS
Soros Fund Management
At least $117 million
Despite the fact that Hungarian-born George Soros spends much of his
time these
days touting capitalism in former East Bloc countries, he was still
able to find
a way for his $3.2 billion offshore Quantum fund, which rose around
63%, to
outperform most managed porfolios and market indexes. Who says bigger
can't also
perform better? After he claimed a chunk of Quantum's 15% incentive fee
and the
fund's entire 1% management fee, Soros's personal take computed into 9
fitures.
Not too shabby, considering how much time the 61-year-old globe-trotter
spends
away from home. One of his more recent pet projects has been the
establishment
of the Central European University in Budapest and Prague. In the past
year or
so, he still found time to launch three spin-off funds - Quasar
International
Partners, Quantum Emerging Growth and Quota.
Financial World
The Wall Street 100
By Stephen Taub, Nanette Byrnes, and David Carey
July 6, 1993
Page 40
No. 1 GEORGE SOROS
Soros Fund Management
At least $650 million
How do you make $650 million in one year if you are not Mike Milken?
Simple.
First, start the year with about $800 million of your own money and
other $4
billion of other people's wealth of nearly $5 billion in all under
management. Then
hire crack managers and traders who rack huge returns trafficking
highly
volatile currencies and derivatives instruments. Finally, charge hefty
management and incentive fees. Result: Last year 62-year-old George
Soros’s
Quantum Fund was up 68.1% after fees; Quantum Emerging, up 57%; Quasar
International, 55.7%; and Quota, 37.4%. Quantum and Quasar charge 1%
management
fees and 15% of the appreciation while the other two funds charge 1%
plus 20%.
Moreover, Soros invests a big portion of his assets in currencies and
index-linked derivatives but never for long. He flits in and out of
these
instruments incessantly, rarely holding a position for more than a few
days. As
a result, he realizes capital gains on the vast bulk of the nominal
returns he
generates in a given year. Do the arithmetic and you'll see that at a
bare
minimum, Soros extracted more than $400 million in profits from his
personal
hoard.
A conservative estimate of his share of his firm's incentive fees tacks
on
another $200 million or so to the total. Finally, Soros awards himself
all his
firm's management fees, which netted him about $50 million. Presto:
$650
million, although his take might have been much higher. Today, Soros's
clutch
of five offshore funds boats assets well over $7 billion, including a
$525
million real estate fund he recently formed in partnership with Paul
Reichmann,
a former controlling shareholder with bankrupt Canadian real estate
developer
Olympia & York. This is not to be mistaken for Soros's new
$775 million
partnership with British Land to invest in properties.
What does one do with so much dough? In the case of Hungarian-born
Soros, help
the desperate of Central and Eastern Europe and foster capitalism on
on4e’s
native soil and surrounding countries. A network of 20 foundations
across
Central and Eastern Europe organized most of his philanthropic
activity. The
first was opened in Hungary in 1984. He pledged $100 million to support
scientific research in the Commonwealth of Independent States last
year, donated
$50 million to Bosnia and financed a $25 million revolving loan to buy
heating
oil that helped Macedonia survive the winter.
Financial World
The Wall Street 100
Call it the year of the hedge funds. For this elite band, it was the
best year
ever.
By Stephen Taub and David Carey with Andrew Osterland and David Yee
July 5, 1994
Page 33
No. 1. GEORGE SOROS
Soros Fund Management
At least $1.1 billion
In 1993, George Soros managed to earn as much individually as
McDonald's did
with the help of 169, 600 employees. How did he do it? Fees, great
performance
and the power of compounding.
Let's run the numbers: To start off, the 63-year-old manages about $11
billion
in several offshore funds, including the relatively well-known Quantum
Fund, as
well as a real estate fund. Last year each of his funds turned in
spectacular
performances. Leading the way: Quantum Emerging Growth, up 109% before
fees,
followed by Quantum and Quota, each up more than 72%. Then Soros's
operation
gets 15% incentive fee, which is less than the going 20% rate for hedge
funds.
Soros himself gets the 1% management fee on assets as of year-end and
then pays
all of the expenses of the firm. He also has more than $1 billion of
his own
capital in the funds. Add it all up, including realized gains on his
own dough,
and the guy made a minimum of $1.1 billion.
What does a fellow do with all this money? Soros is well-known for his
generosity. NOte that nine other people on the Wall Street 100 are
Soros people
- he rewards those who make the biggest contributions. In addition, the
Hungarian native never forgot his roots. His Jewish family had to go
underground
in Nazi-occupied Budapest to survive. In 1947, Soros fled Hungary and
enrolled
in the London School of Economics. He moved from London to New York
City in
1956, the same year the Soviets quashed the Hungarian nationalist
uprising.
Today, he is a longtime giver to Hungarian causes, and his 33rd-floor
office in
midtown Manhattan is decorated with paintings by Hungarian artists. His
10-year-old foundation has already given away more than $300 million
through
offices in many countries of the old Soviet bloc. One recent
humanitarian gift:
funding the connection of Sarajevo's water supply and natural gas
lines. Soros
has also pledged $200 million to revamp Russia's educational system and
spend
$15 million to keep about 28,000 Russians working for a year.
Financial World
The Wall Street 100
Compensation was way down in 1994 for Wall Street’s highest earners
By Stephen Taub, David Carey, and Joseph Epstein
July 4, 1995
Page 42
No. 2. GEORGE SOROS
Soros Fund Management
At least $70 million
Most other mortals would have been ecstatic to earn at least $70
million in one
year, but for George Soros it was quite a comedown—a drop of more
than 93%
from the prior year. Why the falloff? Because, like most of the other
huge hedge
funds and offshore funds, Soros got whipsawed by the change in the
direction of
global interest rates and the sudden collapse of many emerging markets.
His
Quantum Emerging Growth fund and Quota fund were down 13.3% and 10.1%,
respectively. And although the flagship Quantum fund was up 2.7%, its
premium
shrank (see FW, Dec. 8). So about all poor George got by the way of
compensation
was his 1% management fee. At the moment, Soros, 64, is trying to
liquidate the
U.S. real estate fund he started with Paul Reichmann a scant two years
ago.
While Soros’s philanthropic efforts in his native Hungary and other
Middle
European countries are well documented, he makes less publicized
charitable
contributions. For example, the Open Society, another of his
foundations, plans
to give $5 million a year for three years to examine U.S. attitudes
about dying.
In addition, a few years ago he began giving money to the Drug Policy
Foundation, a lobbying group that is exploring various drug
legalization
schemes. Meanwhile, the Soros Foundation is making every effort to
solve the
mysterious April disappearance of Frederic Cuny, the relief expert who
was
setting up a hospital in Chechnya for the foundation.
Financial World
The Wall Street 100
By David Carey and Stephen Taub
October 21, 1996
Page 59
No. 1. GEORGE SOROS
Soros Fund Management
At least $1.5 billion
http://www.stressfreetrading.com
|