Steven A. Cohen, 68, is well known on Wall Street.
Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images
Steve A. Cohen, owner of Point72 Asset Management, is a prominent Wall Street figure.
Cohen has an estimated net worth of $14.8 billion, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
His fund, SAC Capital, shut down in 2013 after pleading guilty to securities fraud.
Billionaire Steve Cohen is known on Wall Street for being one of its most successful traders.
The 68-year-old runs the $39 billion hedge fund Point72 Asset Management and was famously dubbed the "hedge fund king" in 2006 due to his grand slam returns.
Cohen started his first hedge fund, SAC Capital Advisors, in 1992 with $25 million and grew into a financial behemoth.
Cohen, however, eventually found himself in a legal battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission over insider trading and fraud charges in 2012, and it led to the shutdown of SAC Capital Advisors. As part of a $1.8 billion settlement in 2013, the firm pleaded guilty to insider trading and Cohen agreed to an SEC ban.
In 2014, he converted SAC into a family office and launched its successor, Point72 Asset Management. The firm began managing outside money when Cohen's ban lifted in 2018.
But Cohen's name isn't just known within the world of finance.
After years of owning a small stake in the New York Mets, he bought the team for $2.4 billion in 2020. Since then, his reputation as an intense businessman has shifted to that of a passionate owner in the Major Baseball League.
Here's a look at the career rise of the legendary hedgefunder.
He's a New York native who grew up in a middle-class family.Cohen was born in Great Neck, New York.
Newsday LLC/Newsday via Getty Images
Cohen was one of eight children born to a piano teacher and a garment manufacturer. In high school, the billionaire worked at a supermarket, Bloomberg reported.
He graduated from Wharton with a degree in economics.Cohen attended the Wharton School of Business.
David Tran Photo/Shutterstock
He studied economics at the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. Outside of class, he traded stocks and beat his friends at poker. He was in a fraternity, too. He joined the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity.
Cohen loved stocks so much that he would trade them in between his classes, according to a 2003 Bloomberg Businessweek profile. In his spare time, he would also beat all of his friends at poker.
He started his career on Wall Street at Gruntal & Co.His Wall Street career was successful almost instantly.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
After graduating in 1978, he went to Wall Street to work for at boutique investment banking and brokerage firm Gruntal & Co. as a junior trader in the options arbitrage group.
His beginnings on Wall Street inspired a legend that he made $8,000 his first day and was bringing in around $100,000 each day. He became a star at Gruntal and by 1984, he started running his own group of traders.
Then in 1992, he launched SAC Capital in the same building as Gruntal.Cohen left Gruntal to start his own fund with $25 million.
Reuters/ Michelle McLoughlin
He launched his own hedge fund in 1992. Cohen rented office space nine floors above Gruntal to start his own $25 million hedge fund, SAC Capital.
Some of his traders from Gruntal joined him there until SAC was headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut.
Cohen has been married two times — first in 1979 and again in 1992.Cohen met his second wife, Alexandra Cohen, through a dating service.
Adam Hunger/Getty Images
When he was 23, Cohen married Patricia Finke. They had two children together and got divorced in 1988.
In 2009, Finke sued Cohen, alleging that he hid millions from her and some of that money had come from insider trading in RCA shares back in 1985 before it was acquired by General Electric, DealBook reported. A spokesperson at the time called the allegations "ludicrous" and "without merit." The case was ultimately dismissed in 2011.
He met his current wife, Alexandra Garcia, through a dating service in 1991.Alexandra was a single mom of Puerto Rican descent who grew up in Washington Heights.
They married in 1992 and have four children together.
SAC hit its stride in the early 2000s.SAC had its best year in 2000.
Getty Images
In 1998 and 1999, SAC delivered 70% annual returns. Then, in 2000, his hedge fund bet against tech stocks and brought in 70% returns again.
Back in 2006, WSJ reported that SAC's trading accounted for 2% of all of the stock market activity. This would make them a desired client on the Street.
In the summer of 2013, SAC pleaded guilty to securities fraud.Insider trading accusations were the downfall of SAC.
TIMOTHY CLARY/AFP via Getty Images
Cohen wasn't charged with any wrongdoing in an insider trading case against former CR Intrinsic (a subsidiary of SAC) portfolio manager Mathew Martoma. However, SAC Capital pleaded guilty to securities fraud and agreed to pay a $1.8 billion fine in 2013.
Cohen accepted an SEC ban on managing outside money until 2018.
Shortly after, SAC rebranded to Point72 Asset Management.Point72 was a family office until Cohen's SEC ban was lifted.
Point72; Shayanne Gal/Insider
Cohen agreed to turn SAC Capital into a family office with a new name in 2014: Point72 Asset Management. During this time, it managed the assets of Cohen, his family, and eligible employees.
Cohen founded Stamford Harbor Capital in 2016.Cohen is also a Connecticut resident.
Alex Potemkin/Getty Images
The move was seen as his official comeback in money managementafter SAC's legal troubles. He formed Stamford Harbor Capital to invest in private funds. As Cohen sent out pitches for his new fund, anticipation for its launch grew.
Two years later, Stamford Harbor Capital merged with Point72 to begin accepting outside capital, raising $5.7 billion over the course of 2018, the company said on its site.
His interests outside work include cards and art.He has decades of experience in poker.
Peter Dazeley/Getty Images
Cohen has been collecting art since 2000.
His impressive art collection, which was said to be worth around $1 billion at one point, includes pieces by Monet, Picasso, Jasper Johns, Jeff Koons, Damien Hirst, Willem de Kooning, Francis Bacon, and Andy Warhol, according to a 2010 Vanity Fair profile.
Cohen has been playing poker since high school.
"It's the same with trading. I think about the risk. I think about the trade. I don't think about the money. Poker—that was the biggest determinant in my learning to take risks," he told Vanity Fair in 2010.
Cohen bought the New York Mets for $2.4 billion in 2020.Steve Cohen was a longtime Mets fan before he purchased the team.
Jim McIsaac/Getty Images
Cohen grew up watching Mets games
In February 2012, he reportedly bought a 4% stake in the MLB team for $20 million.
He purchased 87% of the Mets for $2.4 billion in 2020. He's one of the richest owners in the league, and he's known to engage with fans online.
In 2021, Cohen's image got a boost and his firm hit a financial milestone.Cohen became a key part of the Mets fandom.
Rob Tringali/MLB Photos via Getty Images
It seemed to be a good year for Cohen. Point72 surpassed $20 billion in assets, and the public perception of Cohen began to change. He was once known as a hedge fund shark, but he gained a following of Mets fans on X, then Twitter, after becoming the team owner.
The momentum kept going in 2023, with big baseball deals and more.Cohen spent big on players in 2023.
Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images
In the period leading up to opening day of the MLB 2023 season, Cohen committed over $806 million in contracts to nine players. The Mets' project player payroll for that year was $377 million, Forbes reported.
On the finance side, Point72 surpassed $30 billion in assets in July 2023.
In September 2024, Cohen gave up trading for Point72.Cohen no longer trades for Point72.
Point72
Cohen stepped away from trading his book for Point72 in favor of mentoring emerging investors.
"Point72 continues to be Steve's primary focus and he's as engaged as ever. The only change here is that he will spend less time in front of his computer screens and more time working with investment teams and developing talent at the firm," a previous statement from a firm spokesperson said.
A month later, Point72 launched an AI-focused fund.Point72 now has an AI-focused fund called Turion.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Point72 launched Turion, a fund dedicated to artificial intelligence, in October 2024. It's run by portfolio manager Eric Sanchez, and it posted a 14% gain within months of starting out with expectations of growing to $1.5 billion.
Julia La Roche contributed to an earlier version of this story.
Welcome to Lakewood Newsbreak, a subsidiary of Lakewood Opinions, LLC. This website is designed o enhance your news delivery. All information belongs to the individual contributor and LNB take no responsibility for any content. We do not sell any information. LNB pulls from over 2,500 RSS news feeds from around the world to bring you the latest updates. Please enjoy.
There are so many Social Media sites out there and they are hard to keep up with. That is why Lakewood Newsbreak has design a Social site design to discuss and post News and World related items of intrest. We are tring to promote feel good news posts to help the world in these harden times. Please be courteous with your comments. Thannk you and enjoy. Please read our Content Policy for any Questions
Notice. Lakewood Newsbreak™ website uses cookies to provide necessary web site functionality, improve your experience and analyze our traffic. By using our website, you agree to its Terms. We do not sell any information