New Evidence Raises Serious Questions About Kingsford Capitalâs âDonationâ to the Columbia Journalism Review
Posted on 06 January 2010 by Mark Mitchell
Tags: Columbia Journalism Review, Dan Loeb, donation, Escala, Jim Chanos, Kingsford Capital, Kynikos, naked short selling, SAC Capital, Steve Cohen, Third Point Capital
A blog published by the University of North Carolina School of Journalism reported recently that Steve Cohen of hedge fund SAC Capital managed to kill a story by Reuters reporter Matt Goldstein. It seems that Goldstein was going to shed some light on allegations that Cohen engaged in insider trading. Cohen didnât like that, and got in touch with Goldsteinâs superiors.
It remains unclear how Cohen convinced Goldsteinâs superiors to shelve their journalistic ethics, but it is not surprising that he succeeded. After all, Cohen is âthe most powerful trader on the Street.â He is also part of a network of closely affiliated hedge fund managers that for many years all but dictated much of what was published by the New York financial press.
Three years ago, while working for the Columbia Journalism Review, a magazine affiliated with Columbia Universityâs school of journalism in New York, I began investigating this network of hedge funds. I worked for many months on this story, and compiled evidence that the hedge fund managers, including Steve Cohen, had developed extremely odd relationships with small number of dishonest journalists.
http://www.deepcapture.com/new-evid...s-donation-to-the-columbia-journalism-review/
Posted on 06 January 2010 by Mark Mitchell
Tags: Columbia Journalism Review, Dan Loeb, donation, Escala, Jim Chanos, Kingsford Capital, Kynikos, naked short selling, SAC Capital, Steve Cohen, Third Point Capital
A blog published by the University of North Carolina School of Journalism reported recently that Steve Cohen of hedge fund SAC Capital managed to kill a story by Reuters reporter Matt Goldstein. It seems that Goldstein was going to shed some light on allegations that Cohen engaged in insider trading. Cohen didnât like that, and got in touch with Goldsteinâs superiors.
It remains unclear how Cohen convinced Goldsteinâs superiors to shelve their journalistic ethics, but it is not surprising that he succeeded. After all, Cohen is âthe most powerful trader on the Street.â He is also part of a network of closely affiliated hedge fund managers that for many years all but dictated much of what was published by the New York financial press.
Three years ago, while working for the Columbia Journalism Review, a magazine affiliated with Columbia Universityâs school of journalism in New York, I began investigating this network of hedge funds. I worked for many months on this story, and compiled evidence that the hedge fund managers, including Steve Cohen, had developed extremely odd relationships with small number of dishonest journalists.
http://www.deepcapture.com/new-evid...s-donation-to-the-columbia-journalism-review/