List of Jewish American businesspeople in finance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
US flag finance.svg
This is a partial list of notable Jewish American business executives in the finance industry. For other Jewish Americans, see Lists of Jewish Americans.

Finance[]

Lloyd C. Blankfein (right)
Michael Bloomberg
Asher Edelman
Laurence D. Fink
Richard S. Fuld Jr.
Henry Kravis
Michael Milken
Ron Perelman (right)
Stephen A. Schwarzman
Jim Simons
George Soros
Bruce Wasserstein
Sanford I. Weill
  • Leonard L. Abess (born 1948), owner and CEO of City National Bank of Florida[1]
  • Bill Ackman (born 1966), hedge fund manager and investor, founder of Pershing Square Capital Management and co-founder of investment firm Gotham Partners[2]
  • Les Alexander (born 1944), investor, founder of the Alexander Group, former owner of NBA's Houston Rockets[3]
  • Sergey Aleynikov (born 1969/1970), Russian-American founder of financial consulting firm Omnibius, LLC[4]
  • Bill (born 1949), Peter (1952–2017), Susan (born 1946) and Ted Alfond (born 1945), investors; members of the Alfond family[5]
  • James Altucher (born 1968), hedge fund manager and tech investor, founder of StockPickr[6]
  • Shari Arison (born 1957), American-Israeli investor, owner of Bank Hapoalim; member of the Arison family[7]
  • Jeff Aronson (born 1958), co-founder of Centerbridge Partners, former partner at Angelo, Gordon & Co.[8][9]
  • Cliff Asness (born 1966), hedge fund manager, co-founder of AQR Capital[10][11]
  • Jules Bache (1861–1944), founder of J. S. Bache & Co.[12]
  • Ronald S. Baron (born 1943), investor, founder of Baron Capital Management[13]
  • Joseph Ainslie Bear (1878–1955), co-founder of investment bank Bear Stearns[14]
  • Jordan Belfort (born 1962), former stock broker, founder of Stratton Oakmont, Inc.[15]
  • Rebecka Belldegrun (born 1950), Finnish-born investor, CEO of BellCo Capital; wife of Arie Belldegrun[16]
  • Bob Benmosche (1944–2015), investment banker, former president and CEO of the American International Group (AIG)[17]
  • David Bergstein (born 1962), founder of private equity firm Cyrano Group[18]
  • Bruce R. Berkowitz (born 1957/1958), founder of Fairholme Capital Management[19]
  • Paul P. (born 1934) and Zalman Bernstein (1926–1999), co-founders of investment-management firm Sanford C. Bernstein & Company (now AllianceBernstein L.P.)[20]
  • Leon Black (born 1951), co-founder of Apollo Global Management, LLC[21]
  • Lloyd C. Blankfein (born 1954), former CEO of the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.[22]
  • Leonard Blavatnik (born 1957), Ukraine-born British-American investor, founder of Access Industries (owns Warner Music Group, Deezer, DAZN)[23][24][25]
  • Michael Bloomberg (born 1942), co-founder of global financial services, software and mass media company Bloomberg L.P.[26]
  • Alfred S. Bloomingdale (1916–1982), co-founder of Diners Club International[27]
  • Richard C. Blum (born 1935), founder of Blum Capital[28]
  • Ivan Boesky (born 1937), former financier and insider trader, founder of Ivan F. Boesky & Company[29][30]
  • David Bonderman (born 1942), co-founder of TPG Capital[31]
  • Bill Browder (born 1964), American-British financier, co-founder of Hermitage Capital Management[32]
  • B. Gerald Cantor (1916–1996), founder of Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P.[33]
  • Arthur L. Carter (born 1931), investment banker, co-founder of Carter, Berlind, & Weill[34]
  • Stanley Chais (1926–2010), former investment advisor and money manager[35]
  • Marshall Cogan (born 1937), former partner at Cogan, Berlind, Weill & Levitt and founder of the United Automotive Group[36]
  • Abby Joseph Cohen (born 1953), advisory director at Goldman Sachs[37]
  • Peter A. Cohen (born 1946/1947), chairman and CEO of Cowen Inc.[38]
  • Steven A. Cohen (born 1956), hedge fund manager, founder of Point72 Asset Management and S.A.C. Capital Advisors[39]
  • Gary Cohn (born 1960), former COO of the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.; Chief Economic Advisor to President Trump (until March 2018)[40]
  • Leon Cooperman (born 1943), investor and hedge fund manager, chairman of Omega Advisors[41][42]
  • Mark Cuban (born 1958), start-up investor, owner of NBA's Dallas Mavericks, co-founder of 2929 Entertainment[43]
  • Jon P. Diamond (born 1957), co-founder of the Safe Auto Insurance Company[44]
  • Glenn Dubin (born 1957), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Highbridge Capital Management, co-owner of global merchant firm CCI[45]
  • Asher Edelman (born 1939), Corporate raider[29]
  • Joseph Edelman (born 1955), founder of hedge fund Perceptive Advisors[46]
  • David Einhorn (born 1968), investor, hedge fund manager, founder of Greenlight Capital[47]
  • Lewis Eisenberg (born 1942), co-founder of private equity firm Granite Capital International Group L.P.[48]
  • Michael R. Eisenson, co-founder of Charlesbank Capital Partners[49]
  • Steve Eisman (born 1962), investor, co-founder of Emrys Partners, managing director at Neuberger Berman[50]
  • Israel "Izzy" Englander (born 1948), investor, founder of Millennium Management, LLC[51]
  • Boris Epshteyn (born 1982), Russian-born investment banker[48]
  • Jeffrey Epstein (1953–2019), financier, founder of Intercontinental Assets Group Inc. and J. Epstein Co.[52]
  • Andrew Fastow (born 1961), former CFO of Enron[53]
  • Irwin Federman (born 1936), General Partner of U.S. Venture Partners (USVP)[54]
  • Steve Feinberg (born 1960), co-founder of Cerberus Capital Management, L.P.[55]
  • Karen Finerman (born 1965), co-founder of hedge fund Metropolitan Capital Advisors[56]
  • Laurence D. Fink (born 1952), financial executive, co-founder of BlackRock, Inc., the world's largest shadow bank[57][58]
  • William S. Fisher (born 1958), investor, hedge fund manager, founder of Manzanita Capital Limited; Gap Inc. heir[59]
  • Lee Fixel (born 1980), investor, partner at Tiger Management[60]
  • John Frankel (born 1961), British-American founder of ff Venture Capital[61]
  • Martin Frankel (born 1954), investor, founder of Winthrop Capital; known for using astrology to make financial trading decisions[62][63]
  • Jacob A. Frenkel (born 1943), Israeli-American chairman of JPMorgan Chase International[64][65]
  • Tully Friedman (born 1942), co-founder of Hellman & Friedman (H&F), Friedman Fleischer & Lowe (FFL)[66][67]
  • Jeremy Frommer, hedge fund manager, former co-CEO of RBC Capital Markets[68]
  • Richard S. Fuld Jr. (born 1946), former (and last) CEO of Lehman Brothers[69]
  • Lewis Glucksman (1925–2006), CEO and chairman of Lehman Brothers, Kuhn, Loeb Inc.[70][71]
  • Stanley Gold (born 1942), former president and CEO of Shamrock Holdings, Inc. (Roy E. Disney's family investment firm)[72]
  • Stanley Golder (1929–2000), co-founder of private equity firm GTCR LLC[73]
  • Marcus Goldman (1821–1904), German-born co-founder of Goldman Sachs; member of the Goldman-Sachs family[74]
  • David Gottesman (born 1926), founder of First Manhattan Co.; member of the Gottesman family[75]
  • Noam Gottesman (born 1961), Israeli-born British-American hedge fund manager and investor, co-founder of GLG Partners, CEO of TOMS Capital[76]
  • Jonathan D. Gray (born 1970), president and COO of the Blackstone Group, chairman of Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc.[77]
  • Leonard I. Green (1934–2002), founder of Leonard Green & Partners, West Coast's largest LBO firm[78]
  • Alan Greenspan (born 1926), former Chair of the Federal Reserve, (co-)founder of Townsend-Greenspan & Co. and Greenspan Associates LLC[79]
  • John Gutfreund (1929–2016), former CEO of Salomon Brothers[80][81]
  • Rich Handler (born 1961), banker, chairman and CEO of independent investment bank Jefferies Group[82]
  • Joshua Harris (born 1965), investor, co-founder of Apollo Global Management, LLC, owner of the New Jersey Devils and the Philadelphia 76ers[83][84]
  • Adrian (born 1966) and Nick Hanauer (born 1959), venture capitalists[85]
  • Alfred S. Hart (1904–1979), Hungarian-born founder of City National Bank[86][87]
  • Andrew Hauptman (born 1969), founder of investment firm Andell Inc. and owner of the Chicago Fire Soccer Club; son-in-law of Charles Bronfman[88]
  • Isaias W. Hellman (1842–1920), German-born banker, co-founder of the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Los Angeles (F&M), president of Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank[89]
  • Samuel J. Heyman (1939–2009), hedge fund manager and chairman of the GAF Materials Corporation[90]
  • Ben Horowitz (born 1966), start-up investor, co-founder of Andreessen Horowitz[91]
  • Carl Icahn (born 1936), Corporate raider, founder of Icahn Enterprises[92]
  • Samuel Israel III (born 1959), former hedge fund manager, founder of the Bayou Hedge Fund Group[93]
  • Kenneth M. Jacobs (born 1957/1958), chairman and CEO of Lazard Ltd[94]
  • Mitchell R. Julis (born 1955), co-founder of the Canyon Capital Advisors hedge fund[95]
  • David Kabiller (born 1964), co-founder of investment management firm AQR Capital[96]
  • Neil Kadisha (born 1955), Iranian-born co-founder of investment firm Omninet Capital[97]
  • Irving Kahn (1905–2015), investor, co-founder of Kahn Brothers Group, Inc.[98][99]
  • Otto Hermann Kahn (1867–1934), German-born investment banker, partner at Kuhn, Loeb & Co.; known for the reorganization of American railroad systems[100]
  • George Kaiser (born 1942), chairman of BOK Financial Corporation[101][102]
  • Robert S. Kapito (born 1957), investor, co-founder of BlackRock, Inc., chair of the board of UJA-Federation of New York[103]
  • Steven Kaplan, co-founder of Oaktree Capital Management, co-owner of MLS' D.C. United and EFL Championship's Swansea City A.F.C.[104]
  • George Karfunkel (born 1948/1949), Hungarian-born co-founder of AmTrust Financial Services and American Stock Transfer & Trust Company (AST)[105][106]
  • Bruce Karsh (born 1955), investor, co-founder of Oaktree Capital Management, chairman of the Tribune Media Company[107]
  • Richard A. Kayne (born 1945/1946), co-founder of Kayne Anderson Capital Advisers[108]
  • Tal Keinan (born 1969), American-Israeli investor, co-founder of Clarity Capital[109]
  • Barry Klarberg (born 1961), founder of Monarch Business & Wealth Management; co-owner of MLB's New York Yankees and MLS's New York City FC[110]
  • Seth Klarman (born 1957), investor and hedge fund manager, founder of the Baupost Group; minority owner of MLB's Boston Red Sox[111]
  • Eugene Kleiner (1923–2003), Austrian-born venture capitalist who co-founded KPCB and is considered a pioneer of Silicon Valley[112]
  • Jerome Kohlberg Jr. (1925–2015), co-founder of KKR & Co. L.P., founder of Kohlberg & Company[113]
  • Sonja Kohn (born 1948), Austrian-American banker[114][115]
  • Bruce Kovner (born 1945), investor, hedge fund manager, chairman of CAM Capital[116]
  • Orin Kramer (born 1945), hedge fund manager, founder of Boston Provident LP[117]
  • Peter S. Kraus, CEO of AllianceBernstein (AB)[118]
  • Henry R. Kravis (born 1944), co-founder of KKR & Co. L.P.[119]
  • Rodger Krouse (born 1961), co-founder of Sun Capital Partners, Inc.[120]
  • Joe Lacob (born 1956), Silicon Valley investor, partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB), co-owner of NBA's Golden State Warriors[121]
  • Andrew A. Lanyi (1925–2009), Hungarian-born investor, founder of the Lanyi Group[122][123]
  • Marc Lasry (born 1959), Moroccan-born hedge fund manager, co-founder (along with his sister Sonia (born 1962)) of the Avenue Capital Group, co-owner of NBA's Milwaukee Bucks[124]
  • Henry Laufer (born 1945), investor, former VP of Research at Renaissance Technologies, co-founder of the Medallion Fund[125][126]
  • Jonathan Lavine (born 1966), co-managing partner of investment firm Bain Capital and CIO of Bain Capital Credit; co-owner of NBA's Boston Celtics[127]
  • Solomon Lazard (1827–1916), French-born founder of Lazard Frères and Company; member of the Lazard family[128][129]
  • Sayra (1898–1994), Jim (1928–2014) and Alexandra Lebenthal (born 1964), Lebenthal & Company[130][131]
  • Bennett S. LeBow (born 1937), Chairman of the Board of the Vector Group, former owner of the Liggett Group[132]
  • Marc J. Leder (born 1962), co-founder of Sun Capital Partners, Inc., co-owner of the Philadelphia 76ers[133]
  • Thomas H. Lee (born 1944), founder of the private equity firms THL and Lee Equity Partners[134][135]
  • Henry (1822–1855), Mayer (1830–1897) and Emanuel Lehman (1827–1907), German-born founders of Lehman Brothers; members of the Lehman family[136]
  • Al Lerner (1933–2002), former Chairman of the Board of credit card company MBNA and owner of NFL's Cleveland Browns[137]
  • Randy Lerner (born 1962), investor, former owner of the MBNA Corporation; former owner of EPL's Aston Villa F.C.[137]
  • Dennis Levine (born 1952), former managing director at Drexel Burnham Lambert[138]
  • Leon Levy (1925–2003), investor, former partner at Oppenheimer & Co.[139]
  • Peter B. Lewis (1933–2013), former chairman and owner of the Progressive Insurance Company[140]
  • Cy Lewis (1908–1978), long-time managing partner of Bear, Stearns & Company[141][142]
  • Josh Linkner (born 1970), former CEO of Detroit Venture Partners[143]
  • Greg Lippmann (born 1968/1969), hedge fund manager, co-founder of LibreMax Partners[144]
  • Daniel S. Loeb (born 1961), hedge fund manager, founder of Third Point Management[145]
  • Solomon Loeb (1828–1903), German-born co-founder of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.[146]
  • Howard Lorber (born 1948), CEO of New Valley LLC (formerly Western Union), chairman of Douglas Elliman and Nathan's Famous[147]
  • Howard Lutnick (born 1961), chairman and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald & BGC Partners[148]
  • Bernie Madoff (1938–2021), financier and chairman of the Nasdaq, founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC; Ponzi schemer[149][150]
  • Stephen Mandel, Jr. (born 1956), hedge fund manager, investor, founder of Lone Pine Capital, former managing director at the Tiger Fund[151]
  • Leo Melamed (born 1932), Polish-born financial futures pioneer, chairman emeritus of the CME Group[152]
  • James Melcher (born 1939), hedge fund manager, founder of Balestra Capital Management; former Olympic fencer[153]
  • J. Ezra Merkin (born 1953), investor, hedge fund manager, former president of the Fifth Avenue Synagogue; Madoff Ponzi scheme victim[154][155]
  • André Meyer (1898–1979), French-American investment banker, former senior partner at Lazard Frères & Co.[156]
  • Marc Eugene Meyer (1842–1925), French-American former president of Lazard Frères & Co.[157]
  • Marc Mezvinsky (born 1977), investment banker, co-founder of Eaglevale Partners; husband of Chelsea Clinton[158][159]
  • Michael Milken (born 1946), financier, junk-bond specialist, founder of the Milken Institute[29]
  • Eric Mindich, hedge fund manager, founder of Eton Park Capital Management[160][161]
  • Steven Mnuchin (born 1962), former hedge fund manager; 77th United States Secretary of the Treasury[48]
  • David Morgenthaler (1919–2016), founder of Morgenthaler, one of the oldest private equity investment firms in the U.S.[162]
  • Sir Michael Moritz (born 1954), British-American Silicon Valley venture capitalist, partner at Sequoia Capital[163]
  • Alfred Huger Moses (1840–1918), banker and investor who founded the city of Sheffield, Alabama[164]
  • Andrew M. Murstein (born 1964), founder of investment company Medallion Financial Corp., former taxi medallion lending executive, owner of MLL's New York Lizards[165]
  • Arthur Nadel (1933–2012), former hedge fund manager, founder of Scoop Management Co.[166]
  • Ezri Namvar (born 1951/1952), Iranian-born founder of the Namco Capital Group and former owner of the Security Pacific Bank[167][168]
  • Jack Nash (1929–2008), German-born hedge fund pioneer, former chairman of Oppenheimer & Company, co-founder of the New York Sun[169]
  • Elkan Naumburg (1835–1924), German-born banker, founder of E. Naumburg & Co.[170]
  • Izak Parviz Nazarian (1929–2017), Iranian-American investor, managing partner at Omninet Capital; member of the Nazarian family[171][172][173]
  • Roy Neuberger (1903–2010), financier, co-founder of Neuberger Berman[174]
  • Aviv Nevo (born 1965), Romanian-born Israeli-American venture capitalist, founder of NV Investments; major shareholder in Time Warner[175]
  • Roy (born 1966) and Victor Niederhoffer (born 1943), hedge fund managers[176][177]
  • Mark Nordlicht (born 1968), American-Israeli hedge fund manager, founder of Platinum Partners[178][179]
  • Nelson Obus (born 1947), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Wynnefield Capital, Inc.[180][181]
  • Daniel Och (born 1961), investor and hedge fund manager, founder of the Och-Ziff Capital Management Group (now Sculptor Capital Management)[182]
  • Bernard Osher (born 1927), a founding director of World Savings Bank[183]
  • Jacob Ostreicher (born 1959), investor[184]
  • Alan Patricof (born 1934), venture capital and private equity pioneer; co-founder of Apax Partners LLP and Greycroft[185]
  • David L. Paul (born 1940), banker, founder of Miami-based CenTrust Bank[186]
  • John Paulson (born 1955), investor, founder of Paulson & Co.[187]
  • Stephen M. Peck (1935–2004), co-founder of asset management firm Weiss, Peck & Greer[188]
  • Nelson Peltz (born 1942), investor, co-founder of Trian Fund Management. L.P.[189]
  • Jeffrey, Raymond (1917–2019) and Ron Perelman (born 1943), investors[190]
  • Richard C. Perry (born 1955), hedge fund manager, founder of Perry Capital LLC[191][192]
  • Carl Pforzheimer (1879–1957), banker, co-founder of the American Stock Exchange, founder of Carl H. Pforzheimer & Co.[193][194]
  • Lionel Pincus (1931–2009), co-founder of private equity firm Warburg Pincus, LLC[195]
  • Danny Porush (born 1957), former stock broker and chairman of Stratton Oakmont[196][197]
  • Victor Posner (1918–2002), LBO pioneer[198]
  • Michael F. Price (born 1951), hedge fund manager, founder of MFP Investors LLC[199]
  • Nicholas (born 1945), Karen (born 1958), Jennifer (born 1950) and John Pritzker (19&3–), investors; members of the Pritzker family[200]
  • Dan Rapoport, Latvian-born investor, founder of Rapoport Capital LLP[201]
  • Ira Rennert (born 1934), industrial investor, founder of the Renco Group[202]
  • Tony Ressler (born 1960), private equity tycoon and venture capitalist, co-founder of Ares Management and Apollo Global Management; owner of NBA's Atlanta Hawks[203]
  • Marc Rich (1934–2013), Belgian-American former oil trader, hedge fund manager and founder of Glencore plc[204][205]
  • Larry Robbins (born 1969), hedge fund manager, founder of Glenview Capital Management[206]
  • Stephen Robert (born 1940), former chairman and CEO of Oppenheimer & Co. and Renaissance Institutional Management LLC (subsidiary of Renaissance Technologies)[207]
  • George R. Roberts (born 1944), co-founder of KKR & Co. L.P.[208]
  • Arthur Rock (born 1926), early Silicon Valley venture capitalist, co-founder of Davis & Rock and Fairchild Semiconductor[209]
  • George Rohr (born 1954), Colombian-born co-founder of private equity firm NCH Capital Inc.[210][211]
  • David S. Rose (born 1957), start-up investor, founder of New York Angels[212]
  • Barry Rosenstein (born 1960), hedge fund manager, founder of JANA Partners LLC[213]
  • Mack Rossoff, founder of independent investment bank Rossoff & Co.[214][215]
  • David René de Rothschild (born 1942), banker; current chairman of Rothschild & Co; member of the Rothschild family[216]
  • Marc Rowan (born 1962), co-founder of Apollo Global Management, LLC[217]
  • David M. Rubenstein (born 1949), financier, co-founder of global private equity investment company The Carlyle Group[218]
  • Robert Rubin (born 1938), former Treasury Secretary, director of National Economic Council, and chairman of Citigroup[219]
  • Samuel Sachs (1851–1935), co-founder of Goldman Sachs[220]
  • William Salomon (1914–2014), former managing partner of Salomon Brothers[221][222]
  • Arthur J. Samberg (1941–2020), founder of Pequot Capital Management[223]
  • Morris Schapiro (1903–1996), Lithuanian-born investment banker, founder of M. A. Schapiro & Company; known for negotiating the merger of Chase Bank and Bank of Manhattan[224]
  • Jacob H. Schiff (1847–1920), German-born banker; former leader of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.[225]
  • Peter Schiff (born 1963), CEO and chief global strategist of Euro Pacific Capital Inc.[226]
  • Rick Schnall (born 1970), partner at private equity firm Clayton Dubilier & Rice and minority owner of NBA's Atlanta Hawks[203]
  • Alan Schwartz (born 1950/1951), Executive Chairman of Guggenheim Partners, former (and last) CEO of Bear, Stearns & Company[130]
  • Stephen A. Schwarzman (born 1947), co-founder of the Blackstone Group[227]
  • Joseph Seligman (1819–1880), German-born co-founder of investment bank J. & W. Seligman & Co.[228]
  • Bruce Sherman (born 1948), co-founder of wealth-management firm Private Capital Management (PCM) and owner of MLB's Miami Marlins[229][230]
  • Eugene Shvidler (born 1964), Russian-American oil tycoon, chairman of Millhouse Capital[231][232]
  • Jim Simons (born 1938), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Renaissance Technologies[233][234]
  • Nat Simons (born 1966), hedge fund manager and investor, (co-)founder of the Meritage Group and Prelude Ventures, co-chairman of Renaissance Technologies[235]
  • Paul Singer (born 1944), hedge fund manager, founder of the Elliott Management Corporation[236]
  • David M. Solomon (born 1962), disc jockey and investment banker, CEO of the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.[237]
  • George Soros (born 1930), Hungarian-American investor and business magnate, founder of Soros Fund Management, LLC; member of the Soros family[238]
  • James Speyer (1861–1941), former head of the banking firm Speyer & Co.; member of the Speyer family[239]
  • Robert B. Stearns (1888–1954), financier, co-founder of Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc[240]
  • Saul Steinberg (1939–2012), Corporate raider[241]
  • Michael Steinhardt (born 1940), investor and hedge fund manager, co-founder of Steinhardt Partners, chairman of WisdomTree Investments[242]
  • Lee Stern (born 1926), futures and options trader; founder of Lee B. Stern & Company; co-owner of MLB's Chicago White Sox[243][244]
  • Leonard N. Stern (born 1938), investor, chairman and CEO of the Hartz Group and Hartz Mountain Industries, Inc.[245]
  • Marc Stern, chairman of the TCW Group, co-owner of NBA's Milwaukee Bucks and MLB's Milwaukee Brewers[246][247]
  • Stuart Sternberg (born 1959), Wall Street investor, owner of MLB's Tampa Bay Rays[248]
  • Barry Sternlicht (born 1960), co-founder of investment firm Starwood Capital Group, former chairman of Starwood[249]
  • Donald Sussman (born 1946), financier, hedge fund manager, founder of Paloma Funds and New China Capital Management LLC[250][251]
  • Leonard M. Tannenbaum (born 1971), founder of Fifth Street Asset Management[252]
  • David Tepper (born 1957), investor, hedge fund manager, founder of Appaloosa Management[253][120]
  • David Tisch (born 1981), start-up investor, co-founder of BoxGroup; member of the Tisch family[254]
  • Igor Tulchinsky (born 1966), Belarus-born hedge fund manager, founder of WorldQuant, LLC[255]
  • Cliff Viner (born 1948), hedge fund manager, co-founder of III Capital Management and AVM L.P., former co-owner of the Florida Panthers[256][257]
  • Jeffrey Vinik (born 1959), former hedge fund manager, owner of NHL's Tampa Bay Lightning[258][259]
  • Paul Wachter (born 1956), founder of Main Street Advisors, a VIP-focused financial and asset management advisory firm[260]
  • Eric M. Warburg (1900–1990), German-American co-founder of Warburg Pincus; member of the Warburg family[261][262]
  • James Warburg (1896–1969), German-born banker and financial adviser to Franklin D. Roosevelt[262]
  • Paul Warburg (1868–1932), German-born former chairman of the Bank of the Manhattan Company (predecessor of Chase Manhattan Bank) and director of the Federal Reserve Bank[262]
  • Bruce Wasserstein (1947–2009), investment banker, former CEO of Lazard and co-founder of Wasserstein Perella & Co.[263]
  • Sanford I. Weill (born 1933), banker & financier, former chairman and CEO of Citigroup Inc., co-founder of Carter, Berlind, Potoma & Weill[264][265]
  • Peter Weinberg (born 1957), co-founder of Perella Weinberg Partners[266]
  • Boaz Weinstein (born 1973), hedge fund manager, founder of Saba Capital Management[267]
  • Sholam Weiss (born 1954), bankruptcy specialist[268][269]
  • Allen Weisselberg (born 1947), CFO of the Trump Organization[270]
  • Maurice Wertheim (1886–1950), founder of Wertheim & Co.[271]
  • Oren Zeev (born 1964), Israeli-American start-up investor, founder of Zeev Ventures, co-founder of Tipalti[272]
  • Nancy Zimmerman (born 1963/1964), hedge fund manager, co-founder of Bracebridge Capital[273]
  • Eric Zinterhofer (born 1971), private equity financier, founding partner of Searchlight Capital; member of the Lauder family[274]
  • Barry Zubrow (born 1953), founder of private investment firm ITB LLC, former CRO of JPMorgan Chase[275][276]

See also[]

  • Lists of Jewish Americans

References[]

  1. ^ Kampeas, Ron (Feb 25, 2009). "Jewish banker sets heartfelt tone for Obama speech". JTA.org. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
  2. ^ Patricia Cohen (Jan 16, 2009). "But Is Madoff Not So Good for the Jews? Discuss Among Yourselves". The New York Times.
  3. ^ Friedman, Gabe (Jan 26, 2016). "5 NBA Teams That Could Use David Blatt as Their Next Head Coach". Haaretz.
  4. ^ Lewis, Michael (Aug 1, 2013). "Did Goldman Sachs Overstep in Criminally Charging Its Ex-Programmer?". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2020-10-16. He [­Aleynikov­] wasn't religious in any conventional sense, but he'd been born a Jew, which had been noted on his Russian passport to remind everyone of the fact
  5. ^ Steve Mistler (Dec 5, 2012). "Alfond, Eves ready to oversee Maine Legislature". Portland Press Herald.
  6. ^ James Altucher (May 25, 2016). "The Secret of 'Billions'". New York Observer. Retrieved 2021-05-04.
  7. ^ "Everyone Counts on Super Sunday & Good Deeds Day". Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County. Mar 17, 2015. Retrieved 2018-12-06.
  8. ^ Leba Nesis (Dec 7, 2016). "Wall Street Titans Take NYC by Storm at Star Studded Gala Dinner". Jewish Voice.
  9. ^ "Fireside Chat with Jeffrey H. Aronson". UJA-Federation of New York. 2016.
  10. ^ William D. Cohan (Mar 29, 2011). "Man vs. Machine on Wall Street: How Computers Beat the Market". The Atlantic.
  11. ^ "The Bulletin" (PDF). Temple Sholom. Jan 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-10-13. Retrieved 2019-11-11.
  12. ^ "BACHE". JVL.
  13. ^ Chloe Sorvino (Sep 30, 2015). "The Seat Of Power: Baron's Castle". Forbes. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
  14. ^ "Bear Stearns: The long, illustrious (Jewish) history of Bear Stearns". Jewish Ledger. 2008.
  15. ^ Adam Chandler (Dec 20, 2013). "'The Wolf of Wall Street' Was a Nice Jewish Boy from the Bronx". Tablet.
  16. ^ "L.A. arts patron selling Cy Twombly painting to fund synagogue events center". LA Times. 2015.
  17. ^ "Good for the Money: The Legacy of Bob Benmosche and AIG". Drexel University.
  18. ^ "Leonard Bergstein Dedication". Conejo Jewish Academy. Winter 2014.
  19. ^ Gabriele Grego (Dec 8, 2014). "The Jewish Origins of Value investing". Times of Israel. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  20. ^ "Zalman Bernstein, Wall Street giant, dies". J. 1999.
  21. ^ Guelda Voien (Dec 24, 2015). "Looks Like Billionaire Leon Black Bought This Extremely Rare Talmud". New York Observer.
  22. ^ Michael Kinsley (Jan 29, 2010). "How to Think About: Jewish Bankers". The Atlantic.
  23. ^ Connie Bruck (Jan 20, 2014). "The Billionaire's Playlist". The New Yorker.
  24. ^ Guy Leshem (Jul 8, 2008). "Russian-born U.S. Billionaire Offers to Buy Ma'ariv". Haaretz.
  25. ^ Ron Kampeas (May 22, 2018). "Know your oligarch: A guide to the Jewish machers in the Russia probe". JTA.org. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
  26. ^ Ron Kampeas (Nov 26, 2019). "Will Michael Bloomberg's Jewishness help or hinder his run for the White House?". JTA.org.
  27. ^ Colacello, Bob (Jul 20, 2016). "Remembering Betsy Bloomingdale, Who Reigned Over Los Angeles Society and Influenced a First Lady". Vanity Fair.
  28. ^ Rone Tempest (Nov 18, 2005). "Deal-Maker's Worlds Mesh at Party in S.F." LA Times.
  29. ^ a b c Shapiro, Edward (1995). A Time for Healing: American Jewry Since World War II. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 117. ISBN 0-8018-5124-6.
  30. ^ Joseph Berger (Nov 22, 1986). "The Worlds of Ivan F. Boesky -- For Charities, A Benefactor". The New York Times.
  31. ^ Lianne Kollrin (Jun 15, 2017). "Jewish director of Uber resigns amid sexism row". The Jewish Chronicle.
  32. ^ Vasilyeva, Nataliya (Nov 20, 2018). "Jewish Kremlin critic faces 'absurd' new charges by Russian prosecutors". Times of Israel. Retrieved 2019-07-03. The new charges leveled against Browder, who is Jewish, accuse him of forming a criminal group to embezzle funds in Russia.
  33. ^ Meryl Gordon (Dec 10, 2001). "Howard Lutnick's Second Life". NY Mag. There was no Fitzgerald in the firm at this [company foundation] point. "The rumor is that Bernie Cantor invented the name so a Jewish guy could break into the Irish-dominated bond market," says Fraser. "But John Fitzgerald was a real person, a big guy in insurance, a minor partner who died in 1964."
  34. ^ "Now, the New York 'Observer'". NY Mag. Jul 13, 1987. p. 21. By his own account, Arthur Carter was a suburban Jewish boy who made his money on Wall Street
  35. ^ "Jewish Investor's Estate Will Pay $277M in Bernie Madoff Settlement". The Forward. 2016. Retrieved 2019-10-07. Stanley Chais, a once-prominent Jewish philanthropist whose phone number was literally on Madoff's speed dial.
  36. ^ Langley, Monica (2004). Tearing Down the Walls: How Sandy Weill Fought His Way to the Top of the Financial World...and Then Nearly Lost It All. Wall Street Journal Book. p. 41. ISBN 9780743247269. 'You're a Jew. I'm a Jew,' Cogan told Golsen.
  37. ^ Musleah, Rahel (February 2005). "Profile: Abby Joseph Cohen". Hadassah Magazine. Judaism helps to center her. "Judaism has always been something to be nourished and enjoyed," says Cohen, who comes from a religiously observant family.
  38. ^ John Rossant (Mar 29, 1999). "The Reincarnation Of Peter Cohen". Bloomberg News.
  39. ^ Larry Neumeister (Nov 5, 2013). "Hedge fund giant led by Jewish billionaire to pay biggest penalty in history". Times of Israel.
  40. ^ "Gary Cohn -- an uneasy fit in Trump's White House". Times of Israel. Mar 7, 2018.
  41. ^ Johanna Ginsberg (Feb 10, 2010). "Family's $5 million gift is devoted to continuity". NJJN.
  42. ^ Chrystia Freeland (Oct 8, 2012). "Super-Rich Irony". The New Yorker.
  43. ^ Charles Curtis (Sep 8, 2008). "Reporting From ... Mark Cuban's Business Lecture". ESPN.
  44. ^ "PLANNED GIVING AND ENDOWMENTS". Columbus Jewish Foundation.
  45. ^ "Miss Saltzman, Editor, Is Wed to Glenn Dubin". The New York Times. Sep 14, 1987.
  46. ^ "Legacy Stories: Joseph Edelman". National Museum of American Jewish History. Retrieved 2019-09-05. (1:58) I was very aware of being Jewish
  47. ^ "The History of Jewish Involvement in Business and Finance" (PDF). Center for Jewish History. 2007.
  48. ^ a b c "A Closer Look at Trump's Jewish Inner Circle". Haaretz. 2016.
  49. ^ "Investing in Jewish Boston" (PDF). Ruderman Family Foundation. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-02-07.
  50. ^ Lewis, Michael (2011). The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 6. ISBN 9780393338829.
  51. ^ "Izzy Englander". Bloomberg Billionaires Index. Retrieved 2018-10-28. Englander was born to Orthodox Jewish parents in Brooklyn, New York, in 1948. Growing up, he attended yeshiva, a traditional religious study school, before earning a degree in finance from New York University in 1970.
  52. ^ Marisa Fox-Bevilacqua (Oct 9, 2016). "Trump's Pathological Fear of Women". Haaretz.
  53. ^ Shay, Scott (2007). Getting our Groove Back. Devora. p. 243.
  54. ^ Dovid Margolin (May 25, 2017). "Recapturing kotel led to a spiritual renewal". The Jewish Star.
  55. ^ Eytan Avriel (Nov 16, 2005). "A Shy Wunderkind, Stephen Feinberg". Haaretz.
  56. ^ Amy Spiro (Oct 19, 2010). "Jewish Girls And Money". The Jewish Week.
  57. ^ Suzanna Andrews (April 2010). "Larry Fink's $12 Trillion Shadow". Vanity Fair.
  58. ^ Erik Schatzker (Apr 18, 2017). "Larry Fink Q&A: "I Don't Identify as Powerful"". Bloomberg News.
  59. ^ Marcy Oster (Aug 23, 2009). "Gap set to open in Israel". JTA.org.
  60. ^ "Young Couples Circle". UJA-Federation of New York.
  61. ^ "JFE Accelerator NY". Jews For Entrepreneurship (JFE). Spring 2016.
  62. ^ "Financial Swindler's Diamonds Sold Off". LA Times. Dec 10, 2004.
  63. ^ Peter Hyman (Apr 13, 2008). "Medium-Security Seder". NY Mag.
  64. ^ Karen Leon (Dec 9, 2011). "YIVO Benefit at Center for Jewish History Honors Chairman of JPMorgan". The Forward.
  65. ^ "GROUP OF THIRTY -- Jacob A. Frenkel". Group of Thirty.
  66. ^ Peter Lattman (Dec 19, 2011). "Warren Hellman, 77, Investor Who Loved Bluegrass, Dies". The New York Times.
  67. ^ "Hardly Strictly Warren Hellman". Contemporary Jewish Museum.
  68. ^ Vicky Hyman (Jan 29, 2016). "Porn magazine's legacy remains in N.J. collector's hands". NJ.com.
  69. ^ Peter Chapman (Sep 2, 2010). "How trader Dick morphed into banker CEO Dick Fuld". Fortune.
  70. ^ Baer, Justin; Onaran, Yalman (July 6, 2006). "Lewis Glucksman, Former Lehman Chief, Dies at 80". Bloomberg News. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Glucksman, a child of second-generation Hungarian Jews, wasn't involved in the Jewish community in his adopted home in Ireland
  71. ^ "US businessman and philanthropist with strong love of Ireland". The Irish Times. July 8, 2006.
  72. ^ "Prominent US Jews Support Two States, Urge Abbas to Set Positive Tone". Israel Policy Forum. Sep 25, 2013. Archived from the original on 2016-04-02.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  73. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths – Golder, Stanley C." The New York Times. Jan 8, 2000.
  74. ^ "Marcus Goldman". Immigrant Entrepreneurship. 2017.
  75. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths – Gottesman, Esther". The New York Times. Oct 5, 1997.
  76. ^ Eytan Avriel (May 17, 2005). "Israel's Gottesman Has London Tongues Wagging". Haaretz.
  77. ^ "WEDDINGS; Mindy Basser, Jonathan D. Gray". NY Times. Jul 2, 1995. Retrieved 2020-01-27. Rabbi Ira F. Stone is to perform the ceremony at Temple Beth Zion Beth Israel in Philadelphia.
  78. ^ Jewish Journal (Oct 31, 2002). "Leonard Green".
  79. ^ Justin Martin (2000). Greenspan: The Man Behind Money. Basic Books. p. 14. ISBN 9780738202754.
  80. ^ Patrick McGeehan (Nov 25, 2001). "Private Sector; Tapping the Wall Street Melting Pot". The New York Times.
  81. ^ Laurence Arnold (Mar 9, 2016). "John Gutfreund, Salomon's Leader in 1980s, Dies at 86". Bloomberg News.
  82. ^ Shelly Banjo (Jan 31, 2011). "Banking Executive Invests $20 Million in Scholarships". WSJ.
  83. ^ Jewish Heritage Programs (JHP). "JHP Mentors".
  84. ^ Jennifer Wang (Nov 7, 2017). "It All Started With Wrestling, Says Billionaire Owner of Philadelphia 76ers". Forbes.
  85. ^ Brunner, Jim (Feb 15, 2014). "Seattle 1-percenter a leader in push for $15 minimum wage". The Seattle Times. "I come from generations of progressive, atheist Jews," he [Nick] said.
  86. ^ "City National's 'banker to the stars'". LA Times. Aug 5, 2012.
  87. ^ Gus Russo (2007). Supermob: How Sidney Korshak and His Criminal Associates Became America's Hidden Power Brokers. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 37. ISBN 9781596912113.
  88. ^ Ryan Torok (Nov 17, 2016). "Making an impact in the Jewish world with philanthropic spirit". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
  89. ^ Marcia Weiss Posner. "Towers of Gold: How One Jewish Immigrant Named Isaias Hellman Created California". Jewish Book Council.
  90. ^ Haar, Dan (Aug 20, 2000). "Dexter Raider". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 2019-08-25. Two years later, he nearly wrested the mantle of chemical behemoth Union Carbide Corp. in Danbury -- the same town where Heyman grew up in a tight-knit Jewish household.
  91. ^ Nick Bilton (Mar 4, 2014). "A Conversation With Venture Capitalist Ben Horowitz on the 'Hard Things'". The New York Times.
  92. ^ Danielle Berrin (Mar 19, 2010). "Jewish billionaire Carl Icahn wants to buy all of Lionsgate". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
  93. ^ Nelson D. Schwartz (Jun 14, 2008). "The Search for a Missing Trader Goes Global". The New York Times.
  94. ^ "YIVO News (No. 199)" (PDF). YIVO. Winter 2005. p. 4.
  95. ^ Ronn Torossian (2016). "Spending Shabbat in Beverly Hills". Algemeiner Journal. Retrieved 2019-09-06.
  96. ^ "Condolences: Irving Kabiller". Chicago Sun-Times.
  97. ^ Natan Odenheimer (Apr 1, 2017). "From 'Tehrangeles' with love: The epic family history of some of LA's wealthiest Persian Jews". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2018-09-03.
  98. ^ Megan McDonough (Feb 26, 2015). "Irving Kahn, Wall Street's oldest stockbroker, dies at 109". The Washington Post.
  99. ^ Jesse Green (Nov 6, 2011). "What Can the DNA of Ashkenazi Jews Tell Us About Living Longer?". NY Mag.
  100. ^ Mayhew, Augustus (Feb 26, 2015). "Otto Kahn's Palm Beach". New York Social Diary. Retrieved 2020-08-23. (...) he [Kahn] once responded: "My parents were not practicing Jews and did not bring me up to be a practicing Jew. But I have never left Judaism and have no idea of doing so." Especially during the last decade of his life, Otto Kahn reaffirmed his Jewish heritage
  101. ^ Cassidy McDonald (Dec 22, 1016). "The Man Turning Tulsa Into Beta City, U.S.A." The New York Times.
  102. ^ Christopher Helman (Sep 21, 2011). "George Kaiser's $10 Billion Bet". Forbes.
  103. ^ Chemi Shalev (Dec 12, 2012). "An Evening of Affluence and Influence With the Jewish Wizards of Wall Street". Haaretz.
  104. ^ David R. Cohen (Apr 29, 2015). "Jewish Investor Buying Hawks". Atlanta Jewish Times. Two other Jewish-led groups, one headed by Oaktree Capital Management's Steve Kaplan and the other by Lionsgate Entertainment Chairman Mark Rachesky
  105. ^ Nathan-Kazis, Josh (Apr 28, 2016). "Michael Karfunkel, the Orthodox Billionaire No One Heard Of, Dies at 72". The Forward. Retrieved 2021-02-01.
  106. ^ Boyd, Roddy (Aug 17, 2014). "The Mitzvah Factory". The Foundation for Financial Journalism. Retrieved 2021-02-01. Michael and his younger brother George grew up poor Jewish kids in Hungary in the mid-1950s.
  107. ^ "Mission/Inspiration". The Karsh Center of Wilshire Boulevard Temple, Los Angeles.
  108. ^ West, Kevin (Jun 1, 2013). "Meet Los Angeles' Coolest Sister Act: Jenni, Saree, and Maggie Kayne". W.
  109. ^ Rocker, Simon (2019-08-25). "The fighter pilot who wants us to give Judaism our best shot". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 2021-11-30. Born in 1969, Keinan could well have become one of America's vanishing Jews (...) they [his family] had a Seder but ate bread on Pesach.
  110. ^ Masha Leon (Feb 14, 2014). "Robert Farber Photo Show Opens". The Forward.
  111. ^ Olivia Oran (Aug 4, 2016). "Jewish Billionaire Seth Klarman Joins Wealthy Republicans Supporting Clinton". Haaretz.
  112. ^ "Eugene Kleiner, Early Promoter Of Silicon Valley, Is Dead at 80". The New York Times. Nov 26, 2003.
  113. ^ Michael J. de la Merced (Jul 31, 2015). "Jerome Kohlberg Jr., Pioneer of the Private Equity Industry, Dies at 90". The New York Times.
  114. ^ Simonian, Haig; Frey, Eric (Jan 7, 2009). "Profile: Bank Medici's Sonja Kohn". FT. Retrieved 2020-11-15. It was at that time that Mrs Kohn embraced an increasingly orthodox Judaism, in time cutting her hair short and wearing a wig as her faith required
  115. ^ Dodds Frank, Allan (Feb 20, 2011). "Sonja Kohn, Bernie Madoff's Bag Lady". Newsweek. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
  116. ^ Philip Weiss (Aug 2005). "George Soros's Right-Wing Twin". NY Mag. p. 3.
  117. ^ David Kocieniewski (Oct 30, 2004). "Jewish Leaders Assail Bush Ad Quoting Them". The New York Times.
  118. ^ Holocaust Center for Humanity (2015). "Community Program: International Holocaust Remembrance Day". Archived from the original on 2017-03-20.
  119. ^ Max Holland (Jun 1990). "King Henry". Mother Jones. p. 38.
  120. ^ a b Josh Nathan-Kazis (Mar 12, 2012). "Romney PAC Attracts New Jewish Donors". The Forward.
  121. ^ "Warriors Jewish co-owner says he meant to type Yiddish not hoodish". J. Oct 31, 2014.
  122. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths LANYI, ANDREW". The New York Times. 2009.
  123. ^ Miller, Stephen (2009). "A Survivor of Nazi Brutality Who Ascended Wall Street". The Wall Street Journal.
  124. ^ Leon Cohen (Oct 31, 2014). "New Bucks owner has distinctive Jewish story". Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-07-05. He [Lasry] is from the Jewish community of Morocco, having been born in Marrakech.
  125. ^ "Annual Report 2013" (PDF). The Jewish Federation of Palm Beach County.
  126. ^ "JAFCO Annual Report 2014" (PDF). Jewish Adoption and Family Care Options (JAFCO).
  127. ^ "Jonathan Lavine". Combined Jewish Philanthropies of Greater Boston (CJP). Oct 7, 2014.
  128. ^ "Solomon Lazard: Jewish Pioneer of Early Los Angeles' Infrastructure". Jewish Museum of the American West.
  129. ^ Artsy, Avishay (Oct 19, 2016). "Jews and the development of Los Angeles". KCRW. Retrieved 2020-09-13.
  130. ^ a b William D. Cohan (2009). House of Cards: How Wall Street's Gamblers Broke Capitalism. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780385528269.
  131. ^ "CNBC Profiles: Alexandra Lebenthal". CNBC.
  132. ^ "Lebow Turns Over a New Leaf". Bloomberg Businessweek. May 6, 2001. LeBow, who is Jewish, even brought in a rabbi to say a prayer for the dead deal
  133. ^ "Romney Trashes Two-State Solution in Video". The Forward. Sep 18, 2012.
  134. ^ William Alden (Apr 30, 2014). "Take My Buyout, Please ..." The New York Times.
  135. ^ "Private Equity Recognition Event Honors Thomas H. Lee". UJA-Federation of New York. Apr 30, 2014.
  136. ^ Kenneth Libo (Sep 18, 2008). "Lehman, From Cotton to Crash". The Forward.
  137. ^ a b Neil Rubin (Aug 3, 2012). "Cleveland Browns sale ends 51-year Jewish ownership". JTA.org.
  138. ^ R. William Weisberger (1991). "Jews and American Investment Banking (Review Essay)" (PDF). AJA.
  139. ^ "Jewish culture". Leon Levy Foundation. Archived from the original on 2012-08-14.
  140. ^ "Peter B. Lewis, Progressive chair, philanthropist remembered". Cleveland Jewish News. 2013.
  141. ^ "Salim L. Lewis Named Head of New York Jewish Federation". JTA.org. Apr 13, 1954.
  142. ^ Charles Kaiser (May 1, 1978). "Salim. L. Lewis, Wall St. Pioneer In Stock Block Trading, Dies at 69". The New York Times.
  143. ^ "from Wantrepreneur Entrepreneur". The Detroit Jewish News. Nov 24, 2012. Retrieved 2019-09-06.
  144. ^ "WEDDINGS/CELEBRATIONS; Kimberly Duckworth, Greg Lippmann". NY Times. 2002. N.Y. Rabbi Stephen A. Klein officiated at the 200 Fifth Club in New York.
  145. ^ Matthew Goldstein (Mar 11, 2011). "Special Report: OMG! Dan Loeb said what?". Reuters.
  146. ^ Stephen Birmingham (1967). Our Crowd: The Great Jewish Families of New York. Syracuse University Press.
  147. ^ "Trump picks businessman Howard Lorber to head Holocaust Memorial Council". JTA.org. May 11, 2017.
  148. ^ Masha Leon (4 June 2015). "Tzedaka, Wall Street Style: Howard Lutnick Honored By Museum of Jewish Heritage". The Forward.
  149. ^ Strober, Deborah (2009). Catastrophe: The Story of Bernard L. Madoff, the Man Who Swindled the World. Phoenix Books. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-59777-640-0.
  150. ^ Julie Creswell (Jan 24, 2009). "The Talented Mr. Madoff". The New York Times.
  151. ^ Julia La Roche (Jan 29, 2016). "Jewish Hedge Fund Managers Continued To Excel In 2015". Jewish Business News.
  152. ^ Jacob Bunge (Mar 2, 2018). "The Man Who Molded Chicago's Merc". The Wall Street Journal. The Melamed family landed in Chicago as Jewish refugees
  153. ^ Shel Wallman (Oct 30, 1985). "Drawing Swords". Jewish Post & Opinion. p. 25.
  154. ^ Gary Rosenblatt (Dec 17, 2008). "'Golden boy' J. Ezra Merkin accused of misleading Jewish investors, groups". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
  155. ^ Leslie Wayne (Jan 15, 2009). "Inquiry Started of Financier Who Invested With Madoff". The New York Times.
  156. ^ Robert Lekachman (Oct 16, 1983). "Master of Mergers". The New York Times.
  157. ^ Katharine Meyer Graham (1997). Personal History. Knopf. ISBN 9780394585857.
  158. ^ Nathan Guttman (Feb 29, 2016). "Why Is Hillary Clinton's Jewish Son-In-Law Avoiding Campaign Spotlight". The Forward.
  159. ^ Raf Sanchez (Feb 1, 2016). "Israeli cabinet minister attacks marriage of Hillary Clinton's daughter". The Telegraph.
  160. ^ "Annual Report 2013" (PDF). The New Jewish Home.
  161. ^ "2014 Annual Report" (PDF). Birthright Israel.
  162. ^ "David T. Morgenthaler, Pioneering Venture Capitalist, Dies at 96" (PDF). Morgenthaler. Jun 20, 2016.
  163. ^ Debra Rubin (Jul 13, 2012). "Jewish billionaire Michael Moritz gives $115 million to Oxford". JTA.org.
  164. ^ Feldberg, Michael. "Alfred Huger Moses, industrial visionary". Jewish World Review. Retrieved December 22, 2017.
  165. ^ "Nicki Minaj turns NY boys into men". Times of Israel. Apr 28, 2015. Retrieved 2019-02-02. Minaj was hired by a New York taxi mogul, Andrew Murstein, to grace and perform at his son Matt's bar mitzvah party last weekend in Manhattan
  166. ^ "The Next Bernie Madoff". Gawker. Jan 19, 2009.
  167. ^ Karmel Melamed (Sep 27, 2010). "Iranian Jewish banker Ezri Namvar indicted on federal fraud charges". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
  168. ^ Gene Maddaus (Jul 21, 2011). "Ezri Namvar Is the New Bernie Madoff and the Most Reviled Man in Town". LA Weekly.
  169. ^ Abha Bhattarai (Aug 2, 2008). "Jack Nash, Pioneer in Hedge Funds, Dies at 79". The New York Times.
  170. ^ "NAUMBURG, U.S. family of bankers and philanthropists". JVL. Retrieved June 6, 2018.
  171. ^ Yoav Yitzhak (Feb 8, 2004). "Nazarian family negotiating to acquire Discount Bank". Globes.
  172. ^ "Pouran and Izak Parviz Nazarian Building". Tel Aviv University.
  173. ^ Kevin West (Jun 10, 2013). "The Persian Conquest". W.
  174. ^ Edward Wyatt (Dec 24, 2010). "Roy R. Neuberger Dies at 107; Applied a Stock Trader's Acumen to Art". The New York Times.
  175. ^ "Jewish millennials show little interest in media domination". Canadian Jewish News. Mar 4, 2015.
  176. ^ "Weddings – Kara Unterberg, Roy Niederhoffer". The New York Times. Oct 25, 1993.
  177. ^ Jim Jerome (Mar 24, 1975). "A Squash Champion Who Says Capitalism Made It All Possible". People. Retrieved 2018-09-05.
  178. ^ Matthew Kalman (Dec 13, 2016). "New 'Madoff' Scandal Feared as Jewish Hedge Fund Execs Charged in $1 Billion Ponzi Scheme". Haaretz.
  179. ^ Bess Levin (Dec 19, 2016). "Seven Hedge Fund Execs Arrested in Madoff-Like 'Ponzi Scheme'". Vanity Fair.
  180. ^ "Annual Report 2009" (PDF). Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.
  181. ^ "ZOA Report" (PDF). Zionist Organization of America. Spring 2014.
  182. ^ Jacob Berkman (Dec 25, 2006). "As Wall Street bonuses set record, NY federation cashes in". Jerusalem Post.
  183. ^ "Local wealthy Jews pledge to give away half their fortunes". J. Aug 13, 2010.
  184. ^ Frank Bajak (Jan 6, 2015). "Year after escaping Bolivia, Orthodox Jew struggles to recover". Times of Israel.
  185. ^ "Bush nominates Patricof to aid body". JTA.org. May 16, 2007.
  186. ^ Myra MacPherson (Mar 19, 1990). "The Banker's Toppled Tower". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2018-08-19.
  187. ^ Amanda L. Gordon (Dec 14, 2015). "Paulson Among New Yorkers Getting Merry at City's Holiday Bashes". Bloomberg News.
  188. ^ Haber, Perry (July 23, 1998). "Paid Notice: Oral History of Stephen M. Peck - interviewed by Perry Haber". Center for Jewish History.
  189. ^ Marcy Oster (May 19, 2016). "Nelson Peltz Throws $2M Bar Mitzvah Bash for Twin Sons". The Forward.
  190. ^ Michael Callahan (Feb 23, 2010). "Perelmans at War". Philadelphia. Retrieved 2018-09-05.
  191. ^ "Clinton Administration & AIPAC Veteran Josh Block Named Chief Executive Officer & President of The Israel Project". The Israel Project (TIP). Aug 23, 2012.
  192. ^ "More Than $18 Million Raised at Wall Street Dinner". UJA-Federation of New York. Dec 17, 2008.
  193. ^ "C.H. Pforzheimer, Banker, 78, Dead; Broker Who Was Civic Leader in Westchester Collected Writings of Shelley". The New York Times. 1957.
  194. ^ "Pforzheimer, Carl Howard (1879–1957)". JVL. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  195. ^ Chernow, Ron (Nov 15, 2016). The Warburgs: The Twentieth-Century Odyssey of a Remarkable Jewish Family. Vintage Books. p. 662. ISBN 9780525431831.
  196. ^ Naomi Pfefferman (Jan 6, 2014). "Jonah Hill's not-so-nice Jewish guy". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles.
  197. ^ Jennifer Goldberg (Jan 29, 2014). "Oscars are light on Jewish nominees". Jewish News of Greater Phoenix.
  198. ^ Benjamin Ginsberg (1993). The Fatal Embrace: Jews and the State. University of Chicago Press. p. 192. ISBN 9780226296661.
  199. ^ Moses L. Pava (1997). Business Ethics: A Jewish Perspective. KTAV Publishing House. p. 180. ISBN 0881255823.
  200. ^ Margaret Eby (Nov 11, 2014). "Where the Pritzker Money Goes". The Forward.
  201. ^ Nathan Guttman (Jan 4, 2017). "The Secret Russian Backstory Behind Ivanka and Jared's New House". The Forward.
  202. ^ Ora Coren (Oct 3, 2013). "U.S. Billionaire Ira Rennert, Ehud Barak Mull Israel Military Industries Bid". Haaretz.
  203. ^ a b David R. Cohen (Apr 29, 2015). "Jewish Investor Buying Hawks". The Atlanta Jewish Times.
  204. ^ Ammann, Daniel (2009). The King of Oil: The Secret Lives of Marc Rich. St. Martin's Press. p. 32.
  205. ^ "FBI releases documents about Bill Clinton's pardon of Jewish philanthropist Marc Rich". JTA.org. Nov 2, 2016.
  206. ^ "Investment Division Honors Singular Leaders". UJA-Federation of New York. Jun 12, 2013.
  207. ^ Linda Marx (Mar 30, 2018). "The Feeling is Mutual". AVENUE Magazine. Retrieved 2019-09-06.
  208. ^ Sicelo P. Nkambule (2014). A Pursuit of Wealth. ISBN 9781312206557.
  209. ^ "Jews in the News: More than Minyan of Innovators". Tampa Jewish Community Centers & Federation. Oct 20, 2014.
  210. ^ Ezra Glinter (Aug 9, 2012). "Sami Rohr, Philanthropist Who 'Invested' Millions in the Jewish People". The Forward.
  211. ^ Rena Greenberg (Jul 28, 2016). "Jewish Life Grows at McGill University". Chabad-Lubavitch.
  212. ^ David Samuels (Aug 10, 1997). "The Real-Estate Royals. End of the Line?". The New York Times.
  213. ^ Svea Herbst-Bayliss (Oct 1, 2015). "Jewish Hedge Fund Titans Clobbered by Market Turmoil". The Forward.
  214. ^ Lazere, Cathy (1989). "The New Generation of M&A Bankers". Institutional Investor. Retrieved 2019-07-27.
  215. ^ "Board of Trustees". Congregation Rodeph Sholom (Manhattan).
  216. ^ "Restoring The House of Rothschild". The New York Times. Oct 1996.
  217. ^ John Surico (Jun 30, 2012). "Mitt Loves N.Y.: Marc Rowan". The Village Voice.
  218. ^ "Jewish Billionaire David Rubenstein Donates $18.5m for Lincoln Memorial Restoration". Haaretz. Feb 16, 2016.
  219. ^ John Gapper (Nov 9, 2007). "Man in the news: Robert Rubin". Financial Times.
  220. ^ Marcus, Jacob Rader (1993). United States Jewry, 1776–1985: The Germanic Period. Wayne State University Press. p. 268. ISBN 0814321887.
  221. ^ Huang, Daniel (Dec 10, 2014). "William R. Salomon Dies at 100". WSJ. Retrieved January 11, 2018.
  222. ^ "Hard to be Rich – The Rise and Fall of the Gutfreunds". New York Magazine. Jan 11, 1988.
  223. ^ "Wall Street at Play (for Charity)". The New York Times. Dec 7, 2007.
  224. ^ David J. Morrow (Dec 28, 1996). "Morris Schapiro, 93, Banker Behind Major U.S. Mergers". The New York Times.
  225. ^ Naomi Wiener Cohen (1999). Jacob H. Schiff: A Study in American Jewish Leadership. UPNE. ISBN 0874519489.
  226. ^ Peter Schiff (Oct 19, 2015). "Death of a Patriot". Capitalism Magazine.
  227. ^ Michael J. de la Merced (Oct 21, 2011). "Live From New York, It's Steve Schwarzman". The New York Times.
  228. ^ Chaim I. Waxman (1983). America's Jews In Transition. p. 26. ISBN 9780877223290.
  229. ^ Rene Rodriguez (Aug 11, 2017). "Here's how the new Marlins money man made his fortune". Miami Herald.
  230. ^ "WEDDINGS; Cynthia Kahn, Bruce Sherman]". The New York Times. 1999.
  231. ^ "History of Soviet Union Jews Project Supported by $2.3 Million Gift from Eugene and Zara Shvidler". NYU. Apr 19, 2016.
  232. ^ "The Rabin-Shvidler Joint Post-Doctoral Fellowship in Jewish Studies at Fordham and Columbia". Columbia University.
  233. ^ Rose Kaplan (Mar 4, 2016). "Report: Some Jews, Mostly Men, Are Very, Very Wealthy". Tablet.
  234. ^ "The mathematician who cracked Wall Street". TED. Sep 2015.
  235. ^ Zuckerman, Gregory (2019). The Man Who Solved the Market. Penguin Books. p. 53. ISBN 9780735217980. Retrieved 2020-10-19. In 1979, at a bar mitzvah party for Simon's son Nathaniel (...)
  236. ^ Ron Kampeas (May 14, 2011). "Jewish, Republican, pro-gay rights". JTA.org.
  237. ^ "Goldman Sachs names David Solomon as new CEO as it targets Main Street growth". Times of Israel. Jul 17, 2018.
  238. ^ Bruck, Connie (Jan 16, 1995). "The World According to George Soros". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2020-08-09.
  239. ^ George W. Liebmann (2015). The Fall of the House of Speyer: The Story of a Banking Dynasty. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 9780857729286.
  240. ^ "Bear Stearns: The long, illustrious (Jewish) history of Bear Stearns". Jewish Ledger. Mar 18, 2008.
  241. ^ Douglas Martin (Dec 10, 2012). "Saul P. Steinberg, Icon of the Corporate Takeover, Dies at 73". The New York Times.
  242. ^ Ben Sales (Jul 6, 2017). "The billionaire who founded Birthright has a private zoo". Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Steinhardt fashions himself as the disruptive Jewish innovator
  243. ^ Sallah, Michael D. (Jan 10, 2013). "Florida club with Toledo ties accused of discrimination". Toledo Blade.
  244. ^ Collins, Daniel. "Lee Stern: Trading 65 years and going strong". Futures. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  245. ^ Mahon, Gigi (1986). "Hartz Content: The Good Life of Leonard Stern". NY Mag. p. 42. Retrieved 2018-10-29.
  246. ^ The American Presidency Project (Sep 25, 2015). "Press Release – Jewish Leadership for Jeb". UC Santa Barbara.
  247. ^ "AJC 2009 Annual Report" (PDF). American Jewish Committee. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-05-13. Retrieved 2019-11-11.
  248. ^ Schwarz, Alan (Oct 2, 2008). "Religion and Baseball, a Scheduling Conflict". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-09-22. "I'll be at shul until maybe the third or fourth inning," Sternberg said
  249. ^ "Our 2016 Supporters". Birthright Israel.
  250. ^ "Clinton campaign tally shows 5 top donors are Jewish". JTA.org. Oct 26, 2016.
  251. ^ "Board & Leadership". National Jewish Democratic Council (NJDC).
  252. ^ "WEDDINGS; Elizabeth Toll, Leonard Tannenbaum". The New York Times. May 1997.
  253. ^ Greater Miami Jewish Federation. "David Tepper".
  254. ^ Shontell, Alyson (Jul 29, 2011). "How David Tisch and TechStars pick startups". Business Insider. Retrieved 2021-02-04. David Tisch began investing in startups when he was a teenager. He took his bar mitzvah money, invested it in eBay's IPO, and saw a 15x return.
  255. ^ Martin B. Cassidy (Dec 19, 2016). "Chabad Lubavitch unveils new learning center". The Advocate. Tulchinsky, who immigrated to the United States in 1977 from Belarus and lives in Greenwich, said he has been receiving instruction in the Torah from Rabbi Yossi Deren for the past five or six years, which has had a "positive effect" on his life.
  256. ^ B'nai Torah Congregation. "B'nai Torah Foundation".
  257. ^ ""Business of Sports" Panel for 3rd B&P Industry Icons Event". Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County. 2013.
  258. ^ Jamie Shapiro (Jul 14, 2017). "Israeli companies sell themselves at Tampa event". Jewish Press of Tampa Bay. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
  259. ^ Janice Arnold (May 15, 2015). "Montreal Canadiens still have a prayer thanks to Chabad rabbi". Canadian Jewish News. Retrieved 2018-09-17. Rabbi Dubrowski is a faithful Lightning fan and is friendly with the team's owner, Jeffrey Vinik, who is Jewish
  260. ^ "Liza Beth Atkins Is the Bride of Paul D. Wachter". NY Times. Jun 1, 1987. Rabbi Stephen Robbins performed the ceremony at the Bel-Air Bay Club.
  261. ^ Narvaez, Alfonso A. (Jul 11, 1990). "Eric Warburg, 90, Investment Banker From Germany, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  262. ^ a b c "A Number of Lives Crowded Into One". The New York Times. 1964. Retrieved 2019-09-06.
  263. ^ William D. Cohan (May 2010). "Bruce Wasserstein's Last Surprise". Vanity Fair.
  264. ^ Stone, Amey; Brewster, Mike (2002). King of Capital: Sandy Weill and the Making of Citigroup. John Wiley & Sons. p. 9. ISBN 9780471330158.
  265. ^ Roger Lowenstein (2000). "Alone at the Top". The New York Times Magazine.
  266. ^ "Three Things to Know About Peter Weinberg's Philanthropy". Inside Philanthropy.
  267. ^ Azam Ahmed (May 26, 2012). "The Hunch, the Pounce and the Kill". The New York Times.
  268. ^ William K. Rashbaum (Oct 26, 2000). "Fugitive Arrested in Austria After a Year on the Run". The New York Times.
  269. ^ David E. Y. Sarna (Dec 3, 2010). "Is Greed Godly?". The Jewish Week.
  270. ^ Josh Nathan-Kazis (Jan 11, 2017). "Low-Key 'Wallpaper' Jewish Exec Catapults to Top of Trump Organization". The Forward.
  271. ^ "Maurice Wertheim, Former American Jewish Committee President, Dies at 64". JTA.org. 1950.
  272. ^ "Judaism Unbound Episode 65: Investing in the Future – Oren Zeev". Judaism Unbound. 2017. Retrieved 2021-02-06.
  273. ^ "Harvard Chabad Women's Circle". Harvard University.
  274. ^ "WEDDINGS; Aerin R. Lauder, Eric Zinterhofer". The New York Times. 1996. Retrieved 2019-03-25.
  275. ^ "Bulletin" (PDF). Temple B'nai Or. June 1996.
  276. ^ "Hillel 2006 Annual Report" (PDF). Hillel International. 2006.
Retrieved from ""