Andrew Lahde of the aptly-named Lahde Capital is one of the rock stars of the current market — one of his hedge funds returned an astounding 870 percent last year by shorting the ABX indices. That ...
You simply can’t make stuff like this up — we’d covered the rousing success of fund manager Andrew Lahde in March, and that story recently popped up as the most-searched story on HousingWire. Which ...
Andrew Lahde, the Santa Monica hedge fund manager who shot to fame with an 870% gain last year by betting on the subprime mortgage collapse, has left the building -- with a bang. Lahde, 37, who closed ...
Andrew Lahde was a hedge fund manager until last year, when he quit after turning an 870% profit. His farewell letter to his clients, in which he inveighs against Congress for failing to curb ...
Wall Street's newest meme wants us all to know that he's not about to gloat while much of the country is getting whacked by the stock market. Then again, Andrew Lahde -- sudden viral sensation, ...
Andrew Lahde, the head of Santa Monica–based hedge fund Lahde Capital Management, who quit after posting an 870 percent gain last year, became something of a folk hero today after his awesome, Jerry ...
Most people lost money when the subprime market collapsed in late 2006, taking the economy down with it. But Wall Street Journal reporter Greg Zuckerman’s new book, The Greatest Trade Ever, tells the ...
NEW YORK, Oct 17 (Reuters) - Andrew Lahde, the hedge fund founder who shot to fame with his small fund that soared 870 percent last year on bets against U.S. subprime home loans, has called it quits, ...
Andrew Lahde, the hedge-fund manager who quit after posting an 870 percent gain last year, said farewell to clients in a letter that thanks stupid traders for making him rich and ends with a plea to ...
In that giant casino known as the U.S. economy, there is always someone who can count the cards, work the odds and beat the house. The Financial Times reported Monday that a California hedge fund, ...
Worries about subprime lending drove the riskiest tranche of the closely-watched subprime ABX derivative index to a record low of 44 cents on the dollar today -- understandable, given everything ...