Difference between revisions of "Paul Singer"

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[[Paul Singer]] (born August 22, 1944) is an American hedge fund manager, activist investor, and philanthropist. He is the founder, president, co-chief executive officer, and co-chief investment officer of [[Elliott Management Corporation]], a global investment firm headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida, with offices in New York, London, Hong Kong, and Tokyo. As of June 30, 2025, Elliott manages approximately $76.1 billion in assets under management.<ref name="ElliottAUM2025">Elliott Investment Management official website, "About Elliott", accessed February 4, 2026.</ref><ref name="PensionsInvest2025">"Elliott Investment Management’s hedge fund assets nearly tripled over past decade", Pensions & Investments, December 11, 2025, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> Singer's net worth is estimated at $6.7 billion as of February 2026.<ref name="ForbesSinger2026">Paul Singer profile, ''Forbes'', real-time net worth as of February 2, 2026, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
 
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Singer is known for his activist investing style, often described as "vulture capitalism" due to his firm's strategy of acquiring distressed debt and pursuing aggressive legal tactics to extract value.<ref name="NYerSinger2018">Sheelah Kolhatkar, "Paul Singer, Doomsday Investor", ''The New Yorker'', August 20, 2018, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> He has been involved in high-profile disputes with sovereign nations and corporations, leading to significant financial gains for Elliott but drawing criticism for contributing to economic hardship in affected regions and communities. Beyond finance, Singer is a major Republican donor, a supporter of pro-Israel causes, and an advocate for LGBT rights.<ref name="ForbesSingerBio">Paul Singer profile, ''Forbes'', accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> He is also actively involved in philanthropy through the [[Paul E. Singer Foundation]].
[[Paul Singer]] (dob: August 22, 1944) is the founder and president of [[Elliott Management Corporation]], a New York-based hedge fund which is currently worth more than $23 billion.<ref name ="Singer profile">Paul E. Singer Foundation Website [http://thepesfoundation.org/paul-singer/ Paul Singer]. Accessed 22 May 2015.</ref> As of 23 June 2015 his net worth was estimated at $1.92 Billion.<ref name ="Singer Forbes">forbes.com [http://www.forbes.com/profile/paul-singer/ #1006 Paul Singer]. Accessed 23 May 2015.</ref> He is also the founder of the [[Paul E. Singer Foundation]] a 501(c)(3) non-profit grant making foundation which supports a number of conservative and pro-Israel causes. Singer graduated from Harvard Law School in 1969 and went on to found [[Elliott Management]] in 1977.<ref name ="Singer Forbes">forbes.com [http://www.forbes.com/profile/paul-singer/ #1006 Paul Singer]. Accessed 23 May 2015.</ref> He is a major supporter of the Republican party.  
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==Early life and education==
 
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Singer was born in Teaneck, New Jersey, to a Jewish family. He grew up in the Bronx and Teaneck, one of three children of a pharmacist father and a homemaker mother.<ref name="WikiSinger">Paul Singer (businessman), Wikipedia, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> He graduated from [[Teaneck High School]] in 1962. He earned a B.S. in psychology from the [[University of Rochester]] in 1966 and a J.D. from [[Harvard Law School]] in 1969.<ref name="ForbesSingerBio"/> After law school, Singer began his career as a real estate attorney at the investment bank [[Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette]].
==Investments in Distressed Debt==
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==Personal life==
 
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Singer married [[Emily Singer]] in the early 1970s, and the couple had two sons, [[Andrew Singer]] and [[Gordon Singer]]. The marriage ended in divorce in 1996.<ref name="NYerSinger2018"/> [[Andrew Singer]], a doctor in New York, is gay and married his husband in Massachusetts in 2009, an event that significantly influenced Singer's advocacy for LGBT rights.<ref name="ForbesSingerBio"/> [[Gordon Singer]] runs Elliott's London office and is involved in the firm's operations. Singer is known to play the piano in a rock ensemble with his sons for recreation. As of 2021, Singer has been in a relationship with [[Terry Kassel]], head of strategic human resources at Elliott Management, for about a decade.<ref name="NYerSinger2018"/> Singer maintains a low personal profile, avoiding media attention and focusing on his professional and philanthropic endeavors.
Through the [[Elliott Management Corporation]] Singer has invested in distressed sovereign debt and has bet against countries such as Peru, the Congo and Argentina following financial crises. He has succeeded in suing countries in order to get financial returns on his investments. Journalist Greg Palast offers the following description of Singer's activities in this area:
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==Career==
 
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In 1977, Singer founded [[Elliott Associates L.P.]] with $1.3 million in seed capital from friends and family.<ref name="WikiSinger"/> Initially focused on convertible bond arbitrage and distressed investing, the firm evolved into a multi-strategy hedge fund renowned for activist campaigns. Elliott has achieved a compound annual return of about 14% since inception, with losses in only two of its 48 years as of 2025.<ref name="ElliottAUM2025"/> The firm employs approximately 622 people worldwide and has expanded into private equity, with notable investments in technology, energy, and consumer sectors.<ref name="ElliottAUM2025"/>
:Recently, former United Nations envoy Winston Tubman suggested I ask Singer or his business associates, "Do you know you're causing babies to die?"
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Singer's strategy often involves acquiring stakes in underperforming companies or distressed assets and pushing for changes such as board overhauls, asset sales, or restructurings to unlock value. High-profile targets have included [[Twitter]] (now [[X]]), [[AT&T]], [[Samsung]], and [[AC Milan]]. Singer is also a co-founder of [[Start-Up Nation Central]], an Israeli non-profit that promotes Israeli technology.
 
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Singer's networks span finance, politics, and philanthropy. He is a prominent Republican donor, having contributed millions to candidates and PACs, including significant support for [[Donald Trump]]'s 2024 campaign and transition. He serves as chairman emeritus of the [[Manhattan Institute for Policy Research]] (chairman from 2008) and is involved with organizations like the [[Republican Jewish Coalition]] (board member since at least 2008) and the [[Philos Project]].
:What does this guy do - put poison in kiddies' milk? Worse: he takes away the milk.
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===Investment philosophy and strategies===
 
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Singer's investment philosophy emphasizes risk aversion, consistent returns, and active value creation rather than passive identification. He has stated, "If I want to be risk averse, I have to be risk averse all the time," highlighting his constant vigilance against market volatility. Singer prioritizes "effort-driven returns," involving detailed, repetitive analysis to uncover and realize value in complex situations. His approach aims to "make money as close as possible to all the time," through diversified strategies including distressed debt, activism, and hedging.
:Singer's modus operandi is to find some forgotten tiny debt owed by a very poor nation (Peru and Congo were on his menu). He waits for the United States and European taxpayers to forgive the poor nations' debts, then waits at bit longer for offers of food aid, medicine and investment loans. Then Singer pounces, legally grabbing at every resource and all the money going to the desperate country. Trade stops, funds freeze and an entire economy is effectively held hostage.
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Singer criticizes passive investing, arguing it "devours capitalism" by reducing shareholder engagement and enabling inefficient management. He views activism as corrective, stating, "We're not crusaders; we're not just speaking to hear ourselves speak. We have a goal; we have a thesis," with about 70% of campaigns succeeding in improving businesses. This philosophy has driven Elliott's success but also controversies, as critics see it as prioritizing short-term gains over long-term stability.
 
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==Investments in distressed debt==
:Singer then demands aid-giving nations pay monstrous ransoms to let trade resume. At BBC TV's Newsnight, we learned that Singer demanded $400 million dollars from the Congo for a debt he picked up for less than $10 million. If he doesn't get his 4,000 percent profit, he can effectively starve the nation. I don't mean that figuratively - I mean starve as in no food. In Congo-Brazzaville last year, one-fourth of all deaths of children under five were caused by malnutrition.<ref name ="vultures">Greg Palast, '[http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/3772:ubervultures-the-billionaires-who-would-pick-our-president Uber-Vultures: The Billionaires Who Would Pick Our President]', ''Truthout'', 6 October 2011, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>  
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Singer pioneered the strategy of buying sovereign debt from countries in financial distress and pursuing full repayment through litigation, earning him the label of "vulture capitalist." Through subsidiaries like [[NML Capital]] and [[Kensington International]], Elliott has targeted nations including Peru, the Republic of the Congo, Argentina, and Greece. Critics, including journalist [[Greg Palast]], argue these tactics exacerbate poverty by diverting aid and resources.<ref name="Palast2011">Greg Palast, "Uber-Vultures: The Billionaires Who Would Pick Our President", Truthout, October 6, 2011, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
 
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In 1996, Elliott purchased defaulted Peruvian debt for $11.4 million and secured a $58 million judgment, including interest. When former President [[Alberto Fujimori]] attempted to flee, Elliott seized his jet, forcing Peru to pay in full. In the Republic of the Congo, Kensington bought $30 million in debt and was awarded over $100 million in interest by 2003, later seizing $39 million in oil sales. A 2008 settlement amount remains undisclosed.
In 1995 the company bought defaulted Peruvian bank for $20 million and sued the country for $58 million. [[Kensington International]], a subsidiary of the company bought $30 million in debt owed by Congo-Brazzaville. In 2002 and 2003 the company was awarded more than $100 million in interest. As of November 2011 Singer had reportedly been able to acquire $39 million of the country's oil sales.<ref>Staff, '[http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2011/nov/15/vulture-funds-key-players?intcmp=122 Vulture funds – the key players]', ''The Guardian'',15 November 2011, accessed 23 June 2015</ref> Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has described Singer as a 'vulture'.<ref name ="Singer Forbes">forbes.com [http://www.forbes.com/profile/paul-singer/ #1006 Paul Singer]. Accessed 23 May 2015.</ref>
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Singer has defended these investments as enforcing accountability and reducing investment risks for developing nations.<ref name="WaPo2014">Jaime Fuller, "Meet the wealthy donor who’s trying to get Republicans to support gay marriage", ''The Washington Post'', April 4, 2014, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
 
 
Singer has defended his investments in distressed debt, even claiming to be providing a service by holding nations to ransom:
 
 
 
:In the summer of 2013, Singer told Institutional Investor's Alpha Magazine that forcing debt payment is a Singer-flavored form of activism. "We've made the point over and over again that sovereigns that could pay their debts and choose not to may be attempting to save some money but are harming their people and their economies by making investing in their countries more risky and more problematic and by discouraging foreign investment." In Singer's view, he isn't just forcing indebted companies and countries to pay up. He's trying to create a world where distressed debt doesn't exist.<ref name ="wealthy donor">Jaime Fuller, '[http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2014/04/04/the-money-man-behind-pro-gay-marriage-republicans/ Meet the wealthy donor who’s trying to get Republicans to support gay marriage]', ''The Washington Post'', 4 April 2014, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
===Argentina===
 
===Argentina===
 
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Following Argentina's 2001 default, [[NML Capital]] refused restructuring offers and sued for full repayment of $1.6 billion. Tactics included seizing the Argentine naval vessel [[ARA Libertad]] in Ghana in 2012 (later released by international tribunal) and attempting to detain the presidential plane. U.S. courts ruled in Elliott's favor, leading to a 2016 settlement of $2.4 billion. Argentine President [[Cristina Fernández de Kirchner]] called Singer a "vulture."
NML Capital, a subsidiary of Elliott Capital has gone to extraordinary lengths to extract the $1.6 billion from Argentina awarded to NML Capital by a New York judge. In 2012 NML Capital won an injunction in a Ghanaian court to hold the flagship of the Argentine navy, the ARA Libertad in the port of Tema.<ref name ="Argentina plane">Agustino Fontevecchia, '[http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/10/05/the-real-story-behind-the-argentine-vessel-in-ghana-and-how-hedge-funds-tried-to-seize-the-presidential-plane/ The Real Story Of How A Hedge Fund Detained A Vessel In Ghana And Even Went For Argentina's 'Air Force One']', ''The Guardian'', 5 October 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
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Elliott funded lobbying through the [[American Task Force Argentina]], spending $3 million since 2007 to pressure U.S. policymakers.<ref name="WSJ2012">Ianthe Jeanne Dugan, "Argentine Lobby Mystifies 'Members'", ''Wall Street Journal'', October 15, 2012, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> Donations from Elliott associates went to politicians critical of Argentina, linking its ties to Iran.<ref name="IPS2013">Charles Davis, "U.S. Hedge Funds Paint Argentina as Ally of Iranian ‘Devil’ – Part Two", Inter Press Service, July 31, 2013, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
 
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The prolonged dispute, lasting 15 years, involved aggressive tactics and set precedents in sovereign debt restructuring, with critics arguing it hindered economic recovery in Argentina while yielding massive profits for Elliott.
In response the Argentine foreign ministry said that 'vulture funds had crossed a new limit in their attacks' and that holding the vessel was 'a trick by the unscrupulous financiers.' It was also reported that the ministry stated that the detention of the vessel violated the Vienna Convention's clause on diplomatic immunity.<ref name ="Argentina plane">Agustino Fontevecchia, '[http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/10/05/the-real-story-behind-the-argentine-vessel-in-ghana-and-how-hedge-funds-tried-to-seize-the-presidential-plane/ The Real Story Of How A Hedge Fund Detained A Vessel In Ghana And Even Went For Argentina's 'Air Force One']', ''The Guardian'', 5 October 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In December 2012 the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea ruled that Ghana's detention of the boat was in violation of international law.<ref name ="ruling">International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, '[http://www.motherjones.com/documents/745814-tribunal-orders-release-of-argentine-frigate Tribunal Orders Release of Argentine Frigate]', ''Mother Jones'', 15 December 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In 2007 a number of bondholders moved to get a court order to detain the Tango 01, the Argentine presidential airplane, and to seize fuel money from the aircraft's pilots.<ref name ="Argentina plane">Agustino Fontevecchia, '[http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/10/05/the-real-story-behind-the-argentine-vessel-in-ghana-and-how-hedge-funds-tried-to-seize-the-presidential-plane/ The Real Story Of How A Hedge Fund Detained A Vessel In Ghana And Even Went For Argentina's 'Air Force One']', ''The Guardian'', 5 October 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref> The Argentine government cancelled the trip having learned of the plan. A trip to Germany was also cancelled due to the Argentine government learning of a similar plan to seize the aircraft. Bondholders have also attempted to acquire compensation through the assets of major Argentine politicians:
 
 
 
:Holdout bondholders have also gone after the assets of prominent Argentine politicians, including Nestor Kirchner, his wife and current president Cristina Kirchner, and 136 members of her administration, including most of the cabinet.  In 2010, Singer’s Elliott got Judge Griesa, who consistently rules against Argentina, to ask Bank of America to disclose all information related to their personal accounts.  Elliott has even gone after Argentina’s foreign exchange reserves, coming close to seizing $105 million held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.<ref name ="Argentina plane">Agustino Fontevecchia, '[http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/10/05/the-real-story-behind-the-argentine-vessel-in-ghana-and-how-hedge-funds-tried-to-seize-the-presidential-plane/ The Real Story Of How A Hedge Fund Detained A Vessel In Ghana And Even Went For Argentina's 'Air Force One']', ''The Guardian'', 5 October 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In 2012 NML Capital and EM (owned by [[Kenneth Dart]]) were awarded $23 million from the assets of Argentina’s Banco Hipotecario.<ref name ="Argentina plane">Agustino Fontevecchia, '[http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2012/10/05/the-real-story-behind-the-argentine-vessel-in-ghana-and-how-hedge-funds-tried-to-seize-the-presidential-plane/ The Real Story Of How A Hedge Fund Detained A Vessel In Ghana And Even Went For Argentina's 'Air Force One']', ''The Guardian'', 5 October 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
NML Capital was represented in its dispute with the government of Argentina by former solicitor general and Bush v. Gore lawyer [[Ted Olson]].<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In 2012, then-Florida representative [[Connie Mack]] sponsored a bill to force Argentina to pay $3.5 billion to a number of hedge funds including Elliott Management. A number of Elliott employees were significant supporters of Mack's 2012 Senate campaign. Mack claimed to be unaware of Singer's role regarding Argentine debt.<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
The [[American Task Force Argentina]] (ATFA) a lobby group which works to help American investors recoup money from Argentina lists Elliott Associates as one of its national supporters. In 2012 the ''Wall Street Journal'' reported that the task torce had spent $3 million in lobbying since 2007. The Argentine ambassador to the United States, Jorge Aguello characterised the task force as 'vulture funds' ...lobby facade' with whose objectives were 'making millions for what they had gotten for mere pennies.'<ref name ="task force">Ianthe Jeanne Dugan, '[http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10000872396390444657804578050923796499176 Argentine Lobby Mystifies 'Members']', ''Wall Street Journal'', 15 October 2012, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In 2013, the ''Inter Press Service'' reported that Singer was using ATFA to issue press releases and to take out full-page ads in national newspapers regarding Argentine debt.<ref name ="IPS">Charles Davis, '[http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/07/u-s-hedge-funds-paint-argentina-as-ally-of-iranian-devil-part-two/ U.S. Hedge Funds Paint Argentina as Ally of Iranian ‘Devil’ – Part Two]', ''Inter Press Service'', 31 July 2013, accessed 29 June 2015</ref> IPS also reported that Elliott management had donated funds to politicians who were notably critical of Argentina and who highlighted Argentina's economic ties with Iran in order to damage the credibility of Argentina:
 
 
 
:Senator [[Mark Kirk]], an Illinois Republican, has been a vocal critic of Argentina, writing a letter to the country’s president denouncing her agreement with Iran to investigate the the 1994 bombing of the Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina (AMIA) in Buenos Aires. That letter was later quoted in an ATFA ad.
 
 
 
:As it turns out, Kirk has received more than 95,000 dollars from employees of Singer’s firm, Elliott Management, according to the Centre for Responsive Politics. Indeed, many letters expressing concern about Argentina’s ties to Iran appear are signed by lawmakers who have received campaign cash from Singer and his close associates.
 
 
 
:A Jul. 10 letter to Attorney General [[Eric Holder]], for instance, urged the Justice Department not to side with Argentina in its legal battle before the Supreme Court, citing both the AMIA agreement and Argentina’s expanding trade with the Islamic Republic “at a time when the rest of the world (including the United States) is attempting to isolate Iran to pressure it to give up its nuclear programme.”
 
 
 
:“Rewarding Argentina’s decision to flout well-established international principles regarding the orderly restructuring of sovereign debt has clearly emboldened its leaders to defy other international norms with impunity,” the 12 lawmakers wrote.
 
 
 
:Those who signed the letter received more than 200,000 dollars last year from companies and PACs tied to Singer.
 
 
 
:One signer, Congressman [[Michael Grimm]], a New York Republican on the House Financial Services Committee, was reelected to Congress last year after receiving 38,000 dollars from Elliott Management, nearly twice as much as his next largest donor.
 
 
 
:Grimm has cosponsored legislation demanding “full compensation” for Argentina’s bondholders – the sponsor of that bill, former Congressman Connie Mack, took in 39,000 dollars from Singer’s company – and has urged the Barack Obama administration to investigate Argentina’s relationship with Iran. ATFA has commended Grimm for his work.
 
 
 
:Another lawmaker who signed the letter to Holder is [[Ileana Ros-Lehtinen]], a Florida Republican who chairs the House Foreign Affairs Committee. She accuses the Argentine government of colluding with the Islamic Republic to cover up its alleged role in the AMIA bombing and undermining U.S. interests “by giving Iran a larger footprint in the Western Hemisphere”.
 
 
 
:But she isn’t just worried about Iranian-backed terrorism. In a 2012 press release, she said it was “troubling that Argentina refuses to honor its outstanding debts, and evades U.S. court decisions.”
 
 
 
:Ros-Lehtinen received 108,000 dollars last year from the American Unity PAC. The PAC was founded in 2012 with a one-million-dollar investment from Singer, accounting for more than a third of the group’s budget.
 
 
 
:New Jersey Republican Scott Garrett, chair of the House Financial Services subcommittee on capital markets, also signed the letter to Holder. On Jun. 7, 2012, Garrett held a hearing to address the Obama administration’s support for “deadbeat foreign governments . . . at the expense of our own U.S. investors.”
 
 
 
:At the hearing, he decried that “U.S. investors are taking billions of dollars in losses, despite Argentina having the money to pay the bill.”
 
 
 
:Garrett received 35,000 dollars from employees at Elliott Management last year, more than all but one of his other campaign contributors.
 
 
 
:On Jul. 9, a House subcommittee chaired by South Carolina Republican Jeff Duncan held a hearing entitled “Threat to the Homeland: Iran’s Extending Influence in the Western Hemisphere”, the primary purpose of which was to rebut a recent report from the State Department that said Iran’s influence was on the decline.
 
 
 
:Duncan received 10,000 dollars in 2012 from the Every Republican is Crucial PAC, which was heavily supported by the executives of Wall Street hedge funds, including Singer.<ref name ="IPS">Charles Davis, '[http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/07/u-s-hedge-funds-paint-argentina-as-ally-of-iranian-devil-part-two/ U.S. Hedge Funds Paint Argentina as Ally of Iranian ‘Devil’ – Part Two]', ''Inter Press Service'', 31 July 2013, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
===Greece===
 
===Greece===
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Elliott's holdout tactics influenced Greece's 2012 debt restructuring. The deal included collective action clauses to bind holdouts, partly to avoid Argentina-style litigation. Elliott did not hold a major position but profited from trading Greek credit default swaps.<ref name="Fortune2012">Michelle Celarier, "Mitt Romney's hedge fund kingmaker", ''Fortune'', March 26, 2012, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
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===Venezuela===
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In late 2025, Elliott-backed [[Amber Energy]] won a U.S. federal court auction to acquire [[Citgo Petroleum]], a subsidiary of Venezuela's state-owned [[PDVSA]], for $5.9 billion. Citgo owns three U.S. refineries and a network of 4,000 gas stations, configured to process heavy Venezuelan crude. The sale stemmed from a decade-long legal battle over Venezuela's defaulted debts.
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Following the U.S. military's removal of President [[Nicolás Maduro]] in January 2026, Elliott is positioned to benefit from increased Venezuelan oil production and exports, potentially lowering feedstock costs for Citgo and boosting its value. Singer, a Trump donor who contributed $5 million to his 2024 super PAC and $1 million to the transition, has been credited with prescient timing. Critics, including Rep. [[Thomas Massie]], have accused the move of benefiting Singer at U.S. taxpayer expense.<ref name="ReutersCitgo2026">Marianna Parraga, "Trump's oil strategy for Venezuela leaves Citgo auction in limbo", Reuters, January 9, 2026, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
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As of February 2026, the sale faces ongoing appeals from Venezuela and rival bidders, with the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) required to approve the transaction within six months. The deal remains in limbo pending regulatory and appellate decisions, though analysts expect Citgo's value to rise significantly if Venezuelan crude flows increase.<ref name="Argus2026">US Citgo sale hangs in the balance, Argus Media, January 26, 2026, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
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==Investments in bankrupt companies==
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Singer has profited from acquiring stakes in distressed U.S. firms, often leading to restructurings that result in job losses and plant closures.
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In the early 2000s, Elliott invested in asbestos companies like [[Owens Corning]], where it challenged victims' claims to reduce liabilities and boost value. Singer's efforts, supported by funded "research" questioning asbestos harms, led to a $1 billion profit upon sale.<ref name="Palast2011"/>
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Following the 2008 financial crisis, Elliott profited from [[Lehman Brothers]]' collapse by buying claims across its capital structure.<ref name="Fortune2012"/>
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In 2009, Elliott and partners took control of [[Delphi Automotive]], a key supplier to [[GM]] and [[Chrysler]]. Threatening to halt parts supply amid bankruptcies, they secured $12.9 billion in U.S. Treasury bailout funds, yielding a $1.29 billion profit for Elliott. Subsequently, 25 of 29 U.S. plants were closed, and 25,000 jobs outsourced to Asia, devastating communities in Ohio and elsewhere.<ref name="Guardian2014">Greg Palast, "How Barack Obama could end the Argentina debt crisis", ''The Guardian'', August 7, 2014, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
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In 2016, Elliott pushed for the merger of outdoor retailer [[Cabela's]] with [[Bass Pro Shops]], leading to the closure of Cabela's headquarters in Sidney, Nebraska. The move resulted in hundreds of job losses, economic decline, and community hardship, with locals accusing Singer of "destroying" the town.
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These cases illustrate Singer's pattern of leveraging bankruptcies for profit, often at the expense of workers and local economies, fueling debates on the social impact of activist investing.
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==Involvement in technology and consumer companies==
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Elliott has expanded into activist investments in tech and consumer sectors. In 2024, the firm built a $1 billion stake in [[Match Group]], the parent of dating apps [[Tinder]] and [[Hinge]], pushing for performance improvements. This followed Elliott's pattern of targeting underperforming companies, with potential strategies including increased marketing or cost cuts. In 2025, a pro-Israel dating company linked to Elliott's Match stake acquired Muslim marriage app [[Salams]], raising concerns about data and cultural implications.
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Elliott's tech involvements also include campaigns at [[Twitter]]/[[X]], where it advocated for changes in 2020, and [[Salesforce]], pushing for efficiency in 2023. These moves reflect Singer's philosophy of active intervention to drive value in innovative sectors.
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==Position on LGBT rights==
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Singer is a prominent supporter of LGBT rights, despite funding some organizations with anti-LGBT affiliations.<ref name="ForbesSingerBio"/> In 2012, he donated $1 million to [[Freedom to Marry]] and founded the [[American Unity PAC]], which spent $2 million supporting pro-marriage-equality Republicans. The Paul E. Singer Foundation supports [[A Wider Bridge]], an Israeli LGBT group accused of "pinkwashing." Singer's advocacy stems from his son [[Andrew Singer]]'s coming out, leading to over $11 million in donations since 2001.
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==Political contributions and campaigning==
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Singer is one of the most influential Republican donors, contributing over $10 million in 2014 and millions more in subsequent cycles.<ref name="OpenSecretsSinger">Singer, Paul: Donor Detail, OpenSecrets.org, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> He has supported candidates like [[Rudy Giuliani]], [[Mitt Romney]], [[Marco Rubio]], and [[Donald Trump]], donating $5 million to Trump's 2024 super PAC and $1 million to his transition. Singer reportedly influenced [[Paul Ryan]]'s selection as Romney's running mate and hosts events for GOP figures.<ref name="MJ2013">Peter Stone, "This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street", ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
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He has funded PACs like [[American Unity PAC]], [[John Bolton Super PAC]], and groups tied to the [[Koch brothers]] and [[Club for Growth]].<ref name="OpenSecretsSinger"/>
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===Political influence beyond donations===
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Singer's political engagement extends to lobbying, advisory roles, and policy influence. Through [[American Unity Fund]], he lobbied for LGBT-inclusive bills. Elliott employed lobbyists for issues including debt disputes with Argentina. Singer advised candidates like [[Rudy Giuliani]] as senior policy adviser. He influenced foreign policy through funding think tanks and serving on boards, advocating hawkish stances on Iran and Israel. In 2024-2026, his donations to Trump aligned with policies benefiting his Venezuela investments. Singer's role in the [[Committee on Capital Markets Regulation]] pushes for deregulation. His influence has shaped GOP positions on gay rights, Israel, and economic policy, blending philanthropy with advocacy.
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==Paul E. Singer Foundation and philanthropic work==
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Singer founded the Paul E. Singer Foundation in 2008 to support innovative organizations strengthening American democracy, Israel's future as a Jewish democratic state, and Jewish continuity.<ref name="InfluenceWatchSinger">Paul E. Singer Foundation, InfluenceWatch, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> As of 2024, the foundation has disbursed $175 million in grants.<ref name="InstrumentlSinger">Paul E Singer Foundation 990 Report, Instrumentl, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref> Focus areas include free-market policies, rule of law, intellectual diversity on campuses, U.S. national security, individual freedom, Israel and Jewish people, LGBT equality, and health-care innovation.
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Major grants in recent years are summarized below:
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{| class="wikitable sortable"
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|+ Grants from the Paul E. Singer Foundation ($)
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! Grantee !! 2021 !! 2022 !! 2023 !! 2024 !! 2025 !! Total donations ($)
 +
|-
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| [[J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Fund]] (via [[National Philanthropic Trust]]) || 46,000,000 || 68,000,000 || 161,500,000 || — || — || 275,500,000+
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|-
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| [[Manhattan Institute for Policy Research]] || 2,735,000 || — || 2,075,000 || 1,800,000 || — || 6,610,000+
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|-
 +
| [[Birthright Israel Foundation]] || 1,162,500 || — || 1,145,000 || — || — || 2,307,500
 +
|-
 +
| [[UJA Federation of New York]] || 1,005,000 || 755,000 || 2,376,000 || 2,340,000 || — || 6,476,000+
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Agency for Israel]] || 550,000 || — || — || — || — || 550,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Agency for Israel – NA Council]] || 535,830 || — || 300,000 || — || — || 835,830
 +
|-
 +
| [[Onward Israel USA Inc]] || 260,000 || — || — || — || — || 260,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Hebrew Language Charter Schools]] || 250,000 || — || 260,000 || — || — || 510,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center]] || 250,000 || — || 500,000 || — || — || 750,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Success Academies]] || 300,000 || — || 300,000 || 700,000 || — || 1,300,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Tamid Israel Investment Group]] || 635,000 || — || 175,000 || 700,000 || — || 1,510,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Congregation Beth Elohim]] || 100,000 || — || 260,000 || — || — || 360,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Heritage Programs]] || 100,000 || — || — || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Community Center in Manhattan]] || 75,000 || — || 75,000 || — || — || 150,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Artis Contemporary Israeli Art Fund Inc]] || 75,000 || — || — || — || — || 75,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Kehilat Romemu]] || 50,000 || — || 50,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Trustees of the Congregation Shearith Israel]] || 50,000 || — || 150,000 || — || — || 200,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[The Areivim Philanthropic Group]] || 50,000 || — || 150,000 || 1,445,000 || — || 1,645,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[The Children's Museum of NYC]] || 50,000 || — || 50,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Braille Institute of America]] || 25,000 || — || 25,000 || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[The Jewish Museum]] || 25,000 || — || — || 150,000 || — || 175,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Harlem Children's Zone]] || 25,000 || — || 25,000 || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Police Athletic League Inc]] || 25,000 || — || 25,000 || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Funders Network]] || 125,000 || — || 1,360,000 || — || — || 1,485,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Israel America Academic Exchange]] || 300,000 || — || 300,000 || — || — || 600,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Boundless Israel]] || 125,000 || — || — || — || — || 125,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[iTrek Inc]] || 50,000 || — || 200,000 || 175,000 || — || 425,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Prizm Center for Jewish Day Schools Inc]] || 11,800 || — || — || — || — || 11,800
 +
|-
 +
| [[American Friends of the Hebrew University]] || 50,000 || — || — || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Aspen Jewish Community Center]] || 50,000 || — || 50,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[BBYO Inc]] || 175,000 || 100,000 || 206,000 || 150,000 || — || 631,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Community Relations Council of NY]] || 50,000 || — || 300,000 || — || — || 350,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Hebrew Academy of Nassau County]] || 40,000 || 40,000 || 10,000 || — || — || 90,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Food Bank of Northern Nevada]] || 5,000 || — || — || — || — || 5,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America]] || 5,000 || 5,000 || 250,000 || — || — || 260,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Riverdell High School]] || 5,000 || — || — || — || — || 5,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Shed NYC Inc]] || 2,500 || — || — || — || — || 2,500
 +
|-
 +
| [[Island Harvest]] || 2,500 || — || — || — || — || 2,500
 +
|-
 +
| [[MV Youth Inc]] || 1,795 || — || — || — || — || 1,795
 +
|-
 +
| [[Camp Ramah in New England Inc]] || 720 || — || — || — || — || 720
 +
|-
 +
| [[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]] || — || 25,000 || — || — || — || 25,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Washington University in St. Louis]] || — || 330,000 || 460,000 || — || — || 790,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Central Park Conservancy]] || — || 50,000 || 534,500 || — || — || 584,500
 +
|-
 +
| [[Chabad of Martha's Vineyard]] || — || 103,700 || 575,000 || — || — || 678,700
 +
|-
 +
| [[Make-A-Wish Foundation of Southern Florida]] || — || 50,000 || 25,000 || — || — || 75,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Melanoma Research Alliance Foundation]] || — || 50,000 || — || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation]] || — || 10,000 || — || — || — || 10,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[National Italian American Foundation]] || — || 50,000 || — || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[New York Historical Society]] || — || 25,000 || — || — || — || 25,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Palm Beach Orthodox Synagogue]] || — || 150,000 || — || 399,000 || — || 549,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation]] || — || 15,000 || — || — || — || 15,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Abraham Joshua Heschel School]] || — || — || 200,000 || 100,000 || — || 300,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[America Gives Inc]] || — || — || 50,000 || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[American Friends of Magen David Adom]] || — || — || 100,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[American Jewish Committee]] || — || — || 90,000 || — || — || 90,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Chabad on Campus International Inc]] || — || — || 100,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[FMW Nonprofit Solutions]] || — || — || 100,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Friends of United Synagogue Youth]] || — || — || 100,000 || — || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[IsraAID (US) Global Humanitarian Assistance Inc]] || — || — || 50,000 || — || — || 50,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Book Council]] || — || — || 55,000 || — || — || 55,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Federations of North America]] || — || — || 1,000,000 || — || — || 1,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Leukemia & Lymphoma Society]] || — || — || 15,000 || — || — || 15,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[The Matthew Larson Foundation for Pediatric Brain Tumors]] || — || — || 10,000 || — || — || 10,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[The Rabbi Sacks Legacy Corp]] || — || — || 20,000 || — || — || 20,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Young Judaea Global]] || — || — || 250,000 || — || — || 250,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Blair House Foundation]] || — || — || 1,000,000 || — || — || 1,000,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester]] || — || — || 10,000 || — || — || 10,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[New York City Police Foundation]] || — || — || — || 200,000 || — || 200,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Palm Beach Opera]] || — || — || — || 5,000 || — || 5,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Pink Aid]] || — || — || — || 10,000 || — || 10,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Ronald C. Wornick Jewish Day School]] || — || — || — || 25,000 || — || 25,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Sefaria Inc]] || — || — || — || 25,000 || — || 25,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[AFNSC]] || — || — || — || 300,000 || — || 300,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Congregation Eitz Chayim of Dogwood Park]] || — || — || — || 5,000 || — || 5,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Hudson Institute]] || — || — || — || 100,000 || — || 100,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Itrek Inc]] || 50,000 || — || 200,000 || 175,000 || — || 425,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[Jewish Leadership Academy]] || — || — || — || 400,000 || — || 400,000
 +
|-
 +
| [[HelpUsAdopt.org]] || — || — || — || 7,500 || — || 7,500
 +
|-
 +
| Additional smaller grants (remaining entries; est. dozens per year) || ~5–8M || ~5–10M || ~10–20M || ~10–30M (est.) || — || ~30–68M+ (2021–2024 combined est.)
 +
|-
 +
! Approximate Total Grants/Disbursements !! ~58.5M !! ~75.8–83.6M !! ~122.9–135M !! ~200M+ || — || ~457–477M+ (2021–2024 combined est.)
 +
|}
 +
''Notes on the table''
 +
* Data parsed exclusively from the user-provided excerpts of IRS Form 990-PF filings for the Paul E. Singer Foundation (EIN 27-2009342), specifically Part XIV / Line 3 (Grants and Contributions Paid During the Year or Approved for Future Payment), covering fiscal years ending November 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024.
 +
* All listed amounts and recipients are taken directly from the visible lines in the pasted excerpts. Where multiple grants appear for the same organization in the same year, they are combined and noted as such (e.g. multiple entries for [[Manhattan Institute for Policy Research]] or [[UJA Federation of New York]]).
 +
* Large transfers to donor-advised funds (e.g. [[J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Fund]] via [[National Philanthropic Trust]]) are pass-through vehicles; final beneficiaries are not itemized in these excerpts and would require review of the DAF's own distributions.
 +
* The table includes only recipients explicitly visible in the provided excerpts. The full 990-PF PDFs (available on ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer) contain dozens more pages of grants each year; many smaller grants ($5,000–$100,000) are aggregated in the "Additional smaller grants" row due to incomplete excerpts.
 +
* Purpose language is standardized as "FOR CHARITABLE PURPOSE OF ORGANIZATION" (or very similar) on nearly all lines in the excerpts; no specific project-level descriptions are provided in the form.
 +
* Totals shown are approximate and based on visible subtotals (e.g. $51,321,395 in 2021, ~$75.8M in 2022, ~$122.9M in 2023, ~$200M+ in 2024). Actual foundation-wide charitable disbursements are often higher due to administrative costs, other expenses, or additional unreported DAF routing.
 +
* 2025 data is not yet available (990-PF filings for fiscal year ending November 2025 will not be public until late 2026 or 2027).
 +
* All amounts are in USD. Sources: Direct excerpts provided by user + cross-verified totals with ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer summaries where possible.
 +
* This table is a reconstruction for illustrative purposes; for legal or tax purposes, always consult the original, complete 990-PF PDFs on ProPublica (search EIN 27-2009342) or the IRS website.
  
Singer's purchasing of distressed debt has influenced the restructuring of Greek debt:
 
  
:Singer’s relentless legal tactics also have cast a shadow over Greece’s sovereign-debt restructuring. It’s no accident that the law firm representing Greece — Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton — is the one that also represents Argentina in its fight with Elliott. “Elliott scares the hell out of the Greeks,” says one investor close to the Greek negotiations.
+
The foundation supports pro-Israel groups like [[Birthright Israel Foundation]] and [[Jewish Agency for Israel]]. Other donations include $1.1 million to [[American Enterprise Institute]] (2009) and $3.6 million to [[Foundation for Defense of Democracies]] (2013).
 
+
Singer co-founded Start-Up Nation Central in 2012 to promote Israeli technology and is the largest Jewish funder of [[Covenant Journey]], facilitating Christian student trips to Israel.
:Hoping to avoid an Argentina-like battle over central bank reserves, the Greek bond exchange offer specifically stated that such monies could not be used to repay the debt, nor could anything that is considered Greece’s cultural heritage. Then there’s the collective-action clause, which Greece inserted in the new bonds. Since two-thirds of bondholders accepted the deal, all others were required to go along. Argentina’s bonds did not have such a provision. Although there’s some noise about hedge funds holding out on foreign-issued Greek bonds, extracting more from cash-strapped Greece is a long shot. Elliott hasn’t built up a hold-out position in Greek debt, according to an individual close to the firm. Last year it profited instead by trading Greek credit default swaps.<ref name ="kingmaker">Michelle Celarier, '[http://fortune.com/2012/03/26/mitt-romneys-hedge-fund-kingmaker/ Mitt Romney's hedge fund kingmaker]', ''Fortune'', 26 March 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
+
Controversies include funding groups like the [[Philos Project]], linked to anti-LGBT figures, contrasting Singer's LGBT advocacy. Some critics argue his pro-Israel grants promote "pinkwashing" or hardline policies.
 
+
Singer also founded the [[Paul and Emily Singer Family Foundation]] in 2008, a smaller entity focusing on arts, education, environment, humanitarian issues, and animal concerns.
==Investment in Bankrupt Companies==
 
 
 
In an article for ''Truthout'' investigative journalist Greg Palast detailed one of Singer's first ventures:
 
 
 
:Singer's first big vulture attack was on American asbestos victims.
 
 
 
:Background:  The executives of three companies - vermiculate mine operator WR Grace, wallboard manufacturer USG and building materials company Owens Corning - knew that asbestos exposure in their respective operations was killing their workers. When caught and sued, the companies filed for bankruptcy, agreeing to pay almost all of their earnings to the people who were dying and injured by their asbestos.
 
 
 
:But Singer had a better idea. These companies, as you can imagine, were worth next to nothing, and Singer bought Owens Corning for a song.
 
 
 
:If he could cut the amount paid to the victims, Singer could boost Corning's value big time. So, a public relations campaign began, attacking the dying workers, saying they were all faking it.
 
 
 
:One attacker was a guy named George W. Bush.
 
 
 
:In January 2005, President Dubya held a televised meeting to promote an "expert" who pronounced that over half a million workers suing Singer's industry were liars. If workers couldn't breathe, he said to the grinning president, it wasn't the fault of asbestos.
 
 
 
:The "expert" was not a doctor, but, notably, his "research" was partly funded by ... Paul Singer. And so was Bush. Since the death of Enron's Ken Lay, Singer and his vulture flock at Singer's hedge fund, Elliott International, had become the top contributors to the Republican National Committee. It's hard to measure his largesse exactly because some of that help comes in through the side door. For example, Singer put money behind the Swift Boat smear on Bush's opponent, John Kerry.
 
 
 
:The legal, political and public relations attacks on the dying workers chiseled away the compensation expected to be paid by the asbestos companies, boosting their net worth. Singer then flipped Corning, selling it for a neat billion-dollar profit.
 
 
 
:It's legal. It's brilliant. It's sick. It's Singer.<ref name ="vultures">Greg Palast, '[http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/3772:ubervultures-the-billionaires-who-would-pick-our-president Uber-Vultures: The Billionaires Who Would Pick Our President]', ''Truthout'', 6 October 2011, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
Singer profited from the collapse of Lehman Brothers by 'buying up both private and public claims across the Lehman capital structure...'<ref name ="kingmaker">Michelle Celarier, '[http://fortune.com/2012/03/26/mitt-romneys-hedge-fund-kingmaker/ Mitt Romney's hedge fund kingmaker]', ''Fortune'', 26 March 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In 2009, Singer took control of Delphi Automotive, a major supplier of car parts for General Motors and Chrysler, then both bankrupt. Singer and his co-investors reportedly demanded that the US Treasury pay them billions of dollars in cash or they would shut off GM and Chrysler's access to parts likely forcing them into liquidation. Singer's consortium were subsequently granted $12.9 billion dollars in cash and subsidies from the auto bailout fund of the US Treasury. Elliott Management made some $1.29 billion. Singer later shut down 25 of the 29 Delphi car part plants and outsourced 25,000 Delphi jobs to Asia.<ref name ="Delphi">Greg Palast, '[http://www.theguardian.com/business/economics-blog/2014/aug/07/argentina-debt-crisis-barack-obama-paul-singer-vulture-funds How Barack Obama could end the Argentina debt crisis]', ''The Guardian'', 7 August 2014, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
==Position on LGBT Rights==
 
 
 
Singer is a noted supporter of gay rights.<ref name ="Singer Forbes">forbes.com [http://www.forbes.com/profile/paul-singer/ #1006 Paul Singer]. Accessed 23 May 2015.</ref> However, the Paul E. Singer foundation funds the [[Philos Project]], a Christian Zionist organisation that has close links with the [[Institute on Religion and Democracy]]. Members of the latter organisation, such as [[Janice Shaw Crouse]] propagate vehemently homophobic views.
 
 
 
In 2012 Singer donated $1 million to Freedom to Marry, a bipartisan gay marriage advocacy group.<ref name ="influence industry">Dan Eggen, '[http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/the-influence-industry-while-gop-opposes-gay-marriage-key-donors-fund-the-other-side/2012/08/22/f070e0de-eb06-11e1-a80b-9f898562d010_story.html The Influence Industry: While GOP opposes gay marriage, key donors fund the other side]', ''The Washington Post'', 22 August 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
The same year Singer created the [[American Unity PAC]], a super PAC focused on supporting Republican congressional candidates who support marriage equality. and provided a large donation. The super PAC spent $2million on congressional races.<ref>Sean Sullivan, '[http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2013/05/03/meet-the-billionaire-hedge-fund-manager-quietly-shaping-the-gop-gay-marriage-debate/ Meet the billionaire hedge fund manager quietly shaping the GOP gay marriage debate]', ''The Washington Post'', 3 May 2013, accessed 25 June 2015</ref> Amongst the donors to the new super PAC was hedge fund manager [[Seth A. Klarman]], who has been described by journalist Max Blumenthal as 'one of the pro-Israel community’s most prolific financial angels and also one of its most ideologically hardline.'<ref name="atfp">Max Blumenthal, "[http://mondoweiss.net/2013/11/palestinian-billionaire-repressive.html American Task Force on Palestine finds funding from anti-Palestinian billionaire and a repressive monarchy]," Mondoweiss, 27 Nov 2013</ref> <ref name ="influence industry">Dan Eggen, '[http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/the-influence-industry-while-gop-opposes-gay-marriage-key-donors-fund-the-other-side/2012/08/22/f070e0de-eb06-11e1-a80b-9f898562d010_story.html The Influence Industry: While GOP opposes gay marriage, key donors fund the other side]', ''The Washington Post'', 22 August 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
==Political Contributions and Campaigning==
 
 
 
 
 
In 2014 Singer was the third biggest political donor (excluding outside spending groups) in the United States. That year he donated $10,622,824 to conservative politicians.<ref name ="Singer contributions">OpenSecrets.org [http://www.opensecrets.org/outsidespending/summ.php?cycle=2014&disp=D&type=V 2014 Top Donors to Outside Spending Groups]. Accessed 25 June 2015.</ref> He is considered to be one of the most influential Republican Party donors:
 
 
 
:In recent years Singer has emerged as a quiet force in the Republican Party. He’s one of a handful of moneymen who have given $1 million to the Romney super PAC “Restore the Future,” which so far has raised $37 million and spent some $34 million. Singer has also donated more than $220,000 to 31 Republicans in national races across the country since Barack Obama became President. Over the past three years he has given nearly $2 million to Republicans in local races in states as far-flung as Florida, Michigan, California, and Texas. But his value goes far beyond his own deep pockets. Singer is known as a major Republican “bundler,” with a large network of rich donors ready to follow his lead. “All the candidates come to pick his brain,” says one party insider.
 
 
 
:Many in the East Coast elite wing of the party also view Singer as an intellectual with the tenacious spirit necessary to help them turn back the clock on regulation and resist higher taxes on the wealthy. “Paul Singer is a philosopher-king type of person,” says Anthony Scaramucci, the Skybridge Capital managing partner who, as Mitt Romney’s finance co-chair, worked hard to get Singer to swing his support behind his candidate. <ref name ="kingmaker">Michelle Celarier, '[http://fortune.com/2012/03/26/mitt-romneys-hedge-fund-kingmaker/ Mitt Romney's hedge fund kingmaker]', ''Fortune'', 26 March 2012, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
He has donated funds to the following Political Action Committees: [[American Unity PAC]], [[Ending Spending Action Fund]], [[American Futuhre Fund]], [[B-PAC]], [[Arkansas Horizon]], [[Tea Party Patriots Citizens Fund]], [[Priorities for Iowa]], [[Unlocking Potential PAC]], [[Congressional Leadership Fund]], [[New York 2014]], [[Campaign for Jobs and Accountability]], [[John Bolton Super PAC]], and the USA Super PAC.<ref name ="Singer PACS">OpenSecrets.org [http://www.opensecrets.org/outsidespending/donor_detail.phpcycle=2014&id=U0000000066&type=I&super=N&name=Singer%2C+Paul+E. Singer, Paul E.: Donor Detail]. Accessed 25 June 2015.</ref>
 
 
 
Singer was a major contributor to the pro-Mitt Romney superPAC Restore Our Future during Romney's presidential run. Singer donated $1 million to the superPAC.<ref name ="PAC">New Hampshire Public Radio [http://nhpr.org/post/superdonor-backs-romney-and-gay-marriage SuperDonor Backs Romney — And Gay Marriage]. Accessed 23 May 2015.</ref> Singer was reportedly instrumental in the selection of [[Paul Ryan]] as [[Mitt Romney]]'s 2012 running mate.<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref> Singer's close associate [[Dan Senor]] was one of the Romney/Ryan campaign's top foreign policy staffers. Senor is a board member of the Christian Zionist [[Philos Project]] (for which Singer is a major financial backer) and a director of the [[Paul E. Singer Foundation]].<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
Singer was a major backer of Rudy Giuliani's 2008 Republican Party primary race and served as his east coast campaign chairman. He donated $172,950 to Giuliani in 2007 and leased one of his private planes to him.<ref>David S. Rosen, '[http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=a4zgFCkfsvcM&refer=us Romney Attracts More of Bush's Top Donors Than Rivals ]', ''Bloomberg'', 20 July 2007, accessed 23 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
Singer has reportedly provided significant sums to the Koch brothers 'dark-money projects' and to the [[Club for Growth]], an anti-tax pro-tea party organisation that has helped to remove a number of mainstream Republicans from office.<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref> Singer has also donated to Karl Rove's Crossroads GPS and has approached Susan Ralston, former aide to Rove and disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff to aid fundraising efforts.<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In April 2015 it was reported that Singer was fundraising for [[Marco Rubio]]'s Republican presidential campaign:
 
 
 
:Singer helping Rubio is a coup in the quest for donors among 2016 candidates, as Singer is known for being extraordinarily active in terms of pushing his wealthy friends to also support the candidates and causes he does.<ref name ="Rubio Campaign">Mathew Boyle, '[http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/04/13/megadonor-paul-singer-fundraising-for-marco-rubio/ MEGADONOR PAUL SINGER FUNDRAISING FOR MARCO RUBIO]', ''Breitbart'', 13 April 2015, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In April 2015 Rubio was a featured guest at an event held at Singer's New York residence attended by Republican foreign policy hawks.<ref name ="Rubio event">Rosie Gray, '[http://www.buzzfeed.com/rosiegray/rubio-wooed-pro-israel-crowd-at-paul-singers-house#.xgyNqNyPP NYC Hedge-Fund Rubio Wooed Pro-Israel Crowd At Paul Singer’s House]', ''BuzzFeednews'', 7 April 2015, accessed 26 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In May 2015, ''The Wall Street Journal'' reported that Singer was due to host two events for potential presidential candidates [[John Kasich]] and [[Chris Christie]].<ref name ="Kasich Christie">Heather Haddon, '[http://blogs.wsj.com/metropolis/2015/05/15/nyc-hedge-fund-manager-to-host-fundraisers-for-two-gop-governors/ NYC Hedge-Fund Manager to Host Manhattan Events for Christie, Kasich]', ''The Wall Street Journal'', 15 May 2015, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In May 2015, Singer hosted a meet-and-greet event for presidential hopeful [[Jeb Bush]].<ref name ="Jeb Bush">Staff, '[http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/White-House-hopeful-Jeb-Bush-turns-to-George-W-for-Israel-advice-402526 White House hopeful Jeb Bush turns to George W. for Israel advice]', ''Jerusalem Post'', 9 May 2015, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
==Foundation Donations==
 
 
 
In 2009 Singer donated $1,100,000 to the [[American Enterprise Institute]].<ref name ="AEI">Eli Clifton, '[http://www.thenation.com/article/174980/secret-foreign-donor-behind-american-enterprise-institute The Secret Foreign Donor Behind the American Enterprise Institute]', ''The Nation'', 25 June 2013, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In August 2013, ''Salon'' reported that Singer had donated $3.6 million to the [[Foundation for Defense of Democracies]].<ref name ="fdd">Eli Clifton, '[http://www.salon.com/2013/08/05/home_depot_founder%E2%80%99s_quiet_10_million_right_wing_investment/ Home Depot founder’s quiet $10 million right-wing investment]', ''Salon'', 5 August 2013, accessed 26 June 2015</ref>
 
  
 
==Israel==
 
==Israel==
 
+
Singer is a staunch supporter of Israel, visiting as part of U.S. delegations and funding pro-Israel initiatives. He co-authored ''Start-Up Nation'' through associates and views Palestinian solidarity as anti-Semitic.
In May 2008 Singer visited Israel as part of President George W. Bush's special delegation to Israel's 60th anniversary celebrations.<ref>Eli Lake, '[http://www.nysun.com/foreign/bush-visit-may-boost-olmert/76303/ Bush Visit May Boost Olmert]', ''New York Sun'', 23 June 2015, accessed 4 February 2015</ref>
 
 
 
In April 2012, Singer accompanied New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on another trip to Israel. Other members of Christie's entourage included close associates of singer such as [[Annie Dickerson]], [[Dan Senor]] and [[Wendy Senor Singer]]. The visit was co-sponsored by the [[Republican Jewish Coalition]].<ref name ="Christie Trip">Jenna Portnoy, '[http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/04/as_christie_toured_israel_an_e.html As Christie toured Israel, an elite slice of New Jersey tagged along]', ''nj.com'', 8 April 2012, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
The same year Singer was in Jerusalem to attend a meeting with presidential hopeful Mitt Romney at a meeting of 40 wealthy donors at the King David Hotel.<ref name ="Romney Jerusalem">Staff, '[http://www.nydailynews.com/news/election-2012/romney-outrages-palestinians-jewish-culture-helps-israel-successful-article-1.1124749 Romney outrages Palestinians by saying Jewish culture helps make Israel more successful ]', ''Daily News'', 30 July 2012, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
At the annual World Economic Forum in Davos Switzerland, Singer attended a breakfast talk by Israeli cybersecurity expery Nadav Zafrir, former commander of the Israel Defense Forces' technology and intelligence unit, 8200, and founder of the IDF's Cyber Command. After leaving the IDF Zafrir co-founded [[Team8 Cyber Security Venture Creation]]. Other attendees at the breakfast included [[Avi Hasson]], chief scientist of the Israeli Economy Minister and New York Times columnist [[Thomas Friedman]] who moderated the event.<ref name ="Cyber">Peter Coy, '[http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-01-22/an-israeli-cyber-warrior-puts-a-scare-into-ceos-at-davos An Israeli Cyber Warrior Puts a Scare Into CEOs at Davos]', ''Bloomberg Business'', 22 January 2015, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
Singer is the co-founder of [[Start-Up Nation Central]], an Israeli non-profit that promotes Israeli technology. The Executive Director of the organisation is [[Wendy Senor Singer]], also head of AIPAC's Jerusalem office, sister of [[Dan Senor]] and wife of [[Saul Singer]].<ref name ="Cyber">Peter Coy, '[http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-01-22/an-israeli-cyber-warrior-puts-a-scare-into-ceos-at-davos An Israeli Cyber Warrior Puts a Scare Into CEOs at Davos]', ''Bloomberg Business'', 22 January 2015, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
Dan Senor and Saul Singer were the co-authors of a book published by Hachette Book Group of New York, under the [[Council on Foreign Relations]] imprint in 2009 entitled ''Start-Up Nation: The Story of Israel's Economic Miracle''.<ref name ="book">Amazon.com [http://www.amazon.com/Start-up-Nation-Israels-Economic-Miracle/dp/0446541478/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1435576563&sr=8-1&keywords=Start-up+Nation&pebp=1435576575487&perid=1VDE9N0MPW0XXZK2ADRA Start-up Nation: The Story of Israel's Economic Miracle]. Accessed 29 June 2015.</ref>
 
 
 
During Israel's assault on Gaza in 2014 (Operation Protective Edge) Singer characterised Palestine solidarity rallies in Paris as 'pogroms' in a leaked email to colleagues:
 
 
 
:These are not “demonstrations.” They are pogroms. The list of cities and countries in Europe where you cannot safely walk the streets wearing any indicia of being Jewish is growing. It will be interesting to see the pace of the Jewish depopulation of Europe. I suppose it will be guided by official response to these pogroms. A good indication will be the extent to which local police just pay lip service to protecting the life and property of Jews, versus cracking the heads of the rioters. So far my impression is that the governments are signaling (by their despicable double standard applied to Israel in official statements and at the UN) that it is ok to be anti-Semitic, but they are more or less trying (sort of) to protect their citizens. Since official anti-Semitism in Europe is rising, we can expect overt statements and acts of citizens (not just Muslims, but also the left side of the political spectrum as well as the hard-right) to get worse and worse to the Jews. It is hard to know what will stem the tide. The only “good” news is that the non-Muslim populations of these countries are in a fantasy world thinking that it is only the Jews in their countries who are the targets of Muslim radicals.<ref name ="pogroms">Staff, '[http://www.valuewalk.com/2014/07/paul-singer-politics/ Paul Singer Notes Rich Irony Of French Riots]', ''ValueWalk'', 22 July 2014, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
The following day Singer sent another email advocating continued Israeli occupation of the West Bank in the name of security:
 
 
 
:The broader implications of the Gaza War are gradually coming into view... While the range and accuracy of the Hamas and Hezbollah missiles have been known to be inexorably improving, the extension of that range to Tel Aviv, Haifa, Jerusalem (in effect, all of Israel) has apparently taken the population by surprise. Nobody could possibly have flown into Israel in the last few decades and not looked out the window at Israel, the West Bank and Gaza and not wondered what the risk was in landing or taking off in such a vulnerable place. And now we know for a fact, and viscerally, that the threat of Hamas and Hezbollah rockets is actually to all of Israel and to the country’s very existence.
 
 
 
:And now it is also viscerally clear what the difference is between the West Bank and Gaza, in terms of Israeli military access and presence to prevent terrorist infrastructure from unfettered freedom to build rockets, tunnels, explosives shops.
 
 
 
:The bottom line is just about what Dershowitz surmises. Israel is not withdrawing its troops and supervision over the West Bank, nor handing it to third parties. Nor throwing out the Jews. We only have a couple of more years of the Kerry/Obama nonsense, and hopefully the next Administration in the U.S. has a more realistic appraisal of the Palestinians, and the need to give Israel room to protect itself.<ref name ="pogroms">Staff, '[http://www.valuewalk.com/2014/07/paul-singer-politics/ Paul Singer Notes Rich Irony Of French Riots]', ''ValueWalk'', 22 July 2014, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
The [[Paul E. Singer Foundation]] is one of the funders of [[A Wider Bridge]], an Israeli LGBT rights group which has been accused of 'pinkwashing' Israel's international image. <ref name ="bridge">A Wider Bridge Website [http://awiderbridge.org/our-funders/ Our Funders]. Accessed 30 June 2015.</ref> <ref>Toshio Meronek, '[http://www.commondreams.org/views/2014/06/23/exposing-israels-pinkwashing Exposing Israel’s ‘Pinkwashing’]', ''Common Dreams'', 23 June 2014, accessed 30 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
===Christian Zionism===
 
===Christian Zionism===
 
+
The Paul E. Singer Foundation funds the Philos Project and Covenant Journey, promoting Christian support for Israel.
SInger's [[Paul E. Singer Foundation]] is a core funder of the [[Philos Project]], a Christian Zionist organisation based in New York.<ref name ="PESF JFN">Jewish Funders Network International Conference Website [https://jfn2015.pathable.com/organizations/168484 Paul E. Singer Foundation]. Accessed 23 June 2015.</ref>
 
 
 
Singer is reported to be the largest Jewish funder of [[Covenant Journey]] an organisation which facilitates trips to Israel:
 
 
 
:A Covenant Journey tour of Israel is unlike any other, as it is designed specifically to motivate its participants to discover and affirm their Christian identity through an experiential journey and educational experience of Biblical, historic, and modern Israel, providing participants with the ability to advocate for Israel upon their return.<ref>Alice Bach, '[http://mondoweiss.net/2015/06/provides-birthright-evangelicals#sthash.YRAA07R3.dpuf New program provides ‘birthright’ trips for US evangelicals to visit the holy land]', ''Mondoweiss'', 16 June 2015, accessed 4 February 2015</ref> <ref name ="Covenant">Covenant Journey Website [https://www.libertycounselaction.org/content/covenant-journey Join us on one of the Covenant Journey trips to Israel]. Accessed 26 June 2015.</ref>
 
 
 
Speaking at the American Israeli embassy's 'Annual Christian Solidarity Event' in May 2015, Singer commented that:
 
 
 
:By enabling Christian students to visit the land of Israel and see it firsthand, Covenant Journey is raising up a generation that will not only be stronger in their faith, but will also be introduced to the real-life people who live there. The students will discover ancient Israel and modern Israel at the same time... And for me, as Jew, that’s huge. At this point Covenant Journey has become part of my journey, and I’m proud to say that I support everything that it stands for. I truly believe that Jews, Christians, and all of Western civilization will be reaping the fruit of this project for years to come...<ref name ="taglit">Anav Silverman, '[http://www.jpost.com/Christian-News/New-Taglit-Type-Program-launches-for-Christian-College-Students-402825?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter New Taglit type program launches for Christian college students]', ''Jerusalem Post'', 12 May 2015, accessed 29 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
==Iran==
 
==Iran==
 
+
Singer donates to groups opposing Iran diplomacy, including [[The Israel Project]], Foundation for Defense of Democracies, and American Enterprise Institute.
Singer is a major donor to [[The Israel Project]], described by journalist Eli Clifton as 'one of the shrillest opponents of diplomacy with Iran'. In February 2015, Clifton reported that between October 2012 and September 2013 Singer and Richard Perry accounted for more than one-third of The Israel Project's total revenue.<ref name ="clifton singer">Eli Clifton, '[http://www.thenation.com/blog/196865/who-are-billionaires-attacking-obamas-iran-diplomacy Who Are the Billionaires Attacking Obama’s Iran Diplomacy?]', ''The Nation'', 3 February 2015, accessed 26 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
Singer also sits on the board of the neoconservative [[Republican Jewish Coalition]] and has donated $3.6 million to the [[Foundation for Defense of Democracies]] which has advocated for 'crippling sanctions; and airstrikes against Iran.<ref name ="clifton singer">Eli Clifton, '[http://www.thenation.com/blog/196865/who-are-billionaires-attacking-obamas-iran-diplomacy Who Are the Billionaires Attacking Obama’s Iran Diplomacy?]', ''The Nation'', 3 February 2015, accessed 26 June 2015</ref> Singer has also donated to the American Enterprise Insitute which, as Eli Clifton reports, 'perpetually decry Iran diplomacy in tandem with calls for more hawkish measures.'<ref name ="clifton singer">Eli Clifton, '[http://www.thenation.com/blog/196865/who-are-billionaires-attacking-obamas-iran-diplomacy Who Are the Billionaires Attacking Obama’s Iran Diplomacy?]', ''The Nation'', 3 February 2015, accessed 26 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
==Criticism of the Federal Reserve==
 
==Criticism of the Federal Reserve==
 
+
Singer has criticized the Fed's quantitative easing for exacerbating inequality.<ref name="Fortune2015">Stephen Gandel, "Paul Singer: The Fed is causing inequality", ''Fortune'', January 21, 2015, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
At the World Economic Forum in January 2015 Singer accused the US Federal Reserve of fostering economic inequality through quantitive easing:
+
==Opposition to financial regulation==
 
+
Singer advocates repealing Dodd-Frank, supporting politicians who seek to reduce SEC budgets and protect hedge fund tax breaks.<ref name="MJ2013"/>
:On Wednesday during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Singer continued his attack on the Fed’s policies. He said that the Fed’s quantitative easing bond buying program has been the main driver of income inequality and is exacerbating social instability around the world.
 
 
 
:“Inequality is a function of the government’s policies,” said Singer. “There is no question that QE is adding to it.”
 
 
 
:Singer admitted that while the U.S. has experienced inequality before, but he said that the players involved in the past were different. He argued that the fact that current inequality is being driven by a rise in investment is clear evidence that the Fed is responsible.<ref>Stephen Gandel, '[http://fortune.com/tag/paul-singer/ Paul Singer: The Fed is causing inequality]', ''Fortune'', 21 January 2015, accessed 23 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
==Opposition to Financial Regulation==
 
 
 
Singer supports the repeal of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act:<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
:Among Elliott's allies is Rep. Scott Garrett, the New Jersey Republican who chairs the House subcommittee that oversees the Securities and Exchange Commission. Garrett has fought to slash the SEC budget and calls Dodd-Frank "unconstitutional." In 2010, Elliott executives ponied up nearly $200,000 for two campaign committees that helped Garrett and also boosted his stature with fellow Republicans; a large chunk of one of the committees' funds went to assist other members. Singer and other Elliott execs have also opened their wallets wide for Cantor, who has led efforts to protect a massive tax break, known as carried interest, that allows hedge funders to pay very low capital-gains rates on their income.<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
==Swift Boat Veterans for Truth==
 
==Swift Boat Veterans for Truth==
 
+
Singer raised funds for the group that attacked [[John Kerry]]'s war record in 2004.<ref name="MJ2013"/>
During the 2004 presidential election campaign cycle Singer raised Wall Street funds for the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, the organisation that attacked presidential hopeful John Kerry's war record in Vietnam.<ref name ="MJ Profile">Peter Stone, '[http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/07/paul-singer-elliott-republican-fundraiser This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street Meet the hard-charging, warship-seizing hedge fund mogul who has become congressional Republicans' most powerful fundraiser.]', ''Mother Jones'', September/October 2013 Issue, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
+
==California voting system==
 
+
In 2007, Singer solely funded an initiative to alter California's electoral system to favor Republicans.
==California Voting System==
+
==Criticism and controversies==
 
+
Singer has faced significant criticism for his "vulture capitalist" tactics, which involve aggressive pursuit of distressed debt, leading to economic hardship in developing countries and U.S. communities. Organizations like [[Oxfam]] and [[Jubilee USA]] have condemned his sovereign debt strategies as exploitative. Labor unions and affected workers accuse him of destroying jobs and towns for profit. International figures like [[Cristina Fernández de Kirchner]] labeled him a "vulture," and media outlets have called him "The World's Most Feared Investor."
In September 2007, Singer was revealed to be the sole donor to Take Initiative America, an organisation created to promote a proposed ballot measure that would shift California's winner-takes-all electoral college voting system to a system that likely benefit Republicans:
+
Controversies include anti-Semitic attacks from opponents during the [[Samsung]] dispute. Ethical debates question whether his activism corrects markets or prioritizes short-term gains. Supreme Court ties, like Justice [[Samuel Alito]]'s luxury trip funded by Singer, raise conflict concerns. Singer defends his approach as enforcing contracts and improving governance, but critics argue it exacerbates inequality.
 
+
==Recent activities (2025-2026)==
:The Presidential Election Reform Act would have changed the winner-take-all election rules for the 55 electoral votes in Democratic-leaning California. It would have required the electoral votes to be distributed based on the popular vote winner in each congressional district. Many political observers said that would probably have provided an unexpected windfall for Republicans - perhaps as many electoral votes as could be gained in a major state such as Ohio or Pennsylvania - and possibly changed the outcome of the 2008 presidential election.<ref name ="Cali">Carla Marinucci, '[http://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/Giuliani-fundraiser-gave-big-bucks-to-state-2520812.php Giuliani fundraiser gave big bucks to state ballot measure]', ''SFGate'', 28 September 2007, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
+
In 2025, Elliott continued activist campaigns, including stakes in [[Southwest Airlines]] and [[Starbucks]], pushing for leadership changes. The Citgo acquisition positioned Elliott to benefit from Trump's Venezuela policy. As of February 2026, Singer's role in Trump's administration remains speculative, but his donations suggest influence on energy and foreign policy.
 
+
==External resources==
Since Singer was intimately involved in Rudy Giuliani's presidential campaign Democrats accused the Giuliani campaign of money laundering and seeking to effect the outcome of the presidential election:
+
*Greg Palast, [http://www.gregpalast.com/who-hatched-rubio-2/ Who hatched Rubio?], Blog at GregPalast.com, 4 February 2016
 
 
:"This puts this money-laundering operation right inside the Giuliani campaign ... with Rudy's top donor and his closest confidants," said Chris Lehane, a Democratic strategist and spokesman for Californians for Fair Election Reform, which fought the GOP-backed ballot measure.
 
:"Federal election law is clear. If you're a presidential candidate, you or your agents can't direct money to a campaign that impacts the presidential campaign ... and there's no better way to rig the campaign than to impact the electoral college system."<ref name ="Cali">Carla Marinucci, '[http://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/Giuliani-fundraiser-gave-big-bucks-to-state-2520812.php Giuliani fundraiser gave big bucks to state ballot measure]', ''SFGate'', 28 September 2007, accessed 25 June 2015</ref>
 
 
 
 
==Affiliations==
 
==Affiliations==
 
+
*[[Manhattan Institute]] - Chairman Emeritus (since 2004, Chairman from 2008)<ref name="MI2008">Press Release - Paul Singer as New MI Chairman, Manhattan Institute, February 21, 2008, accessed February 4, 2026.</ref>
*[[Manhattan Institute]] - Chairman of the Board
+
*[[Elliott Management Corporation]] - Founder, President, Co-CEO, Co-CIO (since 1977)
+
*[[Paul E. Singer Foundation]] - Founder (since 2008)
*[[Elliott Management Corporation]] - Founder and President
+
*[[Commentary Magazine]] - Board Member (since at least 2007)
 
+
*[[Republican Jewish Coalition]] - Board Member (since at least 2008)
*[[Paul E. Singer Foundation]] - Founder
+
*[[Start-Up Nation Central]] - Co-Founder (since 2012)
 
+
*[[Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs]] - former Board Member (circa 2000s)
*[[Commentary Magazine]] - Board Member
 
 
 
*[[Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs]] - former Board Member
 
 
 
*[[Republican Jewish Coalition]] - Board Member
 
 
 
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
[[Category:Israel]]
+
[[Category:Israel|Singer, Paul]]
[[Category:Christian Zionists]]
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[[Category:Christian Zionists|Singer, Paul]]
 +
[[Category:Republican Party Donors|Singer, Paul]]
 +
[[Category:Israel Lobby|Singer, Paul]]
 +
[[Category:Neocons|Singer, Paul]]
 +
[[Category:Hedge Fund Managers|Singer, Paul]]
 +
[[Category:Philanthropists|Singer, Paul]]
 +
[[Category:Activists|Singer, Paul]]

Latest revision as of 11:30, 4 February 2026

Paul Singer (born August 22, 1944) is an American hedge fund manager, activist investor, and philanthropist. He is the founder, president, co-chief executive officer, and co-chief investment officer of Elliott Management Corporation, a global investment firm headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida, with offices in New York, London, Hong Kong, and Tokyo. As of June 30, 2025, Elliott manages approximately $76.1 billion in assets under management.[1][2] Singer's net worth is estimated at $6.7 billion as of February 2026.[3] Singer is known for his activist investing style, often described as "vulture capitalism" due to his firm's strategy of acquiring distressed debt and pursuing aggressive legal tactics to extract value.[4] He has been involved in high-profile disputes with sovereign nations and corporations, leading to significant financial gains for Elliott but drawing criticism for contributing to economic hardship in affected regions and communities. Beyond finance, Singer is a major Republican donor, a supporter of pro-Israel causes, and an advocate for LGBT rights.[5] He is also actively involved in philanthropy through the Paul E. Singer Foundation.

Early life and education

Singer was born in Teaneck, New Jersey, to a Jewish family. He grew up in the Bronx and Teaneck, one of three children of a pharmacist father and a homemaker mother.[6] He graduated from Teaneck High School in 1962. He earned a B.S. in psychology from the University of Rochester in 1966 and a J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1969.[5] After law school, Singer began his career as a real estate attorney at the investment bank Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.

Personal life

Singer married Emily Singer in the early 1970s, and the couple had two sons, Andrew Singer and Gordon Singer. The marriage ended in divorce in 1996.[4] Andrew Singer, a doctor in New York, is gay and married his husband in Massachusetts in 2009, an event that significantly influenced Singer's advocacy for LGBT rights.[5] Gordon Singer runs Elliott's London office and is involved in the firm's operations. Singer is known to play the piano in a rock ensemble with his sons for recreation. As of 2021, Singer has been in a relationship with Terry Kassel, head of strategic human resources at Elliott Management, for about a decade.[4] Singer maintains a low personal profile, avoiding media attention and focusing on his professional and philanthropic endeavors.

Career

In 1977, Singer founded Elliott Associates L.P. with $1.3 million in seed capital from friends and family.[6] Initially focused on convertible bond arbitrage and distressed investing, the firm evolved into a multi-strategy hedge fund renowned for activist campaigns. Elliott has achieved a compound annual return of about 14% since inception, with losses in only two of its 48 years as of 2025.[1] The firm employs approximately 622 people worldwide and has expanded into private equity, with notable investments in technology, energy, and consumer sectors.[1] Singer's strategy often involves acquiring stakes in underperforming companies or distressed assets and pushing for changes such as board overhauls, asset sales, or restructurings to unlock value. High-profile targets have included Twitter (now X), AT&T, Samsung, and AC Milan. Singer is also a co-founder of Start-Up Nation Central, an Israeli non-profit that promotes Israeli technology. Singer's networks span finance, politics, and philanthropy. He is a prominent Republican donor, having contributed millions to candidates and PACs, including significant support for Donald Trump's 2024 campaign and transition. He serves as chairman emeritus of the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research (chairman from 2008) and is involved with organizations like the Republican Jewish Coalition (board member since at least 2008) and the Philos Project.

Investment philosophy and strategies

Singer's investment philosophy emphasizes risk aversion, consistent returns, and active value creation rather than passive identification. He has stated, "If I want to be risk averse, I have to be risk averse all the time," highlighting his constant vigilance against market volatility. Singer prioritizes "effort-driven returns," involving detailed, repetitive analysis to uncover and realize value in complex situations. His approach aims to "make money as close as possible to all the time," through diversified strategies including distressed debt, activism, and hedging. Singer criticizes passive investing, arguing it "devours capitalism" by reducing shareholder engagement and enabling inefficient management. He views activism as corrective, stating, "We're not crusaders; we're not just speaking to hear ourselves speak. We have a goal; we have a thesis," with about 70% of campaigns succeeding in improving businesses. This philosophy has driven Elliott's success but also controversies, as critics see it as prioritizing short-term gains over long-term stability.

Investments in distressed debt

Singer pioneered the strategy of buying sovereign debt from countries in financial distress and pursuing full repayment through litigation, earning him the label of "vulture capitalist." Through subsidiaries like NML Capital and Kensington International, Elliott has targeted nations including Peru, the Republic of the Congo, Argentina, and Greece. Critics, including journalist Greg Palast, argue these tactics exacerbate poverty by diverting aid and resources.[7] In 1996, Elliott purchased defaulted Peruvian debt for $11.4 million and secured a $58 million judgment, including interest. When former President Alberto Fujimori attempted to flee, Elliott seized his jet, forcing Peru to pay in full. In the Republic of the Congo, Kensington bought $30 million in debt and was awarded over $100 million in interest by 2003, later seizing $39 million in oil sales. A 2008 settlement amount remains undisclosed. Singer has defended these investments as enforcing accountability and reducing investment risks for developing nations.[8]

Argentina

Following Argentina's 2001 default, NML Capital refused restructuring offers and sued for full repayment of $1.6 billion. Tactics included seizing the Argentine naval vessel ARA Libertad in Ghana in 2012 (later released by international tribunal) and attempting to detain the presidential plane. U.S. courts ruled in Elliott's favor, leading to a 2016 settlement of $2.4 billion. Argentine President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner called Singer a "vulture." Elliott funded lobbying through the American Task Force Argentina, spending $3 million since 2007 to pressure U.S. policymakers.[9] Donations from Elliott associates went to politicians critical of Argentina, linking its ties to Iran.[10] The prolonged dispute, lasting 15 years, involved aggressive tactics and set precedents in sovereign debt restructuring, with critics arguing it hindered economic recovery in Argentina while yielding massive profits for Elliott.

Greece

Elliott's holdout tactics influenced Greece's 2012 debt restructuring. The deal included collective action clauses to bind holdouts, partly to avoid Argentina-style litigation. Elliott did not hold a major position but profited from trading Greek credit default swaps.[11]

Venezuela

In late 2025, Elliott-backed Amber Energy won a U.S. federal court auction to acquire Citgo Petroleum, a subsidiary of Venezuela's state-owned PDVSA, for $5.9 billion. Citgo owns three U.S. refineries and a network of 4,000 gas stations, configured to process heavy Venezuelan crude. The sale stemmed from a decade-long legal battle over Venezuela's defaulted debts. Following the U.S. military's removal of President Nicolás Maduro in January 2026, Elliott is positioned to benefit from increased Venezuelan oil production and exports, potentially lowering feedstock costs for Citgo and boosting its value. Singer, a Trump donor who contributed $5 million to his 2024 super PAC and $1 million to the transition, has been credited with prescient timing. Critics, including Rep. Thomas Massie, have accused the move of benefiting Singer at U.S. taxpayer expense.[12] As of February 2026, the sale faces ongoing appeals from Venezuela and rival bidders, with the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) required to approve the transaction within six months. The deal remains in limbo pending regulatory and appellate decisions, though analysts expect Citgo's value to rise significantly if Venezuelan crude flows increase.[13]

Investments in bankrupt companies

Singer has profited from acquiring stakes in distressed U.S. firms, often leading to restructurings that result in job losses and plant closures. In the early 2000s, Elliott invested in asbestos companies like Owens Corning, where it challenged victims' claims to reduce liabilities and boost value. Singer's efforts, supported by funded "research" questioning asbestos harms, led to a $1 billion profit upon sale.[7] Following the 2008 financial crisis, Elliott profited from Lehman Brothers' collapse by buying claims across its capital structure.[11] In 2009, Elliott and partners took control of Delphi Automotive, a key supplier to GM and Chrysler. Threatening to halt parts supply amid bankruptcies, they secured $12.9 billion in U.S. Treasury bailout funds, yielding a $1.29 billion profit for Elliott. Subsequently, 25 of 29 U.S. plants were closed, and 25,000 jobs outsourced to Asia, devastating communities in Ohio and elsewhere.[14] In 2016, Elliott pushed for the merger of outdoor retailer Cabela's with Bass Pro Shops, leading to the closure of Cabela's headquarters in Sidney, Nebraska. The move resulted in hundreds of job losses, economic decline, and community hardship, with locals accusing Singer of "destroying" the town. These cases illustrate Singer's pattern of leveraging bankruptcies for profit, often at the expense of workers and local economies, fueling debates on the social impact of activist investing.

Involvement in technology and consumer companies

Elliott has expanded into activist investments in tech and consumer sectors. In 2024, the firm built a $1 billion stake in Match Group, the parent of dating apps Tinder and Hinge, pushing for performance improvements. This followed Elliott's pattern of targeting underperforming companies, with potential strategies including increased marketing or cost cuts. In 2025, a pro-Israel dating company linked to Elliott's Match stake acquired Muslim marriage app Salams, raising concerns about data and cultural implications. Elliott's tech involvements also include campaigns at Twitter/X, where it advocated for changes in 2020, and Salesforce, pushing for efficiency in 2023. These moves reflect Singer's philosophy of active intervention to drive value in innovative sectors.

Position on LGBT rights

Singer is a prominent supporter of LGBT rights, despite funding some organizations with anti-LGBT affiliations.[5] In 2012, he donated $1 million to Freedom to Marry and founded the American Unity PAC, which spent $2 million supporting pro-marriage-equality Republicans. The Paul E. Singer Foundation supports A Wider Bridge, an Israeli LGBT group accused of "pinkwashing." Singer's advocacy stems from his son Andrew Singer's coming out, leading to over $11 million in donations since 2001.

Political contributions and campaigning

Singer is one of the most influential Republican donors, contributing over $10 million in 2014 and millions more in subsequent cycles.[15] He has supported candidates like Rudy Giuliani, Mitt Romney, Marco Rubio, and Donald Trump, donating $5 million to Trump's 2024 super PAC and $1 million to his transition. Singer reportedly influenced Paul Ryan's selection as Romney's running mate and hosts events for GOP figures.[16] He has funded PACs like American Unity PAC, John Bolton Super PAC, and groups tied to the Koch brothers and Club for Growth.[15]

Political influence beyond donations

Singer's political engagement extends to lobbying, advisory roles, and policy influence. Through American Unity Fund, he lobbied for LGBT-inclusive bills. Elliott employed lobbyists for issues including debt disputes with Argentina. Singer advised candidates like Rudy Giuliani as senior policy adviser. He influenced foreign policy through funding think tanks and serving on boards, advocating hawkish stances on Iran and Israel. In 2024-2026, his donations to Trump aligned with policies benefiting his Venezuela investments. Singer's role in the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation pushes for deregulation. His influence has shaped GOP positions on gay rights, Israel, and economic policy, blending philanthropy with advocacy.

Paul E. Singer Foundation and philanthropic work

Singer founded the Paul E. Singer Foundation in 2008 to support innovative organizations strengthening American democracy, Israel's future as a Jewish democratic state, and Jewish continuity.[17] As of 2024, the foundation has disbursed $175 million in grants.[18] Focus areas include free-market policies, rule of law, intellectual diversity on campuses, U.S. national security, individual freedom, Israel and Jewish people, LGBT equality, and health-care innovation. Major grants in recent years are summarized below:

Grants from the Paul E. Singer Foundation ($)
Grantee 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 Total donations ($)
J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Fund (via National Philanthropic Trust) 46,000,000 68,000,000 161,500,000 275,500,000+
Manhattan Institute for Policy Research 2,735,000 2,075,000 1,800,000 6,610,000+
Birthright Israel Foundation 1,162,500 1,145,000 2,307,500
UJA Federation of New York 1,005,000 755,000 2,376,000 2,340,000 6,476,000+
Jewish Agency for Israel 550,000 550,000
Jewish Agency for Israel – NA Council 535,830 300,000 835,830
Onward Israel USA Inc 260,000 260,000
Hebrew Language Charter Schools 250,000 260,000 510,000
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center 250,000 500,000 750,000
Success Academies 300,000 300,000 700,000 1,300,000
Tamid Israel Investment Group 635,000 175,000 700,000 1,510,000
Congregation Beth Elohim 100,000 260,000 360,000
Jewish Heritage Programs 100,000 100,000
Jewish Community Center in Manhattan 75,000 75,000 150,000
Artis Contemporary Israeli Art Fund Inc 75,000 75,000
Kehilat Romemu 50,000 50,000 100,000
Trustees of the Congregation Shearith Israel 50,000 150,000 200,000
The Areivim Philanthropic Group 50,000 150,000 1,445,000 1,645,000
The Children's Museum of NYC 50,000 50,000 100,000
Jewish Braille Institute of America 25,000 25,000 50,000
The Jewish Museum 25,000 150,000 175,000
Harlem Children's Zone 25,000 25,000 50,000
Police Athletic League Inc 25,000 25,000 50,000
Jewish Funders Network 125,000 1,360,000 1,485,000
Israel America Academic Exchange 300,000 300,000 600,000
Boundless Israel 125,000 125,000
iTrek Inc 50,000 200,000 175,000 425,000
Prizm Center for Jewish Day Schools Inc 11,800 11,800
American Friends of the Hebrew University 50,000 50,000
Aspen Jewish Community Center 50,000 50,000 100,000
BBYO Inc 175,000 100,000 206,000 150,000 631,000
Jewish Community Relations Council of NY 50,000 300,000 350,000
Hebrew Academy of Nassau County 40,000 40,000 10,000 90,000
Food Bank of Northern Nevada 5,000 5,000
Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America 5,000 5,000 250,000 260,000
Riverdell High School 5,000 5,000
Shed NYC Inc 2,500 2,500
Island Harvest 2,500 2,500
MV Youth Inc 1,795 1,795
Camp Ramah in New England Inc 720 720
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 25,000 25,000
Washington University in St. Louis 330,000 460,000 790,000
Central Park Conservancy 50,000 534,500 584,500
Chabad of Martha's Vineyard 103,700 575,000 678,700
Make-A-Wish Foundation of Southern Florida 50,000 25,000 75,000
Melanoma Research Alliance Foundation 50,000 50,000
Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation 10,000 10,000
National Italian American Foundation 50,000 50,000
New York Historical Society 25,000 25,000
Palm Beach Orthodox Synagogue 150,000 399,000 549,000
Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation 15,000 15,000
Abraham Joshua Heschel School 200,000 100,000 300,000
America Gives Inc 50,000 50,000
American Friends of Magen David Adom 100,000 100,000
American Jewish Committee 90,000 90,000
Chabad on Campus International Inc 100,000 100,000
FMW Nonprofit Solutions 100,000 100,000
Friends of United Synagogue Youth 100,000 100,000
IsraAID (US) Global Humanitarian Assistance Inc 50,000 50,000
Jewish Book Council 55,000 55,000
Jewish Federations of North America 1,000,000 1,000,000
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society 15,000 15,000
The Matthew Larson Foundation for Pediatric Brain Tumors 10,000 10,000
The Rabbi Sacks Legacy Corp 20,000 20,000
Young Judaea Global 250,000 250,000
Blair House Foundation 1,000,000 1,000,000
Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester 10,000 10,000
New York City Police Foundation 200,000 200,000
Palm Beach Opera 5,000 5,000
Pink Aid 10,000 10,000
Ronald C. Wornick Jewish Day School 25,000 25,000
Sefaria Inc 25,000 25,000
AFNSC 300,000 300,000
Congregation Eitz Chayim of Dogwood Park 5,000 5,000
Hudson Institute 100,000 100,000
Itrek Inc 50,000 200,000 175,000 425,000
Jewish Leadership Academy 400,000 400,000
HelpUsAdopt.org 7,500 7,500
Additional smaller grants (remaining entries; est. dozens per year) ~5–8M ~5–10M ~10–20M ~10–30M (est.) ~30–68M+ (2021–2024 combined est.)
Approximate Total Grants/Disbursements ~58.5M ~75.8–83.6M ~122.9–135M ~200M+ ~457–477M+ (2021–2024 combined est.)

Notes on the table

  • Data parsed exclusively from the user-provided excerpts of IRS Form 990-PF filings for the Paul E. Singer Foundation (EIN 27-2009342), specifically Part XIV / Line 3 (Grants and Contributions Paid During the Year or Approved for Future Payment), covering fiscal years ending November 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024.
  • All listed amounts and recipients are taken directly from the visible lines in the pasted excerpts. Where multiple grants appear for the same organization in the same year, they are combined and noted as such (e.g. multiple entries for Manhattan Institute for Policy Research or UJA Federation of New York).
  • Large transfers to donor-advised funds (e.g. J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Fund via National Philanthropic Trust) are pass-through vehicles; final beneficiaries are not itemized in these excerpts and would require review of the DAF's own distributions.
  • The table includes only recipients explicitly visible in the provided excerpts. The full 990-PF PDFs (available on ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer) contain dozens more pages of grants each year; many smaller grants ($5,000–$100,000) are aggregated in the "Additional smaller grants" row due to incomplete excerpts.
  • Purpose language is standardized as "FOR CHARITABLE PURPOSE OF ORGANIZATION" (or very similar) on nearly all lines in the excerpts; no specific project-level descriptions are provided in the form.
  • Totals shown are approximate and based on visible subtotals (e.g. $51,321,395 in 2021, ~$75.8M in 2022, ~$122.9M in 2023, ~$200M+ in 2024). Actual foundation-wide charitable disbursements are often higher due to administrative costs, other expenses, or additional unreported DAF routing.
  • 2025 data is not yet available (990-PF filings for fiscal year ending November 2025 will not be public until late 2026 or 2027).
  • All amounts are in USD. Sources: Direct excerpts provided by user + cross-verified totals with ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer summaries where possible.
  • This table is a reconstruction for illustrative purposes; for legal or tax purposes, always consult the original, complete 990-PF PDFs on ProPublica (search EIN 27-2009342) or the IRS website.


The foundation supports pro-Israel groups like Birthright Israel Foundation and Jewish Agency for Israel. Other donations include $1.1 million to American Enterprise Institute (2009) and $3.6 million to Foundation for Defense of Democracies (2013). Singer co-founded Start-Up Nation Central in 2012 to promote Israeli technology and is the largest Jewish funder of Covenant Journey, facilitating Christian student trips to Israel. Controversies include funding groups like the Philos Project, linked to anti-LGBT figures, contrasting Singer's LGBT advocacy. Some critics argue his pro-Israel grants promote "pinkwashing" or hardline policies. Singer also founded the Paul and Emily Singer Family Foundation in 2008, a smaller entity focusing on arts, education, environment, humanitarian issues, and animal concerns.

Israel

Singer is a staunch supporter of Israel, visiting as part of U.S. delegations and funding pro-Israel initiatives. He co-authored Start-Up Nation through associates and views Palestinian solidarity as anti-Semitic.

Christian Zionism

The Paul E. Singer Foundation funds the Philos Project and Covenant Journey, promoting Christian support for Israel.

Iran

Singer donates to groups opposing Iran diplomacy, including The Israel Project, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, and American Enterprise Institute.

Criticism of the Federal Reserve

Singer has criticized the Fed's quantitative easing for exacerbating inequality.[19]

Opposition to financial regulation

Singer advocates repealing Dodd-Frank, supporting politicians who seek to reduce SEC budgets and protect hedge fund tax breaks.[16]

Swift Boat Veterans for Truth

Singer raised funds for the group that attacked John Kerry's war record in 2004.[16]

California voting system

In 2007, Singer solely funded an initiative to alter California's electoral system to favor Republicans.

Criticism and controversies

Singer has faced significant criticism for his "vulture capitalist" tactics, which involve aggressive pursuit of distressed debt, leading to economic hardship in developing countries and U.S. communities. Organizations like Oxfam and Jubilee USA have condemned his sovereign debt strategies as exploitative. Labor unions and affected workers accuse him of destroying jobs and towns for profit. International figures like Cristina Fernández de Kirchner labeled him a "vulture," and media outlets have called him "The World's Most Feared Investor." Controversies include anti-Semitic attacks from opponents during the Samsung dispute. Ethical debates question whether his activism corrects markets or prioritizes short-term gains. Supreme Court ties, like Justice Samuel Alito's luxury trip funded by Singer, raise conflict concerns. Singer defends his approach as enforcing contracts and improving governance, but critics argue it exacerbates inequality.

Recent activities (2025-2026)

In 2025, Elliott continued activist campaigns, including stakes in Southwest Airlines and Starbucks, pushing for leadership changes. The Citgo acquisition positioned Elliott to benefit from Trump's Venezuela policy. As of February 2026, Singer's role in Trump's administration remains speculative, but his donations suggest influence on energy and foreign policy.

External resources

Affiliations

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Elliott Investment Management official website, "About Elliott", accessed February 4, 2026.
  2. "Elliott Investment Management’s hedge fund assets nearly tripled over past decade", Pensions & Investments, December 11, 2025, accessed February 4, 2026.
  3. Paul Singer profile, Forbes, real-time net worth as of February 2, 2026, accessed February 4, 2026.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Sheelah Kolhatkar, "Paul Singer, Doomsday Investor", The New Yorker, August 20, 2018, accessed February 4, 2026.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Paul Singer profile, Forbes, accessed February 4, 2026.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Paul Singer (businessman), Wikipedia, accessed February 4, 2026.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Greg Palast, "Uber-Vultures: The Billionaires Who Would Pick Our President", Truthout, October 6, 2011, accessed February 4, 2026.
  8. Jaime Fuller, "Meet the wealthy donor who’s trying to get Republicans to support gay marriage", The Washington Post, April 4, 2014, accessed February 4, 2026.
  9. Ianthe Jeanne Dugan, "Argentine Lobby Mystifies 'Members'", Wall Street Journal, October 15, 2012, accessed February 4, 2026.
  10. Charles Davis, "U.S. Hedge Funds Paint Argentina as Ally of Iranian ‘Devil’ – Part Two", Inter Press Service, July 31, 2013, accessed February 4, 2026.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Michelle Celarier, "Mitt Romney's hedge fund kingmaker", Fortune, March 26, 2012, accessed February 4, 2026.
  12. Marianna Parraga, "Trump's oil strategy for Venezuela leaves Citgo auction in limbo", Reuters, January 9, 2026, accessed February 4, 2026.
  13. US Citgo sale hangs in the balance, Argus Media, January 26, 2026, accessed February 4, 2026.
  14. Greg Palast, "How Barack Obama could end the Argentina debt crisis", The Guardian, August 7, 2014, accessed February 4, 2026.
  15. 15.0 15.1 Singer, Paul: Donor Detail, OpenSecrets.org, accessed February 4, 2026.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Peter Stone, "This Vulture-Fund Billionaire Is the GOP's Go-To Guy on Wall Street", Mother Jones, September/October 2013 Issue, accessed February 4, 2026.
  17. Paul E. Singer Foundation, InfluenceWatch, accessed February 4, 2026.
  18. Paul E Singer Foundation 990 Report, Instrumentl, accessed February 4, 2026.
  19. Stephen Gandel, "Paul Singer: The Fed is causing inequality", Fortune, January 21, 2015, accessed February 4, 2026.
  20. Press Release - Paul Singer as New MI Chairman, Manhattan Institute, February 21, 2008, accessed February 4, 2026.