![]() Like Hwang, Wood is known to hold Bible study meetings and figures into what some refer to as the "faith in finance" movement.Īnd here, at last, is where the Bill Hwangs collide. That same Bill Hwang, it turns out, is also a backer of one of Wall Street's hottest hands of late, Cathie Wood of Ark Investments. This one masks his dangerous leveraged bets from public view via financial derivatives, was once accused of insider trading and pleaded guilty in 2012 to wire fraud on behalf of his hedge fund, Tiger Asia Management. This is also the Bill Hwang who then went on to quietly become one of the most successful alumni of Robertson's vaunted Tiger Management. Then there's the other Bill Hwang: a former acolyte of hedge fund legend Julian Robertson with a thirst for risk and a stomach for volatile markets - a daring trader who once lost a fortune betting against German automaker Volkswagen AG while running a hedge fund that was supposedly focused on Asian stocks. A generous benefactor to a range of unglamorous, mostly conservative Christian causes, this Hwang eschews the trappings of extravagant wealth, rides the bus, flies commercial and lives in what is, by billionaire standards, humble surroundings in suburban New Jersey. One of them walks for hours through New York's Central Park listening to recordings of the Bible and embraces a new, 21st-century vision of an age-old ideal: that of a modern Christian capitalist, a financial speculator for Christ, who seeks to make money in God's name and then use it to further the faith. There are, in a sense, not one but two Bill Hwangs. ![]() The picture that emerges is unlike anything Wall Street might suspect. Interviews with people from inside Hwang's circle, Wall Street players close to him and documents associated with his multimillion-dollar charitable foundation fill in missing puzzle pieces - ones that haven't been reported previously. The Securities and Exchange Commission is looking into the disaster, which has set teeth on edge in trading rooms across the globe.īut those accounts tell only part of the story. Estimates of the potential size of his position before it imploded have spiraled toward $100 billion. The story thus far - of a mind-boggling fortune made in stealth and then wiped out very publicly in a blink - has sent shock waves through some of the world's mightiest banks. Hitting the play button and then receding into the background was the host, Bill Hwang, the mysterious billionaire trader now at the center of one of the biggest Wall Street fiascos of all time. Then came the New, the Gospels, which called out to the listeners drawn from a path known more for its earthly greed than its godly faith: Wall Street. First might come the Old Testament, perhaps Isaiah or Lamentations.
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