Close Menu
Fund Focus News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Desjardins Investments launches three new mutual funds
    • Global ESG Mutual Fund and ETF Funds Register Outflows in Q3 2025 Against a Complex Geopolitical Backdrop
    • Crypto Exchange Giants Moved Millions In Illegal Funds
    • Samsung, Hyundai announce investments
    • The C-Suite Blind Spot Undermining Your AI Investments
    • India’s Mutual Funds doubled down on this auto ancillary stock in October
    • How To Protect Your Portfolio With Crash-Proof ETFs
    • This mutual fund has turned ₹10,000 SIP into ₹25 lakh in 11 years
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Fund Focus News
    • Home
    • Bonds
    • ETFs
    • Funds
    • Investments
    • Mutual Funds
    • Property Investments
    • SIP
    Fund Focus News
    Home»Investments»$44.6 million for a dinosaur: The other kinds of Wall Street investments | Economy and Business
    Investments

    $44.6 million for a dinosaur: The other kinds of Wall Street investments | Economy and Business

    July 21, 2024


    The founder of the hedge fund Citadel is the second richest investor in the world and, as of a few hours ago, the owner of Apex, “the largest and most complete stegosaurus ever found.” Kenneth C. Griffin paid $44.6 million for the skeleton, which is 11 feet tall and nearly 27 feet long from nose to tail, at an auction held on Wednesday at Sotheby’s. The final price tag shattered pre-sale estimates of between $4 million and $6 million. It is the highest amount ever paid for a dinosaur skeleton, and exceeds the $32 million paid four years ago by Abu Dhabi for Stan, a Tyrannosaurus Rex.

    Discovered only two years ago on private land in an area of Colorado, Moffat County, well known for its Upper Jurassic deposits, Apex stood out from the beginning because it is one of the few skeletons found intact, according to the auction house. It is made up of 254 fossil bone elements of an approximate total of 319. Its future will now probably be inside a U.S. museum, since Griffin has emphasized that “Apex was born in America and is going to stay in America.”

    This is not the first Jurassic adventure by Griffin, who in 2018 donated $16.5 million to a Chicago museum to finance the exhibition of a cast of the largest dinosaur ever discovered, but it does represent one of the first known incursions of the great wolves of Wall Street into this market, which until now had received more attention from Hollywood figures such as Leonardo DiCaprio or Nicolas Cage. To date, Griffin’s track record as a collector had been limited to the art world, where he is known both for his strong bidding at auctions and in the private market. In 2020 he shelled out $100 million for a Basquiat, down from the $500 million he had paid five years earlier in a transaction in which he managed to get his hands on two works, Jackson Pollock’s Number 17A and Willem de Kooning’s Interchange. It was small change for an investor whose fortune amounts to $37 billion, of which he has used more than $1 billion to build a house for his mother in the most luxurious area of Palm Beach, Florida, even though doing so meant previously having to buy and demolish a total of 13 different properties.

    The origin of his love for collecting goes back, according to his own admission, to a trip to New York in 1999 when, by chance, he entered Sotheby’s auction house and saw a sculpture of one of Degas’ famous ballet dancers. He tried to acquire it, but was unsuccessful. “I was outbid, I was outbid—I tried to buy it, the hammer went down, it wasn’t my bid, I wasn’t willing to go that high,” he acknowledged in statements collected by Vanity Fair magazine. “I had never been so frustrated in my life. I hung up the phone, and I called Sotheby’s the next day and offered more money to buy it, and that was the start of my passion in art,” he added.

    Griffin’s fondness for collecting is shared by a good handful of major fund managers, who also enjoy significant tax benefits. This is the case of J. Tomlinson Hill, former president and CEO of Blackstone Alternative Asset Management, and currently one of the world’s largest art collectors. On the walls of his collection there are works by Rubens, Warhol, Picasso, Bacon and Caravaggio. “I don’t collect. Rather, I look for works of art that challenge me and that can then converse with the other pieces I have,” he told EL PAÍS a little more than two years ago. The origin of his collection is a Campbell’s soup can painted by Warhol for which he paid around $340,000.

    Steve Cohen has a wealth of hobbies. The founder of the hedge fund Point72 is also the owner of the New York Mets baseball team and owns, among other works, Picasso’s The Dream, a painting for which he paid $155 million in 2013 to casino magnate Steve Wynn. But his collection, which rotates quarterly through the various offices of the fund in the US, UK and Asia, is much larger and is valued at more than $1 billion. It represents a small part of a fortune estimated at more than $13 billion.

    But it’s not all lavish foundations and Manhattan apartments decorated with works worth millions of dollars. In 2021, one of the pioneers of the hedge fund world, Michael Steinhardt, was forced to return almost 200 works of art valued at more than $70 million. A federal investigation revealed that the works were stolen from sites in a total of 11 countries, including Egypt, Greece, Israel, Syria and Turkey. As determined at the time, the investor, whose fortune exceeds $1.2 billion, demonstrated for decades “a voracious appetite for looted artifacts without concern for the legality of his actions, the legitimacy of the pieces he bought and sold or the serious cultural damage he caused around the world.” Steinhardt avoided jail time, but in exchange he had to accept a lifetime ban on collecting works of art.

    Sign up for our weekly newsletter to get more English-language news coverage from EL PAÍS USA Edition



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    Samsung, Hyundai announce investments

    November 17, 2025

    The C-Suite Blind Spot Undermining Your AI Investments

    November 17, 2025

    Samsung and other South Korean firms pledge larger domestic investments after U.S. tariff deal

    November 16, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    The Shifting Landscape of Art Investment and the Rise of Accessibility: The London Art Exchange

    September 11, 2023

    Charlie Cobham: The Art Broker Extraordinaire Maximizing Returns for High Net Worth Clients

    February 12, 2024

    The Unyielding Resilience of the Art Market: A Historical and Contemporary Perspective

    November 19, 2023

    Crypto Exchange Giants Moved Millions In Illegal Funds

    November 17, 2025
    Don't Miss

    Desjardins Investments launches three new mutual funds

    November 17, 2025

    MONTREAL, Nov. 17, 2025 /CNW/ – Desjardins Investments Inc., the manager of Desjardins Funds, is…

    Global ESG Mutual Fund and ETF Funds Register Outflows in Q3 2025 Against a Complex Geopolitical Backdrop

    November 17, 2025

    Crypto Exchange Giants Moved Millions In Illegal Funds

    November 17, 2025

    Samsung, Hyundai announce investments

    November 17, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    EDITOR'S PICK

    SRM Entertainment ne prévoit pas de lever des fonds dans l’immédiat ; les actions chutent -Le 19 février 2025 à 17:44

    February 19, 2025

    Powell’s Dovish Stance Ignites Rally In Stocks Craving Lower Borrowing Costs: 3 ETFs Positioned For Fed Rate Cuts – Arhaus (NASDAQ:ARHS), Builders FirstSource (NYSE:BLDR)

    August 23, 2024

    Best Mutual Funds: These flexi-cap funds gave over 20% annualised returns in past 5 years. Check list

    November 3, 2025
    Our Picks

    Desjardins Investments launches three new mutual funds

    November 17, 2025

    Global ESG Mutual Fund and ETF Funds Register Outflows in Q3 2025 Against a Complex Geopolitical Backdrop

    November 17, 2025

    Crypto Exchange Giants Moved Millions In Illegal Funds

    November 17, 2025
    Most Popular

    🔥Juve target Chukwuemeka, Inter raise funds, Elmas bid in play 🤑

    August 20, 2025

    💵 Libra responds after Flamengo takes legal action and ‘freezes’ funds

    September 26, 2025

    ₹10,000 monthly SIP in this mutual fund has grown to ₹1.52 crore in 22 years

    September 17, 2025
    © 2025 Fund Focus News
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.