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Brandon M. Dolin

Website of @BMDPICKSHORSES BETS AND BETTING ADVICE. Soon to be sole manager of The 3rd Finger Fund LLC a NV Betting Entity ; Horse Racing & Sports Betting.

Showing all posts tagged "Hedge Funds"

30 teams 30 days DETROIT PISTONS

30 Teams in 30 Days: Pistons opt to go big once again

Detroit adds depth around All-Star center Drummond as youthful roster starts to develop

  • POSTED: Sep 19, 2016 8:14 AM ET

BY Shaun Powell

Coach Stan Van Gundy (center) has a solid core of young players to work with in Detroit.

Since the Cavaliers won their first NBA title back on June 19, NBA teams have undergone a number of changes over the long summer offseason. NBA.com's Shaun Powell will evaluate the state of each franchise -- from the team with the worst regular-season record in 2015-16 to the team with the best regular-season record -- during the month of September as we look at 30 Teams in 30 Days. |Complete schedule

Today's team: Detroit Pistons

2015-16 record: 44-38

Who's gone: G Spencer Dinwiddie, GJodie Meeks, F Anthony Tolliver

Who's new: PF Henry Ellenson, SGMichael Gbinije (via Draft); F Jon Leuer, C Boban Marjanovic, G Ray McCallum Jr., G Ish Smith (via free agency); F-CCameron Bairstow (via trades)

The lowdown: After seven straight losing seasons, the Pistons made the playoffs and appear to be on the up and up.

Top 10 Plays: Detroit Pistons

For two straight seasons, the Pistons used the trade deadline, not the summer, to fortify the club for the better. First they added 26-year-oldReggie Jackson in 2015 from the Oklahoma City Thunder and then last summer gave him a contract extension that looks very team-friendly now.Before the 2016 trade deadline, the Pistons gave the Orlando Magic a used Vinnie Johnson jersey for 24-year-oldTobias Harris, who looked surprisingly comfortable upon arrival. Both players are just touching their prime and were terrific, low-cost moves by Stan Van Gundy, who's juggling both coaching and team president duties.

This summer? Well, Van Gundy didn't need to be a genius to extend his All-Star center Andre Drummond, who is just 22. Van Gundy also signed Marjanovic and Leuer and drafted Ellenson to give Detroit a surplus of big men. While many others league-wide are playing small ball, Van Gundy dares to be different and it could pay off positively for the Pistons both now and the near future.

Top 10 Plays: Andre Drummond

There are only a handful of coaches who have personnel power, and that dual role can be tricky for some (Los Angeles Clippers coach/team president Doc Rivers has a sketchy history, for example). Following his messy exit from the Orlando Magic, Van Gundy wanted power in his next job and the Pistons, after a series of missteps in ex-GM Joe Dumars' last few years, were willing to give Van Gundy that clout.

It wasn't merely about showing his skills as a talent evaluator -- GM Jeff Bower does most of the legwork -- Van Gundy didn't want anyone telling him whom to play or trade, and he wanted to build a team in his vision, not someone else's.

The Pistons are now all about his vision. Only Drummond and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope remain from the Dumars era and Drummond is the team's most important player. Van Gundy is now trying to build around his franchise center much in the same way the Magic did for Dwight Howard. Van Gundy tookthe Howard-led Magic to the 2009 NBA Finals and for a half-dozen years they were a winning and happy unit ... until the relationship soured.

Van Gundy added depth at center with Marjanovic, who remains a curiosity, but moves well for a man his size (7-foot-3). He can contribute in spots, especially at the rim, of course. He also learned a bit in the San Antonio Spurs' organization and at the knee of Tim Duncan, so the Pistons hope to reap those benefits.

The 6-foot-11 Ellenson spent one season at Marquette and has the size to play the post, yet his offensive instincts are slightly more perimeter-based. That means he'll likely play power forward, where his competition (at the moment) is Leuer and Marcus Morris.

To an extent, Van Gundy didn't need to make wholesale moves this summer. More than half of his rotation (Drummond, Morris, Harris, Stanley Johnson and Caldwell-Pope) is players with upside. The Pistons can allow for growth from within before shelling out big dollars to free agents. Those players will either help the Pistons or be used as trade chips.

And that's the beauty of the Pistons under Van Gundy. They're not a finished product by any stretch. Yet, Detroit has a collection of assets. There's future Draft picks, players and decent salary cap space. In short time, Van Gundy has put the Pistons on the right path, both on the floor and on the roster.

The priority this summer was clearly keeping Drummond in the fold, although as a restricted free agent, there was little danger in losing him. He made no noise about being in another city, anyway. He wanted to stay in Detroit, a place that wasn't on anyone's radar three years ago, when empty seats and losing streaks plagued the franchise.


The Pistons aren't a contender, unless this keeps up. They've righted the ship inDeeee-troit, where the Pistons are suddenly worth watching.

Note @ Las Vegas, Nevada

2016 Iroquois Stakes: Two For One


Photo: Maryland Jockey Club


Since the Iroquois Stakes was moved from late October/early November to mid-September we have seen more Kentucky Derby hopefuls, than eventual starters. Although, a few select horses such as Tapiture, Ride on Curlin and Mr. Z did get their chance to run for the roses at Churchill Downs the following spring. Their bids would fall short, but their journey from the first points race all the way to the Kentucky Derby was very unique. Today the long road begins again when the scoring resumes in the 2016 Iroquois Stakes.


At 3-1, Recruiting Ready is the morning line favorite. The son of Algorithms--Need nearly scored his first graded stakes win in his debut race at Churchill Downs on July 2. He did it by attempting to wire the eight other juveniles in the field with swift fractions of 21.76, 45.07 and 56.97 on the front end. The strategy looked to be a winner until his bid to draw clear was outmatched by Classic Empire who reeled him in the final furlong to win the Bashford Manor – G3.


Next time out the Horacio DePaz trainee looked even closer to a graded stakes win in the Saratoga Special – G2 on August 14. However, what appeared to be an easy win quickly turned into another runner up finish when Gunnevera soared home to steal the race at the wire from the heavy post time favorite. And then things got even worse when Recruiting Ready was disqualified from second and placed fourth for making contact with Tip Tap Tapizar near the three-eighths pole and knocking him off his stride.


Today, Gary Stevens will be in the saddle for the first time. The assumption is that Recruiting Ready will be back in position to get things right this time out, but he will also be stretching to out to over 1 mile for the first time in his young racing career.


The second choice on the morning line isThirstforlife. At 7-2 the son of Stay Thirsty - Promenade Girl returns to the track where he broke his maiden in his second career start. In between that effort and today was a respectable third place finish in the Best Pal – G3 at Del Mar, his graded stakes debut. In that contest Thirstforlife was in the mix throughout but he failed to fire a serious bid.


Florent Geroux returns for his second mount aboard Thirstforlife and first since he was in the irons for the colt’s career debut, a third place finish in the Kentucky Juvenile Stakes at Churchill Downs on May 5. Trainer Mark Casse will be attempting to win his second career Iroquois Stakes after notching his first in 2012 with Uncaptured.


Not This Time enters the Iroquois Stakes coming off his very first win for trainer Dale Romans. The one mile maiden victory by 10 lengths on the dirt at Ellis Park last month was his second career start. The son of Giant's Causeway – Miss Macy Sue is the co-third choice on the morning line.


Accompanying Not This Time at 4-1 isBlame Will, the son of Blame – Be My Prospect, trained by D. Wayne Lukas. This will also be his debut stakes race after a maiden win. Blame Will’s first victory came in his third career start and second at Saratoga after beginning his racing career here at Churchill Downs in June.


Lookin At Lee enters the Iroquois Stakes after winning back to back races at Ellis Park this summer. His first was in a maiden special weight race and followed by a more impressive score in the Ellis Park Juvenile Stakes. Though the stakes race was not graded and only featured five starters, the Steve Asmussen trainee by Lookin At Lucky – Langara Lass should be considered a live option for a nice price if his odds remain near his morning line mark of 6-1.


Honor Thy Father for trainer Kenny McPeek follows Lookin At Lee to the Iroquois Stakes from the Ellis Park Juvenile Stakes where he finished third. Prior to that the son of  To Honor and Serve – Hottie Dancer also broke his maiden at Ellis Park after striking out in his career debut at Churchill Downs last June. Coincidentally, Honor Thy Father finished behind Lookin At Lee in that race as well. Both horses missed the top three finishing fifth and sixth.


Just Move On moves into Churchill Downs for his first career start in the Bluegrass State after opening his career at Arlington Park earlier this summer. In two races from Chicago the Patrick Byrne trainee and son of Street Boss finished in the top three both times and won his last time out. Skinflint ships into Churchill Downs and the Kentucky racing circuit for the first time after breaking his maiden at Gulfstream Park last time out. The son of Super Saver, trained by Dane Kobiskie, was listed as the long shot on the morning line with odds of 20-1.


So this is your field for the kickoff point’s race in the Road to the 2017 Kentucky Derby. Keep in mind that the Iroquois Stakes is distinctive because this stakes race also represents the first Breeders’ Cup 2016 Win & You’re In qualifier for the Juvenile division

American Cleopatra

TICKER
  • Not This Time (9-5) leaves the field behind in the Grade 3 Iroquois.
  • On Leave (3-5) runs away with the Grade 2 Sands Point.
  • The Pizza Man (5-1) gets back to the winner's circle in the Grade 1 Northern Dancer.
  • Rainha Da Bateria (9-2) holds off stablemate Dacita (1-1) in the Grade 2 Canadian.
  • No catching Sarah Sis (10-1) in the Presque Isle Downs Masters.
  • Victory to Victory  7-1) pulls clear in the Grade 1 Natalma Stakes.
  • Good Samaritan (3-1) rolls to a Breeders' Cup birth with a Summer Stakes win.
  • Daddys Lil Darling (7-2) runs up to take the Grade 2 Pocahontas.
  • Tepin (2-5) gets her eighth consecutive win in the Grade 1 Woodbine Mile.
  • Fioretti (14-1) digs in to take the Open Mind.

American Cleopatra, Full Sis to American Pharoah, Wins Del Mar Debut


Summer is always an exciting time in horseracing with emerging two-year-olds, but one two-year-old filly in particular was in the spotlight yesterday. American Cleopatra, full sister to 2015 Triple Crown champion American Pharoah, made her debut in Del Mar’s third race yesterday. And what a debut it was.

 

With bettors knowing the talented genes of the best horses are not always passed on, American Cleopatra, by Pioneerof the Nile and out of Littleprincessemma, went off at 7-1, the co-third choice. War Factor got the jump out of the gate and led the field of eight fillies through a quarter mile in :21.87, while American Cleopatra sat just off her flank.

 

After the opening quarter, it was all over. American Cleopatra made her move and grabbed the lead, running a half-mile in :45.17. Jockey Stewart Elliott looked over his shoulder to check on the competition and saw the advantage they had over the field. Second choice Union Strike, 7-2, gave chase, but could only get within two lengths of the winner. American Cleopatra completed the five and one-half furlongs in 1:03.38.

 

“Those are good genes, there,” commented Bob Baffert. One thing American Cleopatra did that her older brother did not was win her debut at Del Mar. American Pharoah had finished fifth in his first race before winning the Grade 1 Del Mar Futurity.

 

“She’s got a beautiful way of moving and she’s got a pretty good mind,” Baffert said of American Cleopatra. “She’s a sweetheart at the barn. She’s very sweet and he was sweet.”

 

Whether the Zayat’s homebred filly goes on to do anything like American Pharoah or not, American Cleopatra’s win certainly brought a lot of excitement to the racing world. It even brought a little glimmer of hope.

 

 

By Christine Oser

 

Wall Street’s 0.01%: The Guru Who Only Talks to Hedge-Fund Elite - Bloomberg

Wall Street’s 0.01%: The Guru Who Only Talks to Hedge-Fund Elite

A new financial elite is emerging on Wall Street. And if you're not part of it, the next best thing is to sell to it.

September 15, 2016
by  

Jens Nordvig, one of the hottest prognosticators in finance, will sell anyone his secret sauce for winning trades for $30,000 a year.

But if you want unfettered access to his best ideas and personal touch—the kind that the deep-pocketed hedge funds covet—be prepared to shell out about 20 times more.

That two-pronged approach to research, off-limits (at least officially) at Wall Street banks, captures one of the most striking shifts in finance today: the rise of a class system where entire businesses cater to only the highest-paying clients. Of course, haves and have-nots have long existed in the world of finance. But the widening gap within Wall Street itself, between what the privileged few and most others get, is creating a new financial elite—what amounts to the 1 percent of the 1 percent.

And if you’re not part of the 0.01 percent, the next best thing is to sell to it.

“Investors either get personalized advice from someone they really trust, or it’s the data tools, good robots—and the price of those two things are different,” the 42-year-old Dane explained from his WeWork office in Manhattan’s Flatiron district one recent afternoon.

For Nordvig, who left Nomura Holdings Inc. in January after five years as Wall Street’s top-ranked currency strategist, it meant leveraging that standing to build his firm, Exante Data, around a rarefied group of the brightest hedge-fund names— and the money they dole out.

 
Jens Nordvig, chief executive officer of Exante Data LLC in the Flatiron WeWork offices in New York.
 
 
Jens Nordvig, chief executive officer of Exante Data LLC in the Flatiron WeWork offices in New York.
 
Photographer: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg
 
 

Exante counts Key Square, founded by George Soros protege Scott Bessent, and Adam Levinson’s Graticule, a Singapore-based firm spun out of Fortress Investment Group, among its clients, according to conversations with investors and people familiar with the matter. Graticule didn’t reply to requests for comment.

Nordvig declined to identify specific firms, but says there are just “five to seven” large institutions, whose fees covered most of his startup costs. And by design, he isn’t accepting any new business. That’s because while Exante’s six employees are focused on its analytics rollout, Nordvig devotes the majority of his time advising his marquee customers.

He’s in touch with them on an almost daily basis and is just a phone call or instant message away—any time, 24/7. His research is tailor-made to suit each one’s needs and Nordvig says he’ll often spend hours at a time with a single firm debating macroeconomic policy and trade strategies.

In late July, Nordvig was up until midnight defending his high-stakes call to a hedge-fund client in Asia that the Bank of Japan would stand pat, rather than announce a new set of aggressive stimulus measures as everyone expected. (He dissuaded the firm from shorting the yen, which proved to be prescient as the Japanese currency surged following the non-event.)

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“At banks, it’s mass production. It’s Target versus Hermès.”

“At banks, it’s mass production. It’s Target versus Hermès.”

“At banks, it’s mass production. It’s Target versus Hermès.”

So far, his backers like what they see.

“Jens is one of the great thinkers in the market,” said Key Square’s Bessent, who oversaw Soros’ personal fortune before starting his own billion-dollar macro fund this year. “Part of what we did was we got him to control his number of clients. At banks, it’s mass production. It’s Target versus Hermès.”

Nordvig isn’t shy about what he brings to the table. Prior to his years at Nomura, he spent almost a decade at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., where he rose to become co-head of global currency research and made his name with bold calls and savvy analysis. In between, he did a brief stint at Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates. And Nordvig brushes off the perception among both admirers and critics that he can, at times, be just a bit too brazen in promoting himself. To him, it’s just part of the cutthroat nature of finance.

“I have a track record of being quite detail-oriented, precise in my analysis and also able to develop new frameworks for thinking about things, and at the same time being quite pragmatic,” he said. “I’ve set up the advisory business so that the people I deal with are some of the biggest macro investors in the world, and I know their interests fit with how I think.”

Whatever the case, there is little doubt the appetite for bespoke research like Nordvig’s is growing. Banks are slashing costs, cutting jobs and abandoning their ambitions to be all things to all customers in the face of a slew of regulations over issues like selective access and excessive risk-taking. An industry-wide slump in revenue since the financial crisis has also prompted bank executives to rethink the value of the commission-based model, where investment research is offered for free in return for trade orders.

Many firms have eliminated analysts as they scale back research spending—making personalized service and attention all the more valuable. Some like Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley have drawn up preferred client lists with code names such as “Focus Five” and “supercore” for top clients.

“It’s a changing landscape,” said Matthew Feldmann, a consultant at Scepter Partners, a multi-family office, and a former money manager at Citadel and Brevan Howard. “People like Jens have found a niche area where all you need is a few wealthy individual customers.”

 
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The Guru Serving Wall Street's Top 0.01%
 
 
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“People like Jens have found a niche area where all you need is a few wealthy individual customers.”
 
 
“People like Jens have found a niche area where all you need is a few wealthy individual customers.”
 
Photographer: Christopher Goodney/Bloomberg
 
 

Perhaps just as important is the proliferation of automated trading strategies and machine-driven data mining, which has replaced many traditional roles that used to exist on Wall Street (not to mention made it harder for hedge funds to outperform as technology makes financial data almost ubiquitous).

Nordvig’s old job at Goldman Sachs exemplified that bygone era. As recently as 2007, he’d stand in the middle of the trading floor with mic in hand on the first Friday of every month, just before the 8:30 a.m. payrolls report. His task? Shout out his immediate take. If the U.S. added more jobs than expected, he’d cry “buy dollar-yen!” and within seconds, Goldman Sachs’s traders would hit the button on their keyboards to put in the order.

“We used to be able to make so much money by just being fast,” he said. Yet today, it’s all done by robots.

Amid the upheaval, Nordvig is confident his experience and smarts will ensure his high-priced advice remains in demand. But he’s not taking any chances.

After years of lackluster returns and faced with the biggest withdrawals since the financial crisis, hedge funds are looking for any edge they can find. These days, that often comes from the world of quantitative analysis. Even legendary names like Paul Tudor Jones, who made their fortunes the old-fashioned way, are hiring a bevy of programmers and mathematicians to build out more sophisticated, computer-driven strategies.

But not everybody has the research budgets to hire scores of Ph.D.s or pay for Nordvig’s white-glove service. That’s where the “data” in Exante Data comes in (Exante is derived from “ex ante,” Latin for “before the event”). Plenty of research superstars have decamped from Wall Street to set up boutique advisory firms, but Exante’s two-tier model is rare. Once the data business is fully up and running, Nordvig promises to give mere mortals on Wall Street the same type of data-mining tools once available only to the biggest quant shops.

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Nordvig says he has one overriding advantage: he simply understands markets better.

Nordvig says he has one overriding advantage: he simply understands markets better.

Nordvig says he has one overriding advantage: he simply understands markets better.

Yet competition on the data front is heating up. Scores of startups are already scraping data and turning the information into actionable ideas. Goldman Sachs is the biggest investor in Kensho Technologies Inc., which analyzes historical trading patterns to predict how assets react to events like policy meetings and economic releases. An outfit called SpaceKnow Inc. uses satellite images of factories to gauge economic activity in export-oriented countries like China.

Nordvig, in his typical cocksure manner, says he has one overriding advantage: he simply understands markets better.

In coming months, Exante will launch its first data product for the masses. According to Nordvig, his data scientists have come up with a complex algorithm that precisely estimates how much the yuan exchange rate is influenced by China’s buying or selling of dollars, on a daily basis.

There’s nothing publicly available that comes close to measuring intervention in such detail. But Nordvig says his algo succeeds because it can capture anomalies in yuan trading, like a sudden widening in bid-ask spreads, and then compare the data against freely-traded markets in big financial centers.

While the tool can’t yet gauge intervention in offshore yuan and currency forwards, his backtested results show it closely tracks less frequently released official figures. And knowing beforehand can make a huge difference. Case in point: In August 2015, the People’s Bank of China unexpectedly engineered a weakening of the yuan, which blindsided investors and sent financial markets worldwide into a tailspin.

“This is about knowing what topics are important to the clients you serve,” Nordvig said.