Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Articles. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

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The Making of Philip Falcone

The Making of Philip Falcone

What makes a man want to amass more money than God, and once he has, keep going? For each hedge-fund manager the answers are a little bit different, and a little bit the same.


From today'sBloomberg Markets we believe we have identified the four primary things that motivated Harbinger Capital founder Philip Falcone (or as readers of this blog may know him, Mr. Lisa Falcone), whose fund made $11 billion betting against subprime, to become who he is today.

We begin with a sepia-tinted moment when Falcone first leaves his Minnesota hometown, all gawky of limb and Lionel Richie of hair, to seek his fortune in the big city.

Neil Sheehy, from nearby International Falls, had offered Falcone a ride to Harvard University, which had recruited both of them to play hockey for the Crimson. The car stalled in front of Falcone’s house, and Sheehy had to restart it on a hill while Falcone’s mother and one of his sisters sobbed their goodbyes.

“It’ll be all right, Mrs. Falcone; it’ll be all right,” Sheehy recalls telling Caroline Falcone as the car chugged to life and headed east.

Falcone was one of nine, and his mother still cared that he was leaving home! This is meaningful and leads us to Motivation 1: Phil can never let his mama down.

[To wit, later: "Galloway says he once set up a meeting for Falcone with a billionaire investor who was interested in Harbinger. Falcone said he couldn’t make the meeting because he had to go see his mother."]
Immediately after leaving home, life decided to punk young Philip by showing him that even when you think that things are tough, they can always get worse.

Falcone rode to Cambridge, Massachusetts, with his feet on the dashboard because Sheehy had packed a skate-sharpening machine on the floor of the front seat... Halfway there, the roof liner came loose and showered the young men with fiberglass insulation that stuck to them as they sweated in the late.

Motivation 2: The fuck he's going to go through something like that again. He is going to kick life's ass!

Then, he did not quite fit in at school.

Falcone was wide-eyed when he arrived at Harvard in 1980, says hockey teammate Greg Olson, who’s now a dentist in Minnetonka, Minnesota. “He was a deer in the headlights,” Olson says. After recovering from the initial shock, Falcone made himself something of a campus don. Hockey teammates called him “Fashion Phil” because he cared so much about his clothes, Olson says. He had a blue, three-piece suit that he wore often, and he always wore stylish shoes.

Motivation 3: Show those jerkoffs who called him a hick and a fag who the man is.

But after graduation, he was more confident.

[Wife Lisa] was working as a model when she met Phil Falcone through mutual friends at a Manhattan restaurant in the late 1980s.

Motivation 4: GIRLS!

Of course, a hot wife and incredible financial success doesn't keep the critics at bay. If anything, it just makes them worse.

“Just because a manager got the subprime trade right, it doesn’t necessarily mean he’s a skilled manager,” says Brad Balter, managing partner of Balter Capital Management LLC, a Boston-based firm that invests in hedge funds for clients. “There have been several funds that benefited from that bet in 2007 whose performance was mediocre before and continues to be mediocre today.”

Motivation 5: Show those jerkoffs who suggest he is a one-hit wonder who the man is. Then show them again. And again. Until he dies."


http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/09/phil_falcone_is_not_an_atm.html


"Harbinger’s Falcone Sells Down Stake in Times Co.
BY AZAM AHMED

Daniel Rosenbaum for The New York Times
Philip A. Falcone, the manager of Harbinger Capital Parters

8:58 p.m. | Updated Harbinger Capital Partners, the large hedge fund run by the embattled manager Philip A. Falcone, has sold off a significant chunk of its stake in The New York Times Company, bringing its ownership in the newspaper company down to about 2.6 percent.

The fund sold a block of seven million shares at $8.13 a share for a total of about $57 million on Monday, according to a securities filing.

In late 2007 and early 2008, Harbinger bought about 20 percent of the company’s Class A shares at more than double what it sold the shares for this week.

Before the sale, Harbinger was the company’s second-largest shareholder, behind the mutual fund company T. Rowe Price Associates, with a 7.4 percent stake.

A spokesman for Harbinger said that the sale was “a very small part of the portfolio and part of standard portfolio management.”


Harbinger's S.E.C. Filing

The Securities and Exchange Commission requires investors to disclose when they have more than 5 percent of a company. Harbinger’s sale will bring it under that reporting threshold.

From September through December of 2009, Harbinger sold more than 10.15 million shares of the 28.5 million shares it originally bought, at a significant loss.

Mr. Falcone has been under pressure recently after the disclosure that federal authorities were looking into a $113 million loan he took out against his firm’s Special Situations funds last year.
The loan occurred when investors in the fund were not allowed to redeem money from it, and authorities from the S.E.C. and the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan are examining whether he disclosed the loan in a timely fashion, according to a person who has been interviewed by regulators about the matter.

Those authorities are also looking into whether certain investors were allowed to withdraw money from the fund at a time when others were not because the fund was under strain, according to the person, who was not authorized to speak on the matter and asked for anonymity.

Mr. Falcone has said the loan was approved by his lawyers and has denied that any investors were given preferential treatment.

Harbinger and Mr. Falcone rose to prominence in 2007 by betting big against the mortgage market.

A series of redemptions have brought the firm’s assets under management down to about $9 billion, from about $26 billion. "




Devindra Hardawar on Nokia

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Nokia to make phones for LightSquared’s wholesale 4G network

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Nokia has announced that it will develop mobile devices for billionaire Philip Falcone’s LightSquared — an ambitious 4G cellular network venture meant to compete with established carriers like AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint, Bloomberg reports.

Falcone’s Harbinger Capital hedge fund is backing the project, and Nokia Siemens has committed $7 billion to building up the 4G network over the next few years. LightSquared plans to have 92 percent of the U.S. population covered with its network by 2015. Given the involvement of Nokia Siemens, it’s not a huge surprise that its parent company would be providing handsets for the project.

Unlike typical cellular carriers, LightSquared doesn’t plan to sell directly to consumers. Instead, it intends to wholesale its network to retailers and other network providers. As CNN mentions, a retailer like Wal-Mart could use LightSquared’s network to offer a branded wireless service of its own. Other mobile carriers like T-Mobile could also license the network for 4G coverage without the need to build their own infrastructure.

While it may seem crazy to attempt building up a new cellular network from scratch, LightSquared’s wholesaling ambitions may prove successful. It opens the door for more companies to offer wireless services of their own and has the potential to drive down costs of 4G network access nationwide.

The company plans to build its network in nine U.S. metro areas in 2011, and it is beginning trials early next year in Baltimore, Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Denver.

LightSquared is also considering supplementing its cellular network with satellite coverage. It’s working with Qualcomm to develop chips that would allow phones to use both cellular and satellite networks.

Reston, VA-based LightSquared says it has amassed $1.75 billion in initial funding commitments."