Mario Gabelli
Mario Joseph Gabelli | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Fordham University Columbia Business School |
Occupation | Founder, Chairman, and CEO of Gabelli Asset Management Company Investors |
Mario Joseph Gabelli (born June 19, 1942) is an American stock investor, investment advisor, and financial analyst. He is the founder, chairman, and CEO of Gabelli Asset Management Company Investors (Gamco Investors), an investment firm headquartered in Rye, New York. Forbes Magazine listed him as #1477 on the list of Billionaires.[2] On January 10, 2000, Gabelli was inducted into the Barron's (newspaper) All Century Team, their list of the most influential mutual fund industry portfolio managers.[3] Mr. Gabelli was named an honorary member of Local 6 and the Hotel Trades Council in December 2019 [4] and formally inducted into the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans on April 2–4, 2020, during the Association's 73rd Horatio Alger Award Induction Ceremonies in Washington, D.C.[5]
Early life and education[]
Gabelli, the son of Italian immigrants, was born in The Bronx and went to Fordham Preparatory School, where he graduated in 1961.[1] He has said he read market reports for fun when he was very young and that he bought his first stock when he was 13 years old.[1]
Gabelli won a scholarship and graduated from Fordham University summa cum laude in 1965. He received his Master of Business Administration degree from Columbia Business School.[6] At Columbia, he was taught by Roger Murray, noted value investing professor and co-author of the Fifth Edition of Security Analysis, The Graham & Dodd Value Investing Bible.[7] Gabelli and his firm later launched the Graham & Dodd, Murray, Greenwald Award for Distinguished Value Investors. This award is presented yearly at his Annual Client Symposium.[8]
Investment career[]
Loeb, Rhoades & Co.[]
After graduation, Gabelli accepted a position at Loeb, Rhoades & Co. as a security analyst responsible for coverage of farm equipment, auto parts conglomerates and later media and broadcasting.[9] Gabelli put into practice the theory of value investing he had learned at Columbia. He rated companies not by earnings but cash flow, analyzing a firm in great detail to calculate what he called private-market value: not the share price at which a stock was selling on an exchange, but the price per share someone would be willing to pay in order to buy the whole company.[10]
Gabelli & Co.[]
In 1976, Gabelli formed Gabelli & Co., an institutional brokerage house, with borrowed funds and money he had accumulated trading his own account.[citation needed] Soon after Gabelli formed Gabelli Investors (later Gamco Investors) to manage money for clients.[citation needed]
The Gabelli Mutual Funds[]
Gabelli's first investment vehicle for the general public, The Gabelli Asset Fund, launched in March 1986 as a no-load fund requiring a minimum of $25,000 to invest. Later, and today, this fund is available for a minimum investment of $1,000 and accepts IRA investments without a minimum. The Asset Fund was later followed on by The Gabelli Equity Trust, a closed-end fund, which, at the time, was the largest equity offering on the NYSE. By the end of 1988, Gabelli's firm had three mutual funds—two run by himself—with combined assets of $650 million. By 1998, Gabelli Asset Management Inc. was managing $16.3 billion. In February 1999, the company went public selling 6 million shares, or about twenty percent of the common stock at $17.50 per share.[11]
Fund Manager of the Year (1997)[]
In 1997, when ten Gabelli equity funds averaged a return of 31.7 percent, the best of any U.S. mutual fund group, Gabelli was honored by Morningstar, Inc. as the domestic equity fund manager of the year.[12]
Money Manager of the Year (2010)[]
The Institutional Investor selected Mario Gabelli as 2010 Money Manager of the Year for its second annual U.S. Investment Management Awards. The award selection was based on performance as well as a survey by U.S. institutions.[13]
Wealth & philanthropy[]
According to Forbes magazine, Gabelli's net worth was $1.4 billion as of April 2020.[14]
University of Nevada, Reno[]
In December 2013, the University of Nevada, Reno announced it had received a $1.5 million donation from the Gabelli Foundation to help pay for the construction of the E. L. Wiegand Fitness Center. Gabelli is a member of the Wiegand Foundation's board of trustees.[citation needed]
Columbia Graduate Business School[]
In July 2013, The Gabelli Foundation pledged $15 million. This gift is earmarked for the construction of Columbia Business School's new Manhattanville campus. The building is scheduled to open in 2018.[15]
Fordham University[]
Among those recognized at the 2010 Fordham University Founder's Award Dinner were Mario J. Gabelli, CBA '65, and Regina M. Pitaro, FCRH '76, a Fordham trustee and managing director of Gamco Asset Management. In September 2010, Fordham formally announced Gabelli's $25 million gift, the largest ever in the university's history. The gift allowed Fordham, which renamed the undergraduate business college the Gabelli School of Business, to expand student scholarships and faculty chairs, and is crucial to the creation of the Center of Global Investment Analysis which brings together students, faculty and professionals in the financial community to enhance scholarship in the study and understanding of capital markets.[16] In 2014, Mario Gabelli funded the University's ability to initiate the Gabelli Ph.D. Program which will establish a doctoral-level business program at Fordham's Gabelli School of Business.[17] In December 2020, Fordham announced Gabelli, through the Gabelli Foundation, had made the largest gift in the university's history, a $35 million gift to support the business school that bears his name.[18][19]
Boston College[]
In September 2010, Boston College announced Gabelli's $3 million gift that was used to endow a professorship in finance in the college's Carroll School of Management. An undergraduate dormitory is also named after Gabelli because of a past donation to the school. Previously, Gabelli, who serves on the college's board of trustees, gave $10 million to create the Gabelli Distinguished Presidential Scholars Fund which provides fifteen students with full tuition every year.[20] In 2012, Alan Marcus, was named as the first recipient of the Endowed Professorship.[21] 2014, Boston College's Presidential Scholars Program was renamed the Gabelli Presidential Scholars Program as a result of a major gift from the Gabelli Family Foundation. In December 2015, The Gabelli Foundation made a contribution to Boston College to further the Foundation's commitment to the Jesuit philosophy of enhancing the intellectual, spiritual and physical aspects of the whole person.[22]
Roger Williams University - Mario J. Gabelli School of Business[]
The Roger Williams University Mario J. Gabelli School of Business was established in 1995, three years after the university conferred an honorary doctor of business degree on Gabelli. In subsequent years, Gabelli has continued to support the school through additional financial pledges.[23]
University of Miami[]
In 2011, a gift from Gabelli enabled the School of Business Administration to establish a new endowed professorship.[24]
NYC Local 6 and the Hotel Trades Council[]
At the December 2019 meeting of the Local 6 Delegate Assembly, the union bestowed an honorary membership to Mario Gabelli, whose support for the Hotel Trades Council's scholarship fund has allowed for more awards and larger grants. Mr. Gabelli's father, Joseph Gabelli, was a charter member of both Local 6 and the Hotel Trades Council.[4]
Legal Issues[]
Mancheski v. Gabelli Group Capital Partners - Investor Lawsuit[]
Frederick J. Mancheski, who was Gabelli's first investor in 1976, and David M. Perlmutter, a former attorney for Gabelli brought a lawsuit alleging that Gabelli had prevented them from selling at fair market value their stake in his company. Settlement for $100M: In March 2006, a judge awarded partial summary judgment in favor of claims that he had unfairly prevented Mancheski from selling his shares.[25] In the ensuing settlement, GGCP distributed assets on a pari passu basis including nearly two million shares of NYSE listed Gamco and approximately $20 million in cash.[25]
US Ex Rel. Taylor v. Gabelli - Wireless Spectrum Auction Fraud[]
The US Government picked up a complaint filed by Rufus Taylor III that alleges that Gabelli and 38 other entities or individuals that participated in a scheme to use "sham" small-business affiliates to fraudulently buy parts of the U.S. cell-phone spectrum. The alleged scheme operated over the course of eight Federal Communications Commission auctions from 1995 to 2000. In 2001, whistleblower Rufus Taylor III filed a civil lawsuit against several companies owned by Gabelli, alleging fraudulent practices in FCC auctions.[26] The suit had alleged that the Gabelli-backed false "entrepreneurs" included an NBA player, a related party, a former partner of an accounting firm, an aerobics instructor, and even the caretaker of a vacation home in part owned by Gabelli.[27][28] In those auctions, the government set aside cell phone licenses to be sold to small businesses. Taylor's lawsuit said that Gabelli used more than twelve "sham" startup companies to meet the requirements of a small business applicant in the auctions and acquire the licenses at a small business discount.[27] The whistleblower was an attorney who once worked in the telecommunications business for LICT's competitor Adelphia which went bankrupt.[citation needed] On July 12, 2006, Gabelli and affiliates agreed to pay $130 million to settle the lawsuit.[29] Gabelli's money management business, Gamco Investors, was not a party to the lawsuit.[30]
Personal life[]
Gabelli lives with his second wife, Regina Pitaro. Gabelli and his first wife, Elaine, the mother of his four children, divorced before 1996.[31]
References[]
- ^ a b c Forbes: The World's Billionaires - Mario Gabelli 2 March 2020
- ^ Mario Gabelli - Forbes Forbes.com
- ^ "All-Stars: A look at the fund world's heaviest hitters".
- ^ a b "Mario Gabelli Named Honorary Member".
- ^ "2020 Horatio Alger Award Recipients".
- ^ "Mario J. Gabelli".
- ^ "The Great Minds of Investing - Mario Gabelli: A Knack for Making Money". The Observer. June 6, 2015. Retrieved October 12, 2015.
- ^ 9
- ^ "Graham & Doddsville - Issue 13" (PDF).
- ^ "GAMCO Asset Management". Gamco Investors. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
- ^ "GAMCO History". GAMCO Investors. GAMCO Investors. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
- ^ "Previous Morningstar Fund Manager of the Year Winners".
- ^ "Mario Gabelli Named Money Manager of the Year by Institutional Investor's U.S. Investment Management Awards".
- ^ "Mario Gabelli". Forbes. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-07-30. Retrieved 2013-07-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ Bob, Howe (September 2010). "Business Alumnus Gives $25 Million to Fordham". Fordham University eNewsroom. Archived from the original on 2012-10-07. Retrieved 2011-07-14.
- ^ Miriam, KS (2012-09-23). "Gabelli gift lifts alma mater". Crain's New York.
- ^ "Billionaire Mario Gabelli makes record donation to Fordham University". New York Post. 2020-12-14. Retrieved 2021-09-11.
- ^ University, Fordham (December 2020). "Gabelli School of Business Celebrates $35 Million Gift, Fordham's Largest in History". Fordham University eNewsroom. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
- ^ Jack, Dunn (September 2010). "Gabelli $3 Million Gift Endows CSOM Professorship". The Boston College Chronicle. Archived from the original on 2012-01-13.
- ^ "The Boston College Chronicle - Boston College". 2012-01-13. Archived from the original on 2012-01-13. Retrieved 2020-09-29.
- ^ "$10 Million Gabelli Foundation Gift to Beautify Campus". The Boston College Chronicle. December 10, 2015.
- ^ "Mario J. Gabelli School of Business".
- ^ "School Establishes Endowed Professorship with Gift from New York Investment Executive". University of Miami Business School. February 28, 2011.
- ^ a b Sorkin, Andrew Ross (2006-05-05). "Gabelli Settles Investor Suit for $100 Million". The New York Times. p. Late Edition - Final, Section C, Page 3, Column 3. Retrieved 2006-05-30.
- ^ "DOJ Agrees To Settle Fraud Case Against Gabelli". Associated Press. 2006-06-06.
- ^ a b Glovin, David; Bhaktavatsalam, Sree Vidya (June 2006). "Gabelli to Pay $130 Million to Settle Fraud Lawsuit". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
- ^ Keenan, Matthew (June 2006). "Gabelli in Talks With Justice Department on Claim". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
- ^ Masters, Brooke A. (July 2006). "Gabelli Settles FCC Auction Charges". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
- ^ Glovin, David; Sree Bhaktavatsalam (June 2006). "Gabelli Reaches Accord With U.S. Over Cell Licenses". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
- ^ "Mario Gabelli's broken legacy". Forbes. Retrieved 2020-04-04.
External links[]
Further reading[]
- Angenfelt, Magnus (2013). The World's 99 Greatest Investors: The Secret of Success. Sweden: Roos & Tegner. ISBN 978-91-86691-53-0.
- 1942 births
- Living people
- American billionaires
- American chief executives of financial services companies
- American financial analysts
- American hedge fund managers
- American investors
- American money managers
- American stockbrokers
- American stock traders
- Businesspeople from New York City
- CFA charterholders
- Fordham Preparatory School alumni
- Columbia Business School alumni
- Gabelli School of Business alumni
- Fordham University alumni
- People from the Bronx
- Stock and commodity market managers
- Giving Pledgers
- 21st-century philanthropists