New York Post

‘TIGER’ BLOOD GUSH

Hwang’s $6B maul

- By NOAH MANSKAR

Despite being a rarefied “Tiger cub,” Bill Hwang was not well known on Wall Street until he blew up in what might be the biggest margin call of all time, causing billions in losses.

Hwang, a former protégé of noted Tiger Management founder Julian Robertson, ran family office Archegos Capital Management, which was so under-the-radar that he wasn’t even initially spotted as the cause of seismic shifts in trading that sent shares of Discovery down 21 percent on Friday.

Hwang has since emerged as the man at the center of a multibilli­on-dollar trading fiasco that is now expected to result in upward of $6 billion in losses for some of his trading partners, including Nomura and Credit Suisse, which have both warned of “significan­t” losses.

Wall Streeters are admittedly stunned by the speed of the crash and the size of the damage left behind even as they brace for a potential battle with lawmakers over regulation of secretive family offices like the one run by Hwang.

“I’ve never seen anything like this — how quiet it was, how concentrat­ed, and how fast it disappeare­d,” Mike Novogratz, a career macro-investor and former partner at Goldman Sachs, told Bloomberg News. “This has to be one of the single greatest losses of personal wealth in history.”

“You have to wonder who else is out there with one of these invisible fortunes,” Novogratz added.

Because Archegos is a family office and not a regulated bank or hedge fund, the details of its crash remain a mystery. What is known is that Hwang establishe­d Archegos after he shuttered his hedge funds following an SEC probe in 2012 alleging insider trading.

The firm then reportedly used derivative­s contracts with brokers to supercharg­e its trades, structurin­g them in such a way that Archegos’ positions were placed on banks’ balance sheets.

Such contracts, which don’t need to be disclosed, reportedly allowed Hwang to turn his net worth, estimated at around $10 billion, into trades worth an estimated $50 billion or more.

At some point last week, the trades went awry, forcing Hwang’s trading partners to start selling his positions to pay off his debts to them.

Archegos finally broke its silence Tuesday, saying: “All plans are being discussed as Mr. Hwang and the team determine the best path forward.”

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, however, is already calling for greater scrutiny.

“Archegos’ meltdown had all the makings of a dangerous situation — largely unregulate­d hedge fund, opaque derivative­s, trading in private dark pools, high leverage, and a trader who wriggled out of the SEC’s enforcemen­t,” Warren tweeted Tuesday.

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