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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 "Money"

Stocks close lower as dollar hits near-two-month high; gold sheds 3%

                                                                                                                                                                  
   
       
   
   
                                                                       

US Markets   

       

Stocks close lower as dollar hits near-two-month high; gold sheds 3%

            | @foimbert
1 Hour AgoCNBC.com
75
SHARES
       
   
   
       
                                            
<p>Pisani: Revenue growth turnaround</p><p>CNBC&#039;s Bob Pisani looks ahead at the day&#039;s market action.</p>
                                                                            Pisani: Revenue growth turnaround                                                                    
                                 Pisani: Revenue growth turnaround                          8 Hours Ago |  03:46

  U.S. stocks closed lower on Tuesday, pressured by a rising dollar, while investors digested data from the International Monetary Fund and remarks from a Federal Reserve official.

       

  "You've got two schools of thought here. You have momentum traders buying dips but you also have the dollar rising and the view that it could keep going is weighing on markets," said Daniel Deming, managing director at KKM Financial.

       

  The dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency's performance against six others, hit its highest level in almost two months. It was last up 0.49 percent at 96.17.

       

  The Dow Jones industrial average fell as much as 137.59 points before closing about 85 points lower, with 3M contributing the most losses. The S&P 500 fell 0.64 percent, with utilities falling more than 2 percent to lead decliners. The benchmark index fell below 2,150 earlier in the session, a key support level. "If we break that level, then you could see some more downside momentum," said Deming.

       

  The Nasdaq composite closed 0.2 percent lower. Stocks had gyrated in the early part of the session, alternating between gains and losses, before closing lower.

       

  "Right now, in the U.S. market, there's a bit of a vacuum," said Bill Merz, investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Bank Management. "It sounds like a broken record, ... but we're just playing a waiting game."

       
    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.      
Getty Images
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

  Overall global growth is expected to expand at 3.1 percent in 2016, according to the IMF's "World Economic Outlook" released Tuesday. That's unchanged from its July forecast. But advanced economies, which include the United States, will slow this year to 1.6 percent growth. That compares with 2.1 percent last year and a July IMF forecast of 1.8 percent.

       

  Gold futures for December delivery fell more than 3 percent to settle at $1,269.70 per ounce, posting its worst trading day since 2013.

       

  "The sell-off which we are seeing for gold is mainly due to the reason that some Fed members have created noise again that November meeting could be live when it comes to the interest rate. Although it sounds extremely bizarre because we also have the US election in that particular month, and I do not see the Fed combining the two risky events together," Naeem Aslam, chief market analyst at Think Markets, said in a note to clients.

       

  Investors also watched Deutsche's stock, after it sent markets around the world for a roller-coaster ride last week as worries that it would not be able to pay its massive fine weighed on investor sentiment. On Tuesday, the German banking giant's U.S.-listed shares rose more than 2 percent.

       

  German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported over the weekend that Deutsche's CEO John Cryan would be in Washington DC to negotiate a settlement with the U.S. government over its $14 billion fine.

       

  "It's very important for investors to read between the lines," said Adam Sarhan, CEO at Sarhan Capital. "Market participants have a way of separating facts and noise. Right now, the fact is that investors have lost confidence in Deutsche Bank."

       

Dow Jones industrial average 2-day chartSource: FactSet

       

  In Fed news, Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker said there was a strong case to raise interest rates significantly and keep inflation under control. "Pre-emptive increases in the federal funds rate are likely to play a critical role in maintaining the stability of inflation," Lacker, a non-voting member of the Fed's policymaking committee, said in a statement.

       

  U.S. Treasury yields rose after Lacker's speech, with the two-year note yield at 0.82 percent and the benchmark 10-year yield at 1.68 percent.

       

  Chicago Fed President Charles Evans is set to speak at 7:40 p.m. ET, on monetary policy and the economy.

       

  "I think the Fed speeches are going to be noise in the background today," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities. "Right now, we're looking at a data-heavy week, but most of that is due at the end of the week."

       

  Key data reports due this week include the September jobs report, scheduled for release Friday at 8:30 a.m. ET.

       

  "The market is in a wait-and-see mode. We've got earnings season coming and earnings have contracted even with low interest rates," said Sarhan. "The economy is lackluster and you've got currency fluctuations sometimes adversely affecting earnings."

       

  Earnings season is set to kick into full gear next week, when Alcoa reports quarterly results.

       

  Overseas, European equities rose broadly, as the British FTSE 100 advanced 1.3 percent, while the British pound hit its lowest level in more than 30 years. Earlier on Tuesday, The IMF said uncertainty stemming from the so-called Brexit will dampen investor confidence. It sees the U.K. expanding at only 1.8 percent this year, and sees a deepening slowdown to 1.1 percent next year. The U.K. grew at a 2.2 percent pace last year. 

       

  "I think a lot of currency investors figures that the UK would be able to negotiate a special deal," said Chris Gaffney, president of EverBank World Markets. "Calling for a March exit really caught people off guard."

       
Symbol
Name
Price
 
Change
%Change
DJIADow Industrials18168.45
 
-85.40-0.47%
S&P 500S&P 500 Index2150.49
 
-10.71-0.50%
NASDAQNASDAQ Composite5289.66
 
-11.22-0.21%

  The Dow Jones industrial average closed 85.40 points lower, or 0.47 percent, at 18,168.45, with 3M leading decliners and JPMorgan Chase leading advancers.

       

  The S&P 500 fell 10.71 points, or 0.5 percent, to close at 2,150.49, with utilities leading 10 sectors lower and financials the only advancer.

       

  The Nasdaq fell 11.22 points, or 0.21 percent, to end at 5,289.66.

       

About three stocks declined for every advancer at the New York Stock Exchange, with and exchange volume of 882.64 million and a composite volume of 3.622 billion at the close.

       

U.S. crude futures settled 0.25 percent higher, or 12 cents, at $48.69 per barrel.

       

—CNBC's Evelyn Cheng contributed to this report.

       

  On tap this week:

       

  *Planner subject to change.

       

  Tuesday

       

  Earnings: Micron

       

  7:40 p.m.: Chicago Fed President Charles Evans speaks on monetary policy and the economy

       

  Wednesday

       

  Earnings: Yum Brands, Constellation Brands, Monsanto, RPM International

       

  8:15 a.m.: ADP payrolls

       

  8:30 a.m.: Trade deficit

       

  9:30 a.m.: Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari gives welcoming remarks at an event on "Early Childhood Development in Indian Country"

       

  9:45 a.m.: Markit services PMI

       

  10 a.m.: ISM non-manufacturing

       

  10 a.m.: Factory orders

       

  1 p.m. & 5 p.m.: Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker speaks on "Does Federal Reserve Governance Need Reform?"

       

  Thursday

       

  Earnings: Helen of Troy, International Speedway, Ruby Tuesday

       

  8:30 a.m.: Jobless claims

       

  2 p.m.: Atlanta Fed live webcast on search process for new bank president and answer questions from the public

       

  Friday

       

  8:30 a.m.: Employment report

       

  10 a.m.: Wholesale trade

       

  10:30 a.m.: Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer speaks on the economy and financial regulation

       

  12:45 p.m.: Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester speaks on Fed communications

       

  3 p.m.: Consumer credit

       

  3:40 p.m.: San Francisco Senior Vice President Mary Daly speaks on the U.S. economic outlook and the role of education in supporting the American dream

       

  4 p.m.: Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard speaks on blockchain technology

       

  *All times Eastern. Planner subject to change.

       
           
                                                       
Fred ImbertNews Associate
       

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Belmont Saturday Highlight Horse: Danny’s Deceiver will relish wet track in the Vosburgh


timeformusblog.com
Belmont Saturday Highlight Horse: Danny’s Deceiver will relish wet track in the Vosburgh
Posted on

DontLetTheGamePassYouByfortfus
>Belmont | Race 9 | Post Time 5:44 EDT | Go To The TimeformUS PPs

In three runs over sealed tracks, Danny’s Deceiver has earned two wins and a second, which is better than he’s done in all of his fast track races. It would have seemed unlikely that he could compete against a field of this quality just a few months ago, but he’s made huge strides over his past few starts.


He defeated a strong allowance field on Belmont Stakes day in June, and then made an eye-catching run from far back to nearly win in July. He was still dismissed at 40/1 in the Forego—his stakes debut—but he managed to pass more than half the field while rallying from last to be fourth. The fact that he was able to accomplish such a feat over a fast track speaks to the form that he’s in right now. I take it as a positive sign that Jose Ortiz climbs aboard, and the stiff 6-furlong workout that he put in a few days ago would appear to indicate that he’s feeling good coming into this race. If there’s one horse in this race that could surprise a lot of people and step up to hit the board—or even win—I believe it’s him.

THE PLAY

Win/Place: 8

Exacta Key Box: 8 with 1,2,3,6,7

Trifecta: 7,8 with 2,3,7,8 with 1,2,3,6,7,8



TRUE NO FRILLS NO BULLSHIT FREE SPORTS PICKS TRACKED BY A TRUE 3RD PARTY WHO I DON'T EVEN KNOW THEIR DAMN PHONE NUMBER OR WHERE IN THE WORLD THEY ARE.

So if sick of being of ripped off and lied to you can go to www.pickmonitor.com and look up obviously my username because in order to truly believe it's 3rd party I SHOULD NOT BE THE ONE GIVING YOU A LINK TO CLICK AND GOING TO A BULLSHIT WEBSITE THAT IS A SCREENSHOT OF THE REAL THING FAKE RECORD FAKE LINES ECT.




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LBCMDole

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40.02All Time
40.021 Year
40.0290 Day
40.0230 Day
40.027 Day
9.4024 Hour

All SportsWLUWPeUeWPROIZAOPAURADP
Football6313.966.677.566.9327.770.88-1115.564.50
Soccer141126.1256.0013.5561.8518.070.86+1525.7825.00
Overall201440.0258.8220.9763.1520.561.17+1355.7317.00

Overall Cappermetrics by Pick Type.

Pick TypeWLUWPeUeWPROIZAOPAURADP
Moneyline45444.442.156.457.760.19+2605.739.00
Point Spread9711.4556.255.9858.9112.470.53-1085.748.00
Total7224.5877.7812.9577.5047.951.53-1135.694.50
Overall201440.0258.8220.9763.1520.561.17+1355.7317.00

Overall Cappermetrics by Pick Size.

Pick SizeWLUWPeUeWPROIZAOPAURADP
1.01 - 201-20.00-30.00-100.00-0.30+113521.00
4.01 - 5201342.0260.6121.663.8121.811.26+1055.8416.50
Overall201440.0258.8220.9763.1520.561.17+1355.7317.00

Overall Cappermetrics by Period.

PeriodWLUWPeUeWPROIZAOPAURADP
Game201440.0258.8220.9763.1520.561.17+1355.7317.00
Overall201440.0258.8220.9763.1520.561.17+1355.7317.00

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Overall: 20 - 14, +40.02 units

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TimePickUnits RiskedUnits Won
9/24/16 6:15PM[364] Texas A&M -6 -1085.45
9/24/16 5:00PM[367] UL Lafayette +5.5 -1135.655
9/24/16 4:40PM[390] Northwestern +7.5 -1125.6-5.6
9/24/16 3:00PM[394] Auburn +3.5 -1105.55
9/24/16 9:30AM[2522] Arsenal -0.25 +10755.35
9/24/16 9:30AM[2522] Arsenal +14057
9/24/16 9:30AMChelsea OVER 2.75 -1155.752.5
9/24/16 9:30AM[3882] Newcastle United PK -1306.50
9/24/16 9:30AM[3882] Newcastle United +1545-5
9/24/16 9:00AM[362] Michigan State -3.5 -1045.2-5.2
9/24/16 9:00AM[365] Nevada +5.5 -1065.3-5.3
9/24/16 9:00AM[374] Mississippi -7 -1155.755
9/24/16 7:00AM[2517] Crystal Palace +17058.5
9/24/16 7:00AM[2517] Crystal Palace PK -1105.55
9/24/16 7:00AMCrystal Palace OVER 2.25 -1216.055
9/24/16 7:00AM[2505] Everton -0.25 -1065.3-5.3
9/24/16 7:00AM[2505] Everton +1255-5
9/24/16 7:00AM[2508] Hull City +11352-2
9/24/16 7:00AM[2513] Stoke City +1295-5
9/24/16 7:00AMManchester City OVER 3.25 +10855.4
9/24/16 7:00AM[2520] Manchester City -1.5 -1105.55
9/24/16 7:00AM[2520] Manchester City -29114.555
9/24/16 7:00AM[2508] Hull City +1.75 +1085-5
9/24/16 7:00AMHull City OVER 3 -1266.35
9/24/16 7:00AMEverton OVER 2.5 -1115.55-5.55
9/24/16 7:00AM[2511] Tottenham Hotspur +11055.5
9/24/16 7:00AMTottenham Hotspur OVER 2.25 -1155.755
9/24/16 7:00AM[2511] Tottenham Hotspur -0.5 +1114.55
9/24/16 7:00AM[2513] Stoke City -0.25 -1035-2.5
9/24/16 7:00AMW.B.A OVER 2.25 -1115.55-2.78
9/24/16 4:30AM[2502] Leicester City +4655-5
9/24/16 4:30AM[2502] Leicester City +0.75 +1045-5
9/24/16 4:30AMLeicester City OVER 2.5 -1165.85
9/23/16 6:00PM[310] Utah -2.5 -1236.155
9/23/16 6:00PMUSC OVER 44.5 -1105.55
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DRF TRAINER PATTERNS CHURCHILL DOWNS

TRAINER PATTERNS
TrainerSts.1stW%$%AWP*Sprint*Route*Turf*Stretch-out*Turn back*1st Turf*1st Start*Off claim*Layoff 45 days*Layoff 120 days

Romans Dale 9 3 33.33 44.44 14.73 56/390 85/554 62/580 29/175 15/104 13/90 15/129 0/4 49/479 12/97
Hartman Chris 4 2 50.00 75.00 4.30 116/535 68/315 15/121 18/106 17/86 0/22 7/47 34/142 31/175 6/44
Von Hemel Donnie 5 2 40.00 40.00 25.60 55/396 65/456 22/127 15/134 17/85 7/45 12/108 0/1 28/194 6/63
McPeek Kenneth 6 2 33.33 33.33 8.90 38/248 95/576 36/342 18/117 16/78 12/109 13/136 0/8 28/229 9/81
Howard Neil 4 2 50.00 50.00 11.50 15/139 23/152 8/105 8/54 2/34 1/27 5/49 0/0 8/84 0/15
Blair Jordan 1 1 100.00 100.00 16.40 3/32 5/26 8/52 0/8 1/7 1/10 0/10 0/1 6/27 1/5
Hamilton Anthony Jr 1 1 100.00 100.00 30.80 8/61 9/57 1/27 4/21 2/18 0/5 0/7 0/0 4/48 1/18
Wilkes Ian 11 1 9.09 45.45 9.60 73/550 59/380 45/374 21/160 21/116 6/97 6/143 1/13 38/290 5/79
Cox Brad 7 1 14.29 42.86 5.20 104/438 92/333 88/305 22/94 19/81 20/69 19/97 38/135 64/257 10/62
Moquett Ron 4 1 25.00 75.00 47.40 69/566 51/346 9/70 16/108 15/96 2/24 6/69 4/30 39/288 5/62
Hofmans Grant 1 1 100.00 100.00 16.60 0/9 5/28 1/6 0/5 0/2 0/1 0/5 0/0 0/6 0/3
Hawley Wesley 2 1 50.00 50.00 12.60 43/246 36/203 11/99 9/58 8/46 2/25 6/39 4/17 8/104 2/28
Bradley William 4 1 25.00 75.00 8.60 28/259 29/200 39/384 10/100 7/73 5/78 3/100 0/9 20/138 4/47
Hale Ronald Jr 1 1 100.00 100.00 12.40 9/55 2/26 2/16 1/15 3/14 0/2 1/3 0/1 3/27 1/14
Anderson Doug 5 1 20.00 20.00 13.20 50/310 21/113 1/16 6/39 6/40 0/3 2/27 6/26 11/81 3/35
Dortch David 1 1 100.00 100.00 17.00 5/41 3/34 0/5 0/8 3/9 0/1 0/0 1/5 1/11 0/5
McGee Paul 5 1 20.00 40.00 6.40 18/150 18/106 5/86 5/41 3/30 0/23 0/29 1/5 8/90 0/20
Foley Gregory 4 1 25.00 75.00 8.20 30/256 12/67 16/155 3/36 4/29 2/37 3/42 2/19 13/144 1/26
Stall Albert Jr 2 1 50.00 50.00 7.80 81/417 58/259 31/224 21/111 16/82 3/55 19/123 0/2 59/271 13/65
Arnold George II 6 1 16.67 16.67 7.40 18/170 35/245 20/249 10/75 8/54 1/53 1/71 0/0 21/204 6/52
Montano Angel Sr 4 1 25.00 75.00 43.20 22/167 29/162 7/54 12/44 8/48 0/5 0/4 8/41 4/25 0/7
Asmussen Steven 9 1 11.11 66.67 7.20 431/2221 247/1317 159/940 64/389 44/295 22/201 68/416 40/231 190/1102 36/255
DiVito James 1 1 100.00 100.00 12.20 88/376 20/101 13/136 8/51 7/58 3/29 7/35 0/1 22/128 5/26
DePaz Horacio 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 2/9 3/11 9/31 2/7 1/2 2/6 3/9 0/0 3/15 1/8
Baca Roberto 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 9/36 5/23 0/7 2/9 0/7 0/1 0/5 1/1 1/10 1/8
Vashchenko Pavel 2 0 .00 50.00 .00 1/24 72/334 25/228 5/25 0/15 5/57 8/69 0/0 32/205 14/77
Walsh Brendan 2 0 .00 .00 .00 19/123 26/133 35/286 7/47 7/43 3/44 6/44 2/15 18/148 2/41
Sandmann III William 1 0 .00 .00 .00 19/91 4/22 1/2 0/6 0/5 0/1 2/3 0/0 2/20 0/3
Becker Scott 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 245/904 115/376 17/133 40/156 31/118 5/45 17/113 13/46 71/299 22/107
Kobiskie Dane 1 0 .00 .00 .00 64/337 25/147 33/214 9/73 14/55 8/68 8/92 14/65 28/155 11/53
Glyshaw Tim 3 0 .00 33.33 .00 77/538 53/418 22/187 8/110 12/95 4/30 0/50 8/64 17/124 7/40
Castaneda Marco 1 0 .00 .00 .00 26/180 5/59 5/33 0/34 3/28 2/9 0/17 1/8 2/32 0/12
Williamson Brian 3 0 .00 .00 .00 25/223 33/266 55/345 4/61 4/44 5/32 7/42 0/0 10/93 7/54
Gorder Kellyn 2 0 .00 .00 .00 62/368 70/370 28/221 27/129 18/99 4/48 14/98 2/20 29/224 6/66
Dorris Thomas 1 0 .00 .00 .00 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/1 0/0
Roberts Merrill 1 0 .00 .00 .00 18/225 2/53 0/12 1/22 2/27 0/5 0/20 0/2 2/43 0/16
Humphries Thomas 1 0 .00 .00 .00 5/45 3/41 3/20 0/9 2/9 0/3 0/10 0/0 4/30 0/10
Richard Chris 5 0 .00 40.00 .00 160/700 67/320 2/34 16/84 21/83 0/13 15/67 42/167 45/189 8/58
Michael Brian 1 0 .00 .00 .00 10/71 18/80 7/28 2/10 1/8 0/4 0/5 3/8 7/32 1/11
French Wayne 1 0 .00 .00 .00 1/23 0/8 0/12 0/9 1/7 0/3 0/3 0/2 0/9 0/5
Woodard Joe 2 0 .00 .00 .00 141/552 108/418 1/57 22/90 16/71 1/6 1/5 33/130 45/199 11/25
Boyce Michele 1 0 .00 .00 .00 24/130 8/63 30/221 1/35 3/32 2/21 4/23 0/1 14/104 3/42
Caldwell J 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 108/695 66/357 25/166 10/115 18/103 4/33 11/67 23/156 25/155 3/36
Denzik William Jr 1 0 .00 .00 .00 13/49 1/14 0/17 1/11 2/5 0/6 0/15 0/0 3/13 1/6
Maker Michael 5 0 .00 20.00 .00 136/647 159/834 321/1491 70/313 54/226 33/181 29/208 61/277 177/837 27/144
Sanner Daniel 1 0 .00 .00 .00 7/44 19/94 1/13 1/16 4/16 0/2 0/4 1/8 1/15 0/8
Dupuy Patrick 1 0 .00 .00 .00 8/39 0/7 5/27 0/4 1/3 1/5 2/2 1/3 5/21 0/2
Barnett Bobby 2 0 .00 .00 .00 5/86 5/51 2/35 2/22 0/16 1/14 0/11 0/6 1/30 1/15
Casse Mark 7 0 .00 42.86 .00 190/969 127/751 191/1210 77/402 61/282 38/302 54/386 0/11 129/804 52/319
Wilkinson Clifford 1 0 .00 .00 .00 26/193 8/88 0/13 3/42 6/42 0/6 0/0 3/17 1/37 0/13
O'Connor Robert II 1 0 .00 .00 .00 11/93 4/46 6/58 2/14 2/16 1/3 0/1 3/25 4/44 1/13
Whiting Lynn 3 0 .00 .00 .00 28/143 1/36 3/25 0/19 2/17 0/8 2/16 2/10 9/42 6/18
Gorham Robert 1 0 .00 .00 .00 259/1424 78/436 4/42 37/175 25/137 3/23 14/102 0/1 36/324 13/157
Harty Eoin 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 32/211 48/265 29/234 16/95 6/44 6/75 12/103 0/0 30/201 2/30
Jordan Rick 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 25/215 19/169 0/14 5/57 4/45 0/5 2/24 0/2 11/72 1/12
Von Hemel Kelly 2 0 .00 50.00 .00 68/394 29/244 6/28 9/93 16/63 1/7 12/61 1/25 9/85 7/54
Vasquez Lona 1 0 .00 .00 .00 1/23 0/10 0/3 0/9 0/8 0/1 0/0 0/0 0/4 0/1
Calhoun W 4 0 .00 50.00 .00 303/1355 91/478 103/523 58/263 40/194 19/150 48/251 6/44 109/520 21/118
Dickey Charles 1 0 .00 .00 .00 5/50 5/47 14/68 0/17 1/14 0/10 0/7 2/8 4/19 0/5
Tomlinson Michael 3 0 .00 .00 .00 26/146 21/132 12/109 6/48 4/32 1/16 4/26 6/36 16/95 1/22
Wilkinson Sherman 1 0 .00 .00 .00 0/3 4/21 0/1 0/2 0/2 0/1 0/0 0/0 1/7 0/2
Vance David 5 0 .00 .00 .00 22/192 22/131 8/46 6/30 5/30 0/7 3/14 6/33 4/56 0/15
Amoss Thomas 2 0 .00 100.00 .00 275/814 135/473 64/312 47/169 52/143 8/51 20/114 48/177 113/428 10/49
Stidham Michael 4 0 .00 25.00 .00 82/445 57/332 126/725 27/154 25/130 19/136 26/157 9/26 59/324 22/105
Mott William 1 0 .00 .00 .00 52/363 87/484 193/1248 37/228 31/173 17/234 19/265 1/3 107/659 34/194
Morse Randy 6 0 .00 16.67 .00 75/505 46/271 13/91 9/88 9/74 0/26 9/64 6/46 30/194 8/57
Lauer Michael 1 0 .00 .00 .00 55/555 46/388 23/146 22/168 15/146 3/38 3/55 1/11 13/166 4/71
Jackson James 3 0 .00 .00 .00 61/397 21/156 0/11 6/64 14/65 0/3 5/15 0/3 4/79 0/35
Holt Larry 1 0 .00 .00 .00 36/227 24/137 2/32 10/41 5/31 2/7 2/27 0/1 18/111 4/36
Hinsley David 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 46/282 9/112 21/229 2/55 7/49 1/15 0/17 0/9 8/51 4/12
Hiles Rick 1 0 .00 .00 .00 9/93 10/77 4/21 1/15 2/16 0/4 0/6 2/8 4/42 2/8
Hammond Kim 1 0 .00 100.00 .00 65/407 29/171 15/103 6/55 14/55 0/12 1/29 8/29 12/107 5/58
Fosdick Stephen 1 0 .00 .00 .00 31/252 27/196 3/46 9/63 7/59 0/12 2/16 1/12 5/58 2/42
Flint Bernard 1 0 .00 .00 .00 46/251 20/99 21/122 8/61 9/53 2/19 3/23 2/31 12/83 3/25
Fires William 1 0 .00 .00 .00 23/174 16/138 4/52 5/47 4/35 2/21 5/37 2/8 5/70 1/16
Connelly William 2 0 .00 50.00 .00 42/263 26/129 7/76 8/42 1/35 0/17 5/33 1/7 7/82 2/21
Catalano Wayne 1 0 .00 .00 .00 82/483 59/320 83/447 31/162 17/113 21/98 33/151 2/13 53/315 15/98
Kordenbrock Matt 2 1 50.00 50.00 16.80 18/146 17/94 3/25 2/15 2/12 0/4 0/2 6/33 6/46 0/8
Bourgeois Keith 3 1 33.33 66.67 6.00 112/532 72/292 11/90 22/126 22/109 1/10 2/9 36/166 44/203 2/10
Hendrickson Lori 1 0 .00 .00 .00 3/49 7/45 2/52 1/16 0/13 0/10 0/11 1/7 3/24 0/3
Godsey Claudie 1 0 .00 .00 .00 41/221 5/47 9/57 3/24 5/24 2/14 2/24 1/10 7/41 3/18
Nafzger Carl 1 0 .00 .00 .00 5/45 9/34 3/21 1/10 1/12 1/4 0/3 0/0 5/33 0/6
* -Trainer statistics reflect North American starts from Sep 12, 2013 through Sep 11, 2016

HOW PRODUCTS CAN CLIMB THE SOCIAL LADDER


STRATEGY | BLOG
SEPTEMBER 14, 2016

HOW PRODUCTS CAN CLIMB THE SOCIAL LADDER

  • Henrich GreveProfessor of Entrepreneurship
In a few short years, one ambitious fashionista transported grappa from reviled to respectable.

Let me start this post with a confession: I like whisky and think the different types taste very different from each other, I also like cognac but can’t tell them apart very well, and, for grappa, I can tell the different types apart but don’t really have an opinion on which ones are better. OK, so now you know my bias, which is important for what follows, and many of you have probably made an assessment of how (un)cultured I am.

But why did I mention grappa alongside the other two? A few years ago, that would have been pretty insulting to whisky and cognac, but now it is natural, at least among some people. And that is a big change with possible implications for managers. In a paper inAdministrative Science Quarterly, Giuseppe Delmestri (of WU Vienna University of Economics and Business) and Royston Greenwood (of the School of Business, University of Alberta) write about the Cinderella-to-queen transformation of grappa, and what it means for our understanding of categories in general, and specifically, organisations in markets.

The paper expertly describes how a dilemma for grappa producers, and their solution to it, solves a puzzle for researchers: why do different product types have different status rankings and how much does that change over time? Historically, grappa was cheap booze for the underclass. This was not ideal for grappa makers, who would have very much liked higher prices. But as long as rich people everywhere – including Italy, its country of origin – thought that grappa was no good, preferring other drinks instead, prices were not going to rise.

Some grappa producers were able to find a path to higher status. Interestingly, grappa’s complete image turnaround was accomplished not only in the space of just a few years (the mid-to-late 1970s), but also immediately after several high-profile failed attempts including one that led to bankruptcy. Delmestri and Greenwood detail the process in which one producer in particular, Giannola Nonino, essentially created a luxury market for artisanal grappa. How successful was she? Without making any changes to the grappa itself, she was able to hike its price by 70 percent in a mere four years. By the end of the 1970s, premium grappa had supplanted foreign spirits as the quaff of choice at Italy’s most chic gatherings.

Three steps to status elevation

The paper has much more detail than I can give here, but the short story is that a rise in status involves distancing from the low-status past and present (detachment), association with related high-status products (emulation) and connections to the broader society (sublimation).

Detachment was a key piece of the puzzle for Nonino. She recognized that grappa’s reputation as a drink for manual labourers would prevent its acceptance by the sophisticated set. So instead of changing the product, she changed its image, starting with the packaging. In order to make grappa look the part, Nonino adopted architect-designed bottles modelled on perfume flagons. Plunging into her role as the public face of premium grappa, Nonino also upgraded her own appearance. She was often seen decked out in the latest Armani and Valentino couture to personally deliver her product to Italy’s finest hotels and restaurants.

Emulation came into play as Nonino sought to cultivate associations between grappa and French wine, employing tactics standard for winemakers but unheard of for grappa producers: “using a single-varietal grape, highlighting the distiller’s family, and labelling to disclose the region of origin", as the paper states. Interestingly, this contradicts one strand of research, which argues that emulation strategies work best when they seek to bridge large, not small, gaps between product categories. Nonino leveraged proximity – the fact that both grappa and wine are grape-derived – rather than difference to create associations for customers. The authors suggest that in mature industries, status elevation is accomplished by activating such points of comparison for the benefit of the most sophisticated audience segments.

Sublimation describes Nonino’s overarching brand vision. She very deliberately positioned her family’s artisanal grappa as part of a larger cultural turn toward home-grown authenticity and away from mass-produced homogenisation. Warm relationships with influential journalists and critics helped promulgate the Nonino narrative of a single-family artisanal grappa producer steadfastly upholding Italian tradition and culture. Also, she sought to install the Nonino name within the established cultural order, launching a literary prize (bestowed at an awards ceremony held in the Nonino distillery) for works treating themes of anti-consumerism and rural culture. At the same time, Nonino embraced contemporary trends in Milanese design and fashion in order to emphasise the coexistence of tradition and modernity.

Pulling the right levers

All needed to be done and the “raw materials" for all needed to be present. The story of grappa’s rise to high-status is interesting because it shows exactly how customers can change their minds when all the right levers are pulled. It took bottles designed to resemble perfume flagons, single-grape distilling and regional labelling and linking to Milanese high fashion to make grappa fashionable and prestigious, but it could be done.

I think the story is also interesting because it suggests a condition that needs to be present for it to work. Grappa became high-status after a long campaign. Can any regional or local product accomplish the same? Before you say yes, consider this: Italy is a pretty cool place, so grappa had a good starting point.

Henrich R. Greve is a Professor of Entrepreneurship at INSEAD and the John H. Loudon Chaired Professor of International Management. He is also the Editor of Administrative Science Quarterly and a co-author of Network Advantage: How to Unlock Value from Your Alliances and Partnerships. You can read his blog here.

Follow INSEAD Knowledge on Twitterand Facebook

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IN THE NEWS TODAY

U.S. stock futures were higher, ahead of this morning's start of Fed's two-day September meeting. Wall Street gave up strong Monday morning gains to close slightly lower. Apple (AAPL), which soared nearly 12 percent last week, was a drag on the market. (CNBC)

The Fed releases its policy statement and economic projections tomorrow afternoon, and central bank chair Janet Yellen holds a post-meeting news conference. Expectations are low for an interest rate hike, but December is at about 50 percent odds. (CNBC)

Perhaps overshadowing the Fed, the Bank of Japan also begins a two-day meeting today, with talk the central bank there could cut rates further into negative territory, but reduce purchases of long-dated bonds, while continuing to short-dated purchases. (CNBC)

Oil was under some pressure this morning, after Venezuela said global supplies were 10 percent oversupplied. Technical indicators also pointed to cheaper prices. U.S. crude rose Monday, the second advance in three sessions. (Reuters)




Ahmad Khan Rahami, the suspect in a series of explosions in New York and New Jersey, was charged with five counts of attempted murder of a law enforcement officer in a shootout with police Monday morning in New Jersey. (NBC News)

Authorities said the key to breaking the case was a fingerprint found on an unexploded bomb in New York. Meanwhile, flip phones used on devices Chelsea and Seaside, New Jersey were both bought at same store last year. (NBC News)

President Barack Obama plans to push world leaders today to do more to meet the needs of the world's refugees, in his final address as president to the annual United Nations summit in New York. (USA Today)

Against the backdrop of the U.N. gathering, billionaire investor George Soros is pledging to invest up to $500 million in programs and companies benefiting migrants and refugees fleeing life threatening situations. (CNBC)

Donald Trump Jr. set off Twitter outrage, comparing Syrian refugees to poisonous Skittles candy. His tweet read: "If I had a bowl of skittles and I told you just three would kill you. Would you take a handful? That's our Syrian refugee problem." (CNBC)

The possibility of a Donald Trump victory over Hillary Clinton, although still small, has risenamong U.S.-based business leaders, while expectations that Clinton will assume the presidency have fallen. (CNBC)

George H.W. Bush, who lost his presidential re-election campaign to Bill Clinton in 1992, plans to vote for Hillary Clinton. That's according to Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, the former Maryland lieutenant governor. (Politico)

The federal government is issuing new self-driving vehicle guidelines. Effective immediately, the rules tell automakers, suppliers, and tech firms what's expected as they develop and deploy automated technologies. (CNBC)

In prepared testimony, Wells Fargo Chairman and CEO John Stumpf plans to tell the Senate Banking Committee at a hearing today he's "deeply sorry" for the unauthorized account scandal, and takes "full responsibility." (NY Times)

Samsung said its investigation into one of two reports of Galaxy Note 7 fires in China found no battery problem. The electronics giant announced a global recall of 2.5 million devices due to complaints of batteries burning up. (AP)

Wal-Mart (WMT) has completedits $3 billion acquisition of internet retailer Jet.com. Jet's founder Marc Lore, who's joining Wal-Mart as head of U.S. e-commerce, gets a huge payday from the deal. (Reuters)

As General Motors (GM) looks to take on Tesla's (TSLA) upcoming Model 3 mass market electric car, it set the price on the Chevrolet Bolt at $37,495, below $30,000 once a federal tax credit is applied. (USA Today)

GM and the Canadian autoworkers union announced atentative contract deal early this morning, averting a 3,900-worker strike that would have shut some manufacturing facilities north of the border. (Reuters)

American Airlines (AAL) employees today start wearing a new uniform, the first in nearly three decades, representing one of the last transitions of the American-US Airways merger, which closed in late 2013. (USA Today)

BY THE NUMBERS

Investors will be parsing this morning's August housing starts and building permits data for signs of excessive weakness or strength that might sway the Fed. Economists see starts falling 1.7 percent and permits rising 1.8 percent.

On the earnings front, Dow transportation component FedEx (FDX), software maker Adobe Systems (ADBE), and home builder KB Home (KBH) are out with quarterly results after closing bell on Wall Street this afternoon.

Ascena Retail (ASNA) reported adjusted profit of 8 cents per share, half of what Wall Street had been expecting. The Ann Taylor parent also warned on guidance. The stock was down more than 20 percent in the premarket.

Homebuilder Lennar (LEN) reported better-than-expected adjusted earnings of $1.01 per share. Revenue of $2.83 billion also exceed forecasts. Orders for new homes were up 8 percent.

STOCKS TO WATCH

Community Health Systems (CYH) was soaring in premarket trading; up about as much as Monday's loss on reports that the company is in talks to sell assets to Apollo Global Management (APO). 

Billionaire investor Carl Icahn slashed his stake in Chesapeake Energy (CHK) by more than half. Icahn cited tax planning as the reason for the move, which reduced his stake to 4.55 percent from 9.4 percent. 

Pier 1 Imports (PIR) now has hedge fund firm Alden Global Capital as a 9.5 percent shareholder. The fund said it has been in contact with the home goods retailer's management about representation on the board. 

JPMorgan (JPM) is naming Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) investment officer Todd Combs to the bank's board.

Intel (INTC) named Bob Swan as its next chief financial officer, replacing longtime CFO Stacy Smith. Swan was eBay's (EBAY) CFO for nine years and helped guide the spinoff of PayPal (PYPL). 

FedEx (FDX) plans to raise shipping rates in 2017, with an average 3.9 percent increase at FedEx Express and 4.9 percent for its ground services. Rival UPS (UPS) recently unveiled an average rate increase of 4. 9 percent. 

WATERCOOLER

Fast food chains are testingupscale menu items, such as a Pesto Mozzarella Melt at McDonald's (MCD) and Truffle Bacon Cheeseburgers and Bacon Truffle Fries at Wendy's (WEN). (CNBC) 


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IN THE NEWS TODAY

U.S. stock futures were higher, ahead of this morning's start of Fed's two-day September meeting. Wall Street gave up strong Monday morning gains to close slightly lower. Apple (AAPL), which soared nearly 12 percent last week, was a drag on the market. (CNBC)

The Fed releases its policy statement and economic projections tomorrow afternoon, and central bank chair Janet Yellen holds a post-meeting news conference. Expectations are low for an interest rate hike, but December is at about 50 percent odds. (CNBC)

Perhaps overshadowing the Fed, the Bank of Japan also begins a two-day meeting today, with talk the central bank there could cut rates further into negative territory, but reduce purchases of long-dated bonds, while continuing to short-dated purchases. (CNBC)

Oil was under some pressure this morning, after Venezuela said global supplies were 10 percent oversupplied. Technical indicators also pointed to cheaper prices. U.S. crude rose Monday, the second advance in three sessions. (Reuters)




Ahmad Khan Rahami, the suspect in a series of explosions in New York and New Jersey, was charged with five counts of attempted murder of a law enforcement officer in a shootout with police Monday morning in New Jersey. (NBC News)

Authorities said the key to breaking the case was a fingerprint found on an unexploded bomb in New York. Meanwhile, flip phones used on devices Chelsea and Seaside, New Jersey were both bought at same store last year. (NBC News)

President Barack Obama plans to pushworld leaders today to do more to meet the needs of the world's refugees, in his final address as president to the annual United Nations summit in New York. (USA Today)

Against the backdrop of the U.N. gathering, billionaire investor George Soros is pledging to invest up to $500 million in programs and companies benefiting migrants and refugees fleeing life threatening situations. (CNBC)

Donald Trump Jr. set off Twitter outrage, comparing Syrian refugees to poisonous Skittles candy. His tweet read: "If I had a bowl of skittles and I told you just three would kill you. Would you take a handful? That's our Syrian refugee problem." (CNBC)

The possibility of a Donald Trump victory over Hillary Clinton, although still small, has risen among U.S.-based business leaders, while expectations that Clinton will assume the presidency have fallen. (CNBC)

George H.W. Bush, who lost his presidential re-election campaign to Bill Clinton in 1992, plans to vote for Hillary Clinton. That's according to Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, the former Maryland lieutenant governor. (Politico)

The federal government is issuing new self-driving vehicle guidelines. Effective immediately, the rules tell automakers, suppliers, and tech firms what's expected as they develop and deploy automated technologies. (CNBC)

In prepared testimony, Wells Fargo Chairman and CEO John Stumpf plans to tell the Senate Banking Committee at a hearing today he's "deeply sorry" for the unauthorized account scandal, and takes "full responsibility." (NY Times)

Samsung said its investigation into one of two reports of Galaxy Note 7 fires in China found no battery problem. The electronics giant announced a global recall of 2.5 million devices due to complaints of batteries burning up. (AP)

Wal-Mart (WMT) has completed its $3 billion acquisition of internet retailerJet.com. Jet's founder Marc Lore, who's joining Wal-Mart as head of U.S. e-commerce, gets a huge payday from the deal. (Reuters)

As General Motors (GM) looks to take on Tesla's (TSLA) upcoming Model 3 mass market electric car, it set the priceon the Chevrolet Bolt at $37,495, below $30,000 once a federal tax credit is applied. (USA Today)

GM and the Canadian autoworkers union announced a tentative contract deal early this morning, averting a 3,900-worker strike that would have shut some manufacturing facilities north of the border. (Reuters)

American Airlines (AAL) employees today start wearing a new uniform, the first in nearly three decades, representing one of the last transitions of the American-US Airways merger, which closed in late 2013. (USA Today)

BY THE NUMBERS

Investors will be parsing this morning's August housing starts and building permits data for signs of excessive weakness or strength that might sway the Fed. Economists see starts falling 1.7 percent and permits rising 1.8 percent.

On the earnings front, Dow transportation component FedEx (FDX), software maker Adobe Systems (ADBE), and home builder KB Home (KBH) are out with quarterly results after closing bell on Wall Street this afternoon.

Ascena Retail (ASNA) reported adjusted profit of 8 cents per share, half of what Wall Street had been expecting. The Ann Taylor parent also warned on guidance. The stock was down more than 20 percent in the premarket.

Homebuilder Lennar (LEN) reported better-than-expected adjusted earnings of $1.01 per share. Revenue of $2.83 billion also exceed forecasts. Orders for new homes were up 8 percent.

STOCKS TO WATCH

Community Health Systems (CYH) was soaring in premarket trading; up about as much as Monday's loss on reports that the company is in talks to sell assets to Apollo Global Management (APO).

Billionaire investor Carl Icahn slashed his stake in Chesapeake Energy (CHK) by more than half. Icahn cited tax planning as the reason for the move, which reduced his stake to 4.55 percent from 9.4 percent.

Pier 1 Imports (PIR) now has hedge fund firm Alden Global Capital as a 9.5 percent shareholder. The fund said it has been in contact with the home goods retailer's management about representation on the board.

JPMorgan (JPM) is naming Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) investment officer Todd Combs to the bank's board.

Intel (INTC) named Bob Swan as its next chief financial officer, replacing longtime CFO Stacy Smith. Swan was eBay's (EBAY) CFO for nine years and helped guide the spinoff of PayPal (PYPL).

FedEx (FDX) plans to raise shipping rates in 2017, with an average 3.9 percent increase at FedEx Express and 4.9 percent for its ground services. Rival UPS (UPS) recently unveiled an average rate increase of 4. 9 percent.

WATERCOOLER

Fast food chains are testing upscale menu items, such as a Pesto Mozzarella Melt at McDonald's (MCD) and Truffle Bacon Cheeseburgers and Bacon Truffle Fries at Wendy's (WEN). (CNBC

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.