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Number 8860726. The services they offer are great differentiators and help make advisors a go-to resource for navigating the intricacies of retirement income planning (which is very complex), healthcare-cost planning (a too often overlooked major expense), and as an end-of-life services guide (in the case of bQuest).
As of 2025, the number of billionaires worldwide has surpassed 3,000 people, with their total net worth more than $16 trillion. From hedge fund kings and private equity masters to investment bankers and wealth managers, the world of finance provides virtually unparalleled conditions for compound growth of capital.
There are about 13 different portfoliomanagers each focused on a different sub-sector. They run long short across each of these, and they’ve put up some pretty impressive numbers over the past couple of years. And to the credit of the portfoliomanager that I was working with Josh Fisher, we were actually up that year.
As an analyst and on the line portfoliomanager I can tell you that estimate revision is one of the more successful factors in stock selection. Healthcare, another example is largely defensive and has secular tailwinds. It’s also a report card on how good or bad the analysts were at getting the number right.
And now we have a number of different hedge funds, some we have in the macro, we have multi-Strat, we have point hedge funds with in technology in the healthcare field. Where, 00:06:25 [Speaker Changed] Where were you managing those for in 96? Do do we care about round numbers like a hundred million or 500 million in sales?
She has had a number of different positions within PIM, including managing their flagship core real estate fund. Before she moved into management, she has been on all of the big lists. I worked in sort of a quasi portfoliomanagement role for like a single client account type business. I had two stops before then.
And I did the math, and I think at that point in time, roughly speaking, assets in ETS were roughly just 10 percent, 12 percent of assets in mutual funds and I was pretty convinced that that number was to increase significantly. I was employee number 10. RITHOLTZ: Which is really a pretty big number. billion dollars in AUM.
FTV 20% “Healthcare – industry recovery is on track as labor and productivity challenges moderate.” It is a market-value weighted index (stock price times number of shares outstanding), with each stock's weight in the Index proportionate to its market value.
Determining the optimal number of clients for a financial advisor depends on various factors, including individual preferences, business models, and client demographics. There is compelling evidence suggesting that the cognitive capacities of humans may impose a natural limit on the number of client relationships one can effectively manage.
Yeah, I did that early in the 1990s, that I had some understanding of portfoliomanagement after allows in the investment industry, it seemed to me I should have some understanding, and it was odd that the firm that I worked for torpedo didn’t require any training at all, except you know what they wanted you to have.
So I had oversight of our 420 plus the number’s probably even greater now, first mutual funds and increasingly ETFs. And we do, as you know, all of our passively managed products or our managed in-house by our investment management group. Tell us what product development means specifically at Vanguard.
And Wall Street didn’t work out for a variety of reasons, but I ended up working sort of an adjacent industry in the portfoliomanagement software business, and really wasn’t where my passion was. I was employee number one in London. Let’s talk a little bit about portfolio analytics, financial planning tools.
He is the Chief Investment Officer of Asset and Wealth Management at Goldman Sachs. He’s a member of the management committee. He co-chairs a number of the asset management investment committees. So we really had to work through that over a number of years. What can I say about Julian Salisbury? We love it.
BARRY RITHOLTZ, HOST, MASTERS IN BUSINESS: This week on the podcast, I have an extra special guest, Tom Wagner, co-founder and portfoliomanager at Knighthead Capital. WAGNER: You know there are a number of things that occurred. . ~~~ ANNOUNCER: This is “Masters in Business” with Barry Ritholtz on Bloomberg Radio.
So healthcare is your focus, your entire career. And one of the professors at Columbia who was a mentor of mine and, and I had worked with Izzy Edelman, his son, Joe Edelman, founded Perceptive, which is a firm that has been tremendously successful as, as healthcare investors. And that’s fascinating to me.
Health care’s weight in the R2G grew as a result of the dramatic increase in the number of early-stage biotech firms, with fortunes that could hinge on the results of one or two clinical trials. In contrast, approximately 27% of the over 625 IPOs since 2019 were in those healthcare sub sectors.
Ritholtz ] 00:09:37 I recall reading, and I know you can’t say this, but I recall reading that fund return something like 19% a year, some just astounding number. Crazy number. And I think my employers appreciated it because I wasn’t trying to, you know, be a portfoliomanager before my time. Some, some, yeah.
And, and then what we’re having is this interesting debate is, so, okay, so go back, I’m a port, you know, think about an active portfoliomanager saying, wait a second, these indexes are eating my lunch. And oh yeah, the economy’s collapsing, but I have healthcare and retirement. I’ll be okay.
DAMODARAN: I am interested in numbers. I’m naturally a numbers person. To me, storytelling is much more — I mean, if you think about the history of humanity, for thousands of years, the way we pass down information was with stories, not numbers. It has allowed for this acceleration of number crunching.
Lisa Shallet, chief Investment Officer at Morgan Stanley has had a number of fascinating roles in Wall Street, which is kind of amusing considering she had no interest in working on Wall Street, and yet she was CEO and chairman at Sanford Bernstein. I was traveling and on an airplane all the time. So I took the plunge, I quit.
So it’s got this math angle where it, you know, it’s all numbers, but then there’s this behavioral angle and psychological angle where, you know, it’s, it’s kind of a fun problem to tackle. It’s kind of a silly number, but people are going to think you’re smart or dumb based on that number.
00:09:37 [Speaker Changed] So again, I was on the avatar side of this y avatar broader organization, which was institutional money management, managing money for a lot of large corporate plans and foundations and endowments. And I was a portfoliomanager, so I was doing bottom up research and picking stocks.
Barry Ritholtz : This week on the podcast, another extra special guest, Tony Kim, is managing director at BlackRock, where he heads the fundamental equity technology group helping to oversee all of the active technology investments BlackRock makes. I must have worked for 30, 40 portfoliomanagers across four, four or five investment firms.
The economic dislocation, the health risks, just the mayhem that took place, but from the perspective of a number of corporate CEOs, Bill Ackman of Pershing Square Capital, the hedge fund that had a couple of amazing trades based on this. So, so you choose a number of specific industries or did you choose them? RITHOLTZ: Wild number.
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