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What pandemic? World’s top 15 hedge funders made £17 billion last year

The world’s top 15 hedge fund managers collectively made nearly £17 billion last year – despite tens of millions of people across the world losing their jobs as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

Chase Coleman III, the founder of Tiger Global Management (TGM) was the best performing hedge fund manager, making $3 billion in performance management fees and gains on his personal investments in the fund, Bloomberg revealed.

Coleman’s personal pay in 2020 was more than the GDP of dozens of countries – including Gambia, Bhutan and Eritrea, according to the International Monetary Fund. The amount made by the top 15 fund managers in total is more than the GDP of Ireland and Zambia.

The 45-year-old Coleman has been described by New York Magazine as having “the unique distinction of being both old and new money rich”. He is a descendant of Peter Stuyvestant, the last Dutch governor of New York who ordered the building of the wall that Wall Street is named after.

His payout is thought to be the biggest single year’s pay for anyone since John Paulson, another hedge fund manager, made $5 billion betting on the recovery of the economy in 2010, after the financial crisis.

The $3 billion windfall adds to the $4.5 billion fortune he had already amassed, according to Forbes – which ranked him as the 458th richest man on the planet. Coleman and his fund made a major windfall from investing heavily in tech stocks – including PayPal, Google-owner Alphabet, fitness bike firm Peloton and remote-working platforms Zoom and Slack.

Coleman is a major donor to the Republican Party – and lives with his wife in a two-level whole floor apartment near Central Park in New York, thought to be worth more than $100 million.

All 15 of the men on the 2020 high pay list are men. Jim Simons, the founder of Renaissance Technologies, was second – taking in $2.6 billion in 2020.

Luke Hilyard, the executive director of the High Pay Centre thinktank, said: “The research shows the extraordinary riches accruing to a tiny number of individuals for speculative financial activities of dubious value to wider society.

“It ought to be completely clear that this is a really terrible way for wealth to be distributed, in the midst of a global pandemic with families losing jobs and homes, businesses going under and public services under immense strain.”

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Henry Goodwin

Henry is a reporter with a keen interest in politics and current affairs. He read History at the University of Cambridge and has a Masters in Newspaper Journalism from City, University of London. Follow him on Twitter: @HenGoodwin.

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