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Hawkshaw Capital Management, LLC: Private Company Information - Businessweek - 0 views

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    Hawkshaw Capital Management, LLC is a privately owned hedge fund sponsor. The firm manages hedge funds and invests in the public equity and alternate markets of the United States. It invests in value stocks of mid-cap companies to create its equity portfolio mix. The firm employs long/short strategy to hedge its investor's risk. Hawkshaw Capital Management was founded in 2002 and is based in New York City.
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The D. E. Shaw group - 0 views

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    Who We Are The D. E. Shaw group is a global investment and technology development firm with more than 1,100 employees; approximately $26 billion in investment capital as of March 1, 2012; and offices in North America, Europe, and Asia. Since its founding in 1988, the firm has earned an international reputation for financial innovation, technological leadership, and an extraordinarily distinguished staff. The firm has a significant presence in many of the world's capital markets, investing in a wide range of companies and financial instruments within both the major industrialized nations and a number of emerging markets. Its activities range from the deployment of investment strategies based on either mathematical models or human expertise to the acquisition of existing companies and the financing or development of new ones.
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Shaw Capital Management Financial News: Wall St. Banks Expected to Post Weak 2nd-Quarte... - 0 views

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    Article by Shaw Financial By ERIC DASHPublished: July 10, 2011Only a few short months ago, JPMorgan Chase traders were on such a roll that they did not have a single losing day in the first quarter.But when the bank reports its second-quarter results this week, that hot streak will have come to an end. Analysts expect JPMorgan to count an almost 20 percent drop in its sales and trading revenues, reflecting a slowdown in investor activity and the dismal performance of its fixed-income and commodities groups.Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are expected to report similar news. After helping prop up Wall Street during the financial crisis, core trading revenue is projected to drop, on average, by as much as 25 percent from the first quarter, according to Credit Suisse research.That will put further pressure on the banks' growth prospects, which are already strained by stagnant loan growth and more stringent regulation. It is also prompting nearly every major Wall Street firm to contemplate another round of layoffs amid growing concerns that at least part of the weak results are permanent."We are undoubtedly being impacted by lower levels of activity," said William Tanona, a financial services analyst with UBS. "There is a lot of uncertainty out there."Together, the five Wall Street banks are still going to take in more than billion from their core trading operations, largely from business done on behalf of clients. For example, the banks routinely help airlines hedge oil prices or bring together buyers and sellers of stock, bonds and other complex securities - often putting their own money on the line to facilitate a trade. But during the second quarter, the business was particularly hard hit.Trading volumes fell sharply as investors became unnerved by the running debt crisis in Europe, the political standoff over the debt ceiling in the United States, and lingering concerns over the anemic growth of the broader economy. Even wh
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