The billionaire who built on chaos: Gail Counsell charts the rise of a speculator who considers himself 'some kind of god'
Thursday 03 June 1993
Latest in Business
On Facebook
The financial markets deified Mr Soros some time ago, but it was only with Black Wednesday, when his coolly-executed dollars 10bn punt against sterling helped to bring about one of the most spectacular reversals of economic policy forced on any British government, that he began to be widely regarded as a financial Superman.
Since then, there has been his celebrated plunge into gold, spending dollars 400m on a stake in Newmont Mining and triggering an enthusiasm for the metal not seen for several years. This new high profile means that his investments in the housebuilder Berkeley Group earlier this year and in British Land yesterday are seen as more significant than previous positions in UK quoted companies such as TV-am, LIG and MGM.
Born in Budapest in 1930, the younger son of a Jewish lawyer, he often attributes his success as a trader to the inflated sense of self given to him by a devoted father and a doting mother. Escaping to London after the war, aged 17, he took a series of odd jobs, eventually enrolling as a student of philosophy at the London School of Economics. There his intellectual tendencies warmed to the teachings of Karl Popper on the importance of the 'open society'.
By the age of 24 he was working in the City and a couple of years later he moved to New York. He only began to find his feet six years later with a job at the investment house Arnhold & S Bleichroeder. That led to the foundation of two offshore funds for A&SB, which in due course metamorphosed into the Soros Fund.
Formed initially with a partner, James Rogers, the fund, based in the tax haven island of Curacao in the Netherland Antilles, was recording annual returns of up to 122 per cent by the late 1970s. Behind its success lay an investment strategy predicated on the idea that markets are inherently chaotic and unstable.
'The major insight I bring to understanding things in general is the role that imperfect understanding plays in shaping events,' he wrote in The Alchemy of Finance. Where traditional economics is based on theories of equilibrium between supply and demand, Soros studies disequilibrium.
This led to the renaming of the fund as the Quantum Fund, based on Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, which says it is impossible to predict the behaviour of sub- atomic particles.
The Quantum Fund has made him and his investors very wealthy. Initially worth dollars 4.8m, Quantum and its offshoots are now valued at up to dollars 9bn, one third of which is believed to be Mr Soros's personal stake.
In recent years, feeling dissatisfied with simply making money, he has championed the reform of Eastern Europe, offering dollars 100m in one go to support former Russian defence scientists, who otherwise might have drifted abroad. There is now a network of 18 Soros Foundations in countries from Albania to Belorussia, as well as two universities.
(Photograph omitted)
- 1 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 2 News in pictures
- 3 Four Britons face death by firing squad after 'smuggling cocaine into Bali'
- 4 Naked Miami man shot dead after being found eating another man's face
- 5 In pictures: The bewildering face of China
- 6 Principled Skinner rises above the fray
- 7 Thunderstorms and rain on the way as heatwave gives way
- 8 News International 'tried to blackmail select committee'
- 9 Postgraduate students are being used as 'slave labour'
- 10 Pope's butler: 'more arrests may follow'
- 1 Robert Fisk: Clinton's $33m raid on Pakistan shows that, in the end, hypocrisy will win
- 2 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 3 It's not easy being Professor Green: The rapper, the heiress and a drama made in Chelsea...
- 4 Naked Miami man shot dead after being found eating another man's face
- 5 Principled Skinner rises above the fray
- 6 Fat? Really? Olympic hope laughs off official’s jibe – but others aren’t amused
- 7 'Hello mum, this is going to be hard for you to read ...'
- 8 Postgraduate students are being used as 'slave labour'
- 9 Coke reveals its secret: It may need to carry a cancer warning
- 10 French in uproar over oral sex anti-smoking posters
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page



Comments