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Daniel Loeb, Hedge Fund Manager, Called Rival 'Hitler Himself,' Emails Show

Daniel Loeb

First Posted: 03/11/11 05:44 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:40 PM ET

NEW YORK (By Matthew Goldstein) - It was the summer of 2006 and hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb was having difficulty containing his very harsh feelings toward Fairfax Financial, the Canadian insurance giant, and its CEO, Prem Watsa.

Loeb's New York-based fund, Third Point LLC, had placed a big bet that the shares and bonds of Fairfax and its subsidiaries would tumble. He was looking forward to cashing in his hedge fund's chips, if and when some bad news rocked Fairfax. And he shared that enthusiasm with another hedge fund manager, in a fairly graphic email message that recently surfaced in a five-year-old civil lawsuit filed by Fairfax against Loeb and other prominent hedge fund managers.

"Prem Watsa bend over the hedge funds have something special for you," Loeb wrote in the June 25, 2006 email to Adam Sender, the founder of Exis Capital, whose hedge fund also was "shorting" Fairfax -- that is, looking to profit from a decline in its shares. A little later that day, in an email to a consultant who was doing research for some of the hedge funds wagering on Fairfax's fall, Loeb wrote: "die, Prem Die!"

A month later, Fairfax sued Loeb and Sender, as well as famed short-seller James Chanos and billionaire hedge fund trader Steven Cohen, claiming they had teamed up to "crush" the company's stock. The Toronto-based insurer, which some of the defendants openly had dubbed "the next Enron," contends Loeb, Chanos, Cohen and Sender orchestrated a multi-year campaign to spread disinformation about Fairfax's business model to a number of well-known financial journalists.

The managers argue they did nothing wrong. They say it's normal for bearish stock traders to dig up critical -- even negative -- information about a company that they suspect is presenting a misleading image in its financial statements.

But now those old emails and others like them are coming back to haunt Loeb, as Fairfax's civil lawsuit creeps along in a Morristown, New Jersey, courtroom and some of 10 million pages of previously sealed documents in the case start coming to light. And while the profane language used by Loeb, a 49-year-old father of three young children, may not shock anyone who works on Wall Street, such crude talk could make some investors queasy -- especially institutional investors who have less of a stomach for negative headlines.

The disclosure of those emails in a recent 800-page court filing by Fairfax's lawyers comes at an especially awkward time for Loeb, who emerged in 2010 as one of the $1.9 trillion hedge fund industry's star performers and is poised to do so again this year. The emails, however, are a rude reminder of Loeb's earlier days, when he was perhaps best known for sending caustic letters to the boards of companies his fund had taken a big stake in.

While Loeb still engages in so-called activist investing, it's a less important part of Third Point's strategy, according to the fund's marketing information and people who know Loeb. Indeed, Third Point's nearly 40 percent gain last year was more attributable to placing savvy bets on a rebound in consumer stocks, the rising fortunes of gold and a surge in the value of beaten-down mortgage-backed securities than from agitating for change at a company or even shorting stocks.

Bill Carmody, an attorney for Loeb, said he could not comment on "selected emails" or any part of Fairfax's filing. He said a court order prohibits him from discussing the case. "It's unfortunate that your readers are going to be viewing this entirely from plaintiff's spin on snippets of dated personal emails of Daniel Loeb's, without the context of actual documents in this case," said Carmody, an attorney with Susman Godfrey.

Reuters reviewed the Fairfax court filing after the New Jersey state judge overseeing the case recently made the papers public. Lawyers for Sender, Cohen and Chanos either declined to comment or did not respond to requests seeking comment.

SPEAK YIDDISH

In some respects, regardless of the outcome of the litigation in which Fairfax is seeking billions in damages, Loeb may have more to loose than his peers -- especially if more embarrassing emails emerge in the coming months. That's because the tenor of the emails undercut his recent effort to shed his image as simply some Wall Street rabble-rouser.

It's notable that Fairfax's filing does not cite any emails from Cohen and makes only a handful of references to emails written by employees of his $13 billion SAC Capital Advisors. There are several emails from Chanos excerpted in the complaint, but most are not nearly as colorful as anything penned by Loeb.

Some of the emails composed by Loeb's friend Sender may be the most crude of all -- in one he jokes about how Fairfax's chief executive would set a record for a certain sexual act involving swallowing if he ever went to jail. But

Sender's hedge fund is relatively small. With just $150 million under management, he is better known these days for collecting works of art than his trading.

When asked about some of his locker room humor, Sender responded in an email this "seems beneath your organization to write about something so trivial and meaningless."

The emails, however, reveal what the managers thought were private communications at the time. But they also highlight a certain edginess, even belligerence that some say can typify a short-seller's aggressive assault on a company.

In the case of Loeb, the emails show that, if nothing else, he is not one to hide his emotions when he has a lot of money riding on a bet. Despite the calm and collected air hedge fund managers often like to present when they are in public or meeting with investors, the emails show how volatile they can become when a stock doesn't perform as expected.

In May 2003, Loeb compared Fairfax to "Hitler himself" when expressing displeasure to another trader about a rebound in the insurer's share price. Fairfax's lawyer's said Loeb, in the instant message exchange, was upset that the rise in the company's shares was making it more costly for him to maintain his short position, which required him to borrow more stock from a broker.

Fairfax's filing quotes Loeb as saying he found the situation somewhat ironic because "the odds are much greater of being strung up by a Canadian Jew than a Canadian schwarze." Loeb, who is Jewish, used "schwarze," a derogatory Yiddish word for a black person, to describe Watsa, who is of Indian ancestry.

LITTLE BOYS

Janet Tavakoli, a Chicago-based derivatives consultant, who worked for many years on Wall Street before opening her own firm, said the course language the managers used to describe their feelings toward Fairfax and Watsa is important for investors to know about. Tavakoli said leaving aside the legal issues in the litigation, profane and pejorative language can tell investors something about a manager's character.

"This kind of little boy screaming and ranting should make a person wonder about someone's self-control," said Tavakoli, who said she does not personally know Loeb. "It does speak to your character because words matter and words have consequences."

Indeed, one of the more memorable images from a high-profile U.S. Senate committee hearing last year into financial crisis, was Sen. Carl Levin repeatedly saying that a Goldman Sachs Group executive had written an email calling one of the investment bank's subprime-mortgage backed securities, "one shitty deal."

All of this may explain why Loeb is fighting harder than some of the other defendants in trying to keep the emails from spilling out into the public. Loeb's lawyers, in a January 7 letter, urged a court-appointed official overseeing the mountain of paper in the case to keep Fairfax's filing sealed "on the grounds that the general public has no interest in viewing such documents."

Fairfax's filing was submitted in response to a motion by the hedge fund defendants to dismiss some aspects of the lawsuit. The defendants withdrew the motion late last year.

Loeb's lawyers also took the unusual step in February of trying to take depositions of several prominent journalists, who Fairfax claims were duped and cajoled into writing critical articles about the insurer. But Loeb's team also withdrew those subpoenas after the journalists retained lawyers to oppose the request.
All the managers, including Loeb, are trying to keep their own deposition under lock and key, at least until the case goes to trial.

Some people who know Loeb bemoan the fact that these old emails are coming to light now. They say Loeb is a much different manager and person today he was then. His supporters point out that he's a big contributor to a nonprofit group called Prep for Prep, which helps get minority students into New York City area prep schools. They also say he is less prone to the angry rant, especially since becoming a father. Loeb and his wife Margaret, now married for nearly seven years, have three children five or younger.

In recent years, Loeb, who grew-up in southern California and is an avid surfer, has become a health food nut and a yoga devotee. His wife is a former yoga instructor.

"He's mellowed," said one person who invests in hedge funds but has no money with Third Point and did not want to be identified.

Whatever the reason for the change, Loeb's new approach has been a smashing success for him and his investors. Third Point's assets under management now tally $5.7 billion, nearly double the amount it oversaw just a few years ago. He's come a long way from the trader who opened shop in 1995 with just $3.3 million and operated in borrowed space from David Tepper's Appaloosa Management, a $16 billion New Jersey-based hedge fund.

LETHAL EMAILS

It's possible, of course, that the 800-page filing by Fairfax may represent the most damaging emails uncovered by the insurer's lawyers against Loeb and the other managers. And, as with any litigation filing, the context in which those emails were written can mean everything.

In fact, while emails now play a pivotal role in both civil litigation and criminal prosecutions involving Wall Street traders, it can sometimes be a double-edged sword. In charging two former Bear Stearns hedge fund managers with fraud, federal prosecutors built a good deal of their case around emails, in which the managers appeared bent on keeping information from their investors about the level of subprime debt the funds had invested in.

But at trial, lawyers for Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin, were able to persuade a jury that the emails, when taken in context, weren't as damaging as they appeared. A jury sitting in Brooklyn, N.Y. acquitted Cioffi and Tannin in November 2009 in what still is the only criminal prosecution of Wall Street executives to arise from the financial crisis.

Edward Little, who defended Cioffi during the trial, said while emails can be "lethal" in litigation, a skilled lawyer can take the bite out of a potentially problematic email by putting it into the proper context.

"Everyone now understands that there is a false sense of privacy when sending emails and people sometimes are speaking to graphically," said Little. "Even rough or graphic humor sometimes can be explained away.

Then again, the bigger concern for Loeb isn't necessarily what a jury thinks of Fairfax's allegation. The danger is whether emails from the past undo the steps he's taken to cast himself a new and more polished image.

(Reported by Matthew Goldstein; Editing by Jim Impoco and Claudia Parsons)


Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mondayboy
Rebel with a cause
12:57 PM on 03/14/2011
I will be interested in an in-depth study of the psychology and the motivations that drive these people to such extreme greed - where their conscience, attitudes and behavior is devoid of societal good.

James Hillman did a brilliant job on Hitler, Jeffrey Dahmer etc in his wonderful book "The Soul's Code." It is one of the best books I have ever read. But there is something profound at work in these type of people, and I don't think it is just about the acquisition of wealth. Look at the Koch brothers and their ilk. How much does one need to live a comfortable and pleasant life? They are not satisfied by just making money, but are driven to destroy other people, nature, things that society values etc. Any insights from the philosophers, psychologists or thinkers?
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redsquirell
red squire LL
04:54 PM on 03/13/2011
I wonder what would happen if the lawyers took over every aspect of government and wrote convoluted laws that required the services of five other lawyers every time there was a crime or dispute? Yep, I wonder what that would be like?
04:15 PM on 03/12/2011
The defense that he Loeb has re-invented himself doen't address the wrongs or intent committed at an earlier time for the sake of self profit.

Kind of like a man who after killing his wife begs for mercy because he is now a widow.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drillsgtmark
I don't know but I've been told...
12:23 PM on 03/12/2011
That's a brilliant commentary from one person to another. People have absolutely no class or clues anymore. I pray for the next generation.
08:58 AM on 03/14/2011
Every generation thinks that the next will be the worst. I would agree that we are rapidly reaching the Nietzschen "Last Man", but there will be something coming out of it... I still have hopes. Go to the next high school play or musical or symphonic affair. The next generation is as usual, 4/5th yahoo jocks and airheads, but there are always that "precious few". They might not prevail, but they will endure.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skeptical Patriot
08:22 AM on 03/12/2011
"the odds are much greater of being strung up by a Canadian Jew than a Canadian schwarze." Schwarze = N*gger. Nice. Don't care what is his returns are, this is the kind of offense approach to investing that give Wallstreet a terrible reputation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
07:58 AM on 03/12/2011
OMG, where did you get that hand model in the picture? It looks like Mr. Hyde or Geico's caveman was sitting down to make some financial transactions!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
08:09 AM on 03/12/2011
Seriously, son, I'd have a doctor look at that lump.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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loki
cheap politicians for sale
07:32 AM on 03/12/2011
Seems to be a Right wing Ivy greed thing. If you dont like someone, call them Hitler.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
08:02 AM on 03/12/2011
In fact, a lot of the right-wing elite loved Hitler. In fact, yesterday's elite were frequently Hitler "bedfellows," so to speak.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/sep/25/usa.secondworldwar

[excerpt]

"George Bush's grandfather, the late US senator Prescott Bush, was a director and shareholder of companies that profited from their involvement with the financial backers of Nazi Germany.
The Guardian has obtained confirmation from newly discovered files in the US National Archives that a firm of which Prescott Bush was a director was involved with the financial architects of Nazism."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VeritasVincit2
on the hunt for Biggie and Tupac
12:02 PM on 03/12/2011
I just wish they bwould al gas each other and then we could get on with our country
07:13 AM on 03/12/2011
Ah, THESE GUYS asre Jerzygirls' people, ha!!!!!!!! And she hates those union members like fireman and school teachers!!!

Yessireeee! Republican shills that post here really know who to LOVE!!!!
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trumbull desi
If I have something pithy to say, see below
10:42 AM on 03/12/2011
If you dislike jerzygirl, then I must fan you.
11:40 AM on 03/12/2011
I don't dislike HER, I dislike her brainwashed ignorance in supporting the very people that couldn't care less about her as a WORKER!! She has had every chance to educate herself but has failed at every turn.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjwrites
06:31 AM on 03/12/2011
It is most interesting to me how the media portrays these hedge funds and related people.

If a man spent his days gambling at a casino, the media would talk about his "problem" and how it might be affecting his family and the family finances and they would blather on about what a "shame" it is that "a grown man can't control his shameful addictions and get a real job to support his family."

But a hedge fund manager, who gambles for a living, is called "savvy and sophisticated", and no one mentions how his gambling affects millions of families and family finances - people who don't even know these gamblers exist and shouldn't bear the affects of their actions. Homes and jobs are lost, businesses are shuttered, and sometimes people in far off places die or starve because of their actions.

I say, it's a shame that these grown hedge fund managers can't control their shameful addictions and get a real job to support their families.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Just another hostage of the poopy heads
02:53 AM on 03/12/2011
The Galleon hedge fund trial began on 3/8 with jury selection.
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trumbull desi
If I have something pithy to say, see below
10:43 AM on 03/12/2011
I was on a Galleon thread the other day where people were defending these guys as 'only' hedge fund managers. That was a real head scratcher to me.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WoolStreet
12:37 AM on 03/12/2011
TIME TO PURGE