Difference between revisions of "Daniel Och"

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:On the basis of these proposed “reasons of common interest” between Palladino and Guinea, the company loaned the country $25-million to finance the establishment of the state mining company. But should Guinea default on the loan, Palladino could take up to a 30% stake in an unspecified subsidiary of the state mining company.<ref>Craig McKune, Stefaans Brummer, James Wood '[http://mg.co.za/article/2012-06-28-tokyo-linked-company-in-guinea-row/ Tokyo-linked company in Guinea row]', ''Mail and Guardian'', 29 June 2012, accessed 18 June 2015</ref>
 
:On the basis of these proposed “reasons of common interest” between Palladino and Guinea, the company loaned the country $25-million to finance the establishment of the state mining company. But should Guinea default on the loan, Palladino could take up to a 30% stake in an unspecified subsidiary of the state mining company.<ref>Craig McKune, Stefaans Brummer, James Wood '[http://mg.co.za/article/2012-06-28-tokyo-linked-company-in-guinea-row/ Tokyo-linked company in Guinea row]', ''Mail and Guardian'', 29 June 2012, accessed 18 June 2015</ref>
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Subsequently the World Bank opened an investigation into the country’s mining sector.<ref>Craig McKune, Stefaans Brummer, James Wood '[http://mg.co.za/article/2012-06-28-tokyo-linked-company-in-guinea-row/ Tokyo-linked company in Guinea row]', ''Mail and Guardian'', 29 June 2012, accessed 18 June 2015</ref>
  
 
==Wealth==
 
==Wealth==

Revision as of 14:24, 18 June 2015

Daniel Och (born 1961) is the billionaire Chairman and CEO of Och-Ziff Capital Management Group - a hedge fund and asset management company. Och founded the firm in 1994.[1] The company currently oversees more than $46 billion.[2]

He is the founder and a trustee of the Jane and Daniel Och Family Foundation, a 501(c)(3) non profit foundation based in New York. The foundation supports a number of pro-Israel causes.He received his B.S. in Finance from the The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.[1]

Och-Ziff Capital Management Group Controversies

Zimbabwe

In the run up to the 2008 second presidential runoff election in Zimbabwe the government of Robert Mugabe unleashed a wave of repression against the Zimbabwean opposition. According to US State Department estimates there were 289 deaths and more than 22,000 injured casualties.[3] As the attacks progressed a Wall Street consortium provided the Zimbabwean government with $100 million dollars to secure platinum mining rights in the country. Firms involved in the consortium included BlackRock, GLG Partners, Credit Suisse and the Och-Ziff Capital Management Group.[3]

The Mugabe government had taken control of the platinum claims in the Zimbabwean Great Dyke which had formerly been held by Anglo American Platinum. The rights were bought by a mining company - the Central African Mining and Exploration Company (Camec) - which was bought out in 2009 by the Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation. Och-Ziff eventually provided 75 percent of the funds Camec raised to secure the mining rights, making Och-Ziff the fourth largest shareholder in the company. Och-Ziff offered shares in Camec on April 7, 2008:[3]

Four days later, Camec announced it was using the money it raised to purchase a joint venture with the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corp., or ZMDC, Mugabe’s state-owned mining company. The joint venture owned the platinum stakes on the Great Dyke that had been taken back just a few weeks earlier from Anglo American. The price included $5 million in cash; Camec issued shares to partners whose identities were shielded by a shell company based in the British Virgin Islands; and $100 million to Mugabe’s government. Camec said the $100 million was a cash loan “to comply with its contractual obligations to the government of Zimbabwe” for the platinum claims. It said the money would be repaid out of ZMDC’s share of future platinum earnings. Camec’s balance sheets for the period make clear that funding for the platinum rights came from the private transactions involving Och-Ziff.[3]

In October 2008 the US Ambassador in Zimbabwe received information claiming that a Camec shareholder was purchasing vehicles off the books for the Mugabe government:

[US Ambassador] McGee’s staff pursued a tip that a Camec shareholder, Muller Conrad “Billy” Rautenbach, was helping the government buy vehicles off the books. A Zimbabwean businessman named Raymond Tendai Chamba, who ran the local office of a Namibian export-import firm, alleges that Rautenbach and Mugabe’s central banker, Gideon Gono, placed orders for 642 vehicles with his company. They were mostly Isuzu (7202:JP) pickups, Toyota (TM) SUVs, and minivans. Chamba says the orders began coming in during the election period, and he was paid $65,000 in cash per truck. He claims Rautenbach paid mostly in U.S. dollars.[3]

The election never took place, with the opposition leader withdrawing in the hope attacks against the opposition would end.[3]

Och-Ziff's European and African investments at the time were overseen by Michael Cohen, reportedly a protégé of Daniel Och's. In 2013 Cohen left the company:

On March 18, 2013, Och-Ziff announced Cohen’s departure from the firm, without explanation. Before Cohen left, he bought a $22 million English country estate outside London. Called Ewhurst Park, the more than 900-acre spread includes a sprawling main house, cottages, a church, a large lake with ducks, a boathouse, bridges, wooded areas, fountains, and formal gardens. Reached on his cell phone, Cohen declined to comment.[3]

In 2014, Och-Ziff warned its shareholders that the Department of Justice and SEC were investigating the firm regarding, amongst other things, its investment activities in a number of companies in Africa.[3]

Libya

In March 2014 Och-Ziff Capital Management Group announced that the hedge fund was under investigation by US regulators, investigating whether or not the company broke bribery laws by accepting an investment from the $65 billion Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) sovereign wealth fund prior to the overthrow of the Qaddafi regime:

Och-Ziff received subpoenas starting in 2011 from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission as part of a probe into possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the New York-based company said in a regulatory filing yesterday. The Justice Department has requested information from Och-Ziff as part of the same investigation, according to the filing. Its shares fell the most in more than a month. The sovereign fund referenced by Och-Ziff in its filing is the Libyan Investment Authority, according to a person with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be identified because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly... The SEC and Justice Department are also examining investments that Och-Ziff made “directly and indirectly” in a number of African companies, the filing said. Och-Ziff said it’s not able to determine how the investigation will be resolved.[4] [5]

The investigation was reportedly examining payments made by a UK-based middleman between Och-Ziff and the LIA named Mohamad Ali-Ajami.[6]

Greece

In January 2012 The Independent reported that Och-Ziff was one of a number of hedge funds that had bought Greek bonds at rock bottom prices were attempting to block a write-down of Greek debt in order to ensure making significant profits on their investments:

these funds are believed to have purchased insurance policies on their holdings of Greek bonds, known as Credit Default Swaps (CDS). If Athens fails to pay its maturing debts in March, that would trigger large CDS payouts to these funds from the large financial firms that sold them the insurance.[7]

Guinea

A partner company of Och-Ziif, Palladino Holdings loaned $25 million to the Guinean government ostensibly for the purpose of a new state mine. However it has been suggested that the funds were given as 'a quid pro quo in return for [Guinean President] Condé campaign support':

Palladino’s contracts with Guinea were signed in the months shortly after Condé was elected as president in November 2010. This followed two turbulent years of military rule.
Guineans went to the polls for a first round of voting in June 2010. A second round of voting was delayed for three months until November, and Condé took office on December 21.
A first order of business for Condé’s government was an assessment of how the country’s mineral assets – vast bauxite reserves, high-grade iron ore, gold and diamonds – could be better managed as well as used to raise much-needed state funding. According to Palladino, it was invited in early 2011 to consult...

Palladino Holdings were granted extremely favourable terms regarding mining rights in the country:

Palladino was to be granted as much as a 49% of the equity stake and voting rights in the state mining company.
With no reference to a licence process open to all contenders, Palladino could choose to negotiate to acquire “minority or majority” stakes in any state-linked mining asset.
Guinea could not sell any state interest in a mining asset without first offering the option to Palladino.
Should Palladino wish to acquire a stake in a mining asset, it was granted the privilege of a six-month negotiating period. If a deal could not be struck, Guinea would be allowed to negotiate with a third party – but Palladino would retain first right of refusal on any deal less favourable to Guinea than the initial offer...
On the basis of these proposed “reasons of common interest” between Palladino and Guinea, the company loaned the country $25-million to finance the establishment of the state mining company. But should Guinea default on the loan, Palladino could take up to a 30% stake in an unspecified subsidiary of the state mining company.[8]

Subsequently the World Bank opened an investigation into the country’s mining sector.[9]

Wealth

In 2015 Och was listed by Forbes at number sixteen in its ranking of the 'Highest-Earning Hedge Fund Managers & Traders'.[10] As of fiscal year 2014 his total calculated compensation was $1,141,613 and in 2015 his net worth was calculated at $3.9 Billion.[2] In 2015 he was ranked by Forbes as the 452nd richest billionaire in the world and the 150th richest billionaire within the United States.[2] [1] Och owns a 7,000 square-foot mansion in The Hamptons valued at more than $20 million.[11] He also owns a $41 million penthouse at 15 Central Park West and a $20.3 million mansion in Aspen, Colorado.[12]

Affiliations

  • Och-Ziff Capital Management Group - (Chief Executive Officer, Executive Managing Director, Chairman of the Board of Directors and former President)
  • OZ Management L.P. (Chief Executive Officer and Executive Managing Director)
  • OZ Management LLC (President)
  • Och-Ziff Management Europe Limited (Chief Executive Officer and Director)
  • Och-Ziff Capital Management Hong Kong Limited (Officer and Director)
  • Och-Ziff Japan Limited (Officer and Director)
  • Och-Ziff India Private Limited (Officer and Director)
  • Cyrus Capital Partners, L.P. (Founder)
  • Goldman, Sachs & Co. (Vice President 1987 - 1999)
  • U.S. Equities Trading (Head of Proprietary Trading in the Equities Division and Co-Head of U.S. Equities Trading)
  • Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (Director)
  • City Harvest (Director)
  • NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital (Trustee)

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 bloomberg.com Och-Ziff Capital Managemen-A (OZM:New York). Accessed 17 June 2015.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 forbes.com The Highest-Earning Hedge Fund Managers & Traders. Accessed 17 June 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Cam Simpson and Jesse Westbrook The Hedge Fund and the Despot Bloomberg Business, 21 August 2014, accessed 17 June 2014
  4. Jesse Westbrook, 'Och-Ziff Falls After Disclosing Sovereign-Related Probe', Bloomberg Business, 20 March 2014, accessed 18 June 2015
  5. Richard L. Cassin, 'HEDGE FUND MANAGER OCH-ZIFF DISCLOSES FCPA PROBE', The FCPA Blog, 20 March 2014, accessed 18 June 2015
  6. Jim Armitage, 'London firms watch as Libya bribery trial begins', The Independent, 7 March 2015, accessed 18 June 2015
  7. Ben Chu, 'Greek rescue blocked by hedge fund greed', The Independent, 18 January 2012, accessed 18 June 2015
  8. Craig McKune, Stefaans Brummer, James Wood 'Tokyo-linked company in Guinea row', Mail and Guardian, 29 June 2012, accessed 18 June 2015
  9. Craig McKune, Stefaans Brummer, James Wood 'Tokyo-linked company in Guinea row', Mail and Guardian, 29 June 2012, accessed 18 June 2015
  10. forbes.com The Highest-Earning Hedge Fund Managers & Traders. Accessed 17 June 2015.
  11. Charlene Adams, Billionaire Lane: From fashion designers to real estate tycoons and Wall Street financiers. Meet those who live on the East Coast's most exclusive 5-mile stretch with a private beach and helipad, Mail Online, 23 May 2015.
  12. Staff, Hedge Clippers Take On Daniel Och “The Wolf Of Wall Street”, Value Walk, 8 May 2015.
  13. Birthright Israel Foundation Website Board of Directors. Accessed 17 June 2015.