Business Standard

How billionair­e learned to love cryptocurr­encies

- ANNIE MASSA & KATHERINE BURTON

Hedge fund billionair­e Steve Cohen was until recently a bit of a skeptic when it came to cryptocurr­encies.

Then his son, a “cryptomani­ac”, helped change his mind.

“He really convinced me this was something I needed to do,” Cohen, the founder of Point72 Asset Management and owner of the New

York Mets, said on Tuesday at the Skybridge Alternativ­es Conference, according to a person with knowledge of his remarks. That was part of a journey that included meeting with as many people over the past six months as he could to educate himself.

“Once I decided there were opportunit­ies, and I thought this could be a space like the internet — it could be incredibly transforma­tional — I wasn’t going to miss this,” Cohen said in a discussion titled “Generating Alpha in Markets and Baseball” moderated by Skybridge Capital founder Anthony Scaramucci.

Cohen, 65, who has a net worth of $11.1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index, has since thrown himself into the world of crypto in a personal capacity and at his firm.

This week, he announced he was investing in Radkl, a quantitati­ve trading firm for digital assets. That was after Recur, a non-fungible token company, said Cohen’s family office also invested in its latest funding round. Cohen, meanwhile, told Scaramucci that Point72 is building crypto-trading capabiliti­es at the firm.

His interest in the virtual realm extends beyond crypto: Cohen expressed a fascinatio­n with the metaverse, or a vision of a virtual world where people interact through avatars.

“There’s some far-out ideas out there, about how people are going to spend their time,” he said. “Your mind can run wild,” he added, about how people will interact in the metaverse, potentiall­y buying virtual real estate and virtual outfits for their avatars.

Cohen, a Mets fan who bought the team in December for about $2.5 billion, also addressed the club’s performanc­e and why he loves owning it.

“It’s taken me into a different realm,” Cohen said. “Owning a hedge fund, you have some notoriety, but it’s nothing like owning a sports team in New York.” He weighed in on the world of social media, where he has been more vocal since acquiring the Mets, saying it has helped people to see him as a human being, and not just a wealthy hedge fund owner.

‘Once I decided there were opportunit­ies, and I thought this could be a space like the internet I wasn’t going to miss this’

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