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Houston billionaire John Arnold plans to give away $4B to philanthropy
Posted on 5/18/13 at 12:58 pm
Posted on 5/18/13 at 12:58 pm
quote:
Arnold, it turns out, had accumulated a fortune estimated at $4 billion in the past decade—only a handful of people on Wall Street made more during that time. Although he had not yet announced it, Arnold had decided to give almost all of it away. In October 2012, he closed his hedge fund, Centaurus Energy, and retired. In U.S. history, there may have never been a self-made individual with so much money who devoted himself to philanthropy at such a young age. ?
But as Taubes and Attia discovered, Arnold and his wife, Laura, have a somewhat unique approach to giving. Most billionaires tend to write checks to good causes they're part of, hospitals where they were treated or universities they attended. These are the so-called "grateful-recipient" donors. Or there are donors who make sizable gifts to meet an obvious need in a community, such as hunger or education. But at a time when charitable giving in the U.S. is still down from its peak in 2007, the Arnolds want to try something new and somewhat grander. John says the goal is to make "transformational" changes to society.
The Arnolds want to see if they can use their money to solve some of the country's biggest problems through data analysis and science, with an unsentimental focus on results and an aversion to feel-good projects—the success of which can't be quantified. No topic is too ambitious: Along with obesity, the Arnolds plan to dig into criminal justice and pension reform, among others. Anne Milgram, the former New Jersey attorney general hired to tackle the criminal-justice issue, has a name for all this: She calls it the "Moneyball" approach to giving, a reference to the book and movie about how the Oakland A's used smart statistical analysis to upend some of baseball's conventional wisdom. And the Arnolds are in no hurry for answers. Indeed, they believe patience is a key resource behind their giving.
A young Houston couple is planning to give away $4 billion—but only to projects that prove they are worth it. Can they redefine the world of philanthropy?
Posted on 5/18/13 at 1:04 pm to rickgrimes
The guy is only 40?! And self made? Welp, my day is shot.
ETA: Oh, he graduated from Vanderbilt in 3 years with 2 degrees. Never mind. Carry on.
ETA: Oh, he graduated from Vanderbilt in 3 years with 2 degrees. Never mind. Carry on.
This post was edited on 5/18/13 at 1:06 pm
Posted on 5/18/13 at 1:10 pm to GaryMyMan
I think he worked at enron and got some giant bonus i read at like 25 $7 or $8M as a trader and used it to start his own fund centaurus.....Ive read alot about him in the past
Posted on 5/18/13 at 1:24 pm to ThaBigFella
quote:
I think he worked at enron and got some giant bonus i read at like 25 $7 or $8M as a trader and used it to start his own fund centaurus.....Ive read alot about him in the past
You're quite right. I think it was a $7 million bonus from Enron. He was a big-time natural gas trader and was pivotal in helping to blow up the Amaranth hedge fund back in 2006.
Posted on 5/18/13 at 3:29 pm to GaryMyMan
quote:
The guy is only 40?! And self made? Welp, my day is shot.
Quit posting and start working.
Posted on 5/18/13 at 6:25 pm to Jim Rockford
He made Enron I think 3/4 of a billion dollars trading natural gas in a year. IN A YEAR.
He took that money and started a hedge fund.
He retired not only because he was rich beyond most peoples imagination but also because the market went to shite and became really unpredictable. He's brilliant though and supposedly a genuinely nice guy.
He took that money and started a hedge fund.
He retired not only because he was rich beyond most peoples imagination but also because the market went to shite and became really unpredictable. He's brilliant though and supposedly a genuinely nice guy.
Posted on 5/18/13 at 6:28 pm to barry
Oh yea from 2002-2006 his hedge fund was rumored to have an average return of ~250% a year.
This post was edited on 5/18/13 at 6:29 pm
Posted on 5/18/13 at 7:23 pm to rickgrimes
quote:
Arnold, it turns out, had accumulated a fortune estimated at $4 billion in the past decade—only a handful of people on Wall Street made more during that time. Although he had not yet announced it, Arnold had decided to give almost all of it away.
Commie S.O.B.
Posted on 5/18/13 at 11:41 pm to Draconian Sanctions
Reading his Wikipedia profile made me legitimately depressed 
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