Gabe Plotkin Quits Melvin Capital To Become Full Time Dogecoin Trader By Eloise Williams - January 31, 2021 In an effort to appease the WallStreetBets crowd, Gabe Plotkin of Melvin Capital Management was reported to quit his hedge fund and focus his time fully on day trading Dogecoin. “After careful consideration I have concluded that shutting down Melvin Capital and focusing full time on day trading Dogecoin is my best alternative to becoming a billionaire again,” Plotkin said. Melvin Capital Management, a hedge fund founded in 2014 was reported to be down 53% in the month of January from a botched GameStop short. At the beginning of the year Melvin had over $12.75 billion in capital. “Given the absolute destruction of capital from my hedge fund, I will be using the proceeds from my day job as a GameStop sales associate to day trade this obscure cryptocurrency on my bathroom breaks,” Plotkin stated. Gabe Plotkin estimates it will only take him 69 years to become a billionaire again. “I should be able to retire by the time I am 98,” Gabe said sighing. https://thestonkmarket.com/gabe-plotkin-quits-melvin-capital-to-become-full-time-dogecoin-trader/
In a related story, I know the current drummer for Queensrÿche (he lives close by) has been out of work because of the virus and was able to pay his mortgage by trading Dogecoin
Hedge Fund Manager Hit in GameStop Frenzy is Developing $44M Miami Mega-Mansion (Fox Business) The hedge fund manager hit hardest by the GameStop trading frenzy is in the middle of a major redevelopment of a $44 million mega-mansion in Miami – despite his company losing $4.5 billion in the mania, according to a report. Short-seller Gabe Plotkin’s Melvin Capital Management lost 53 percent in January – ending the month with $8 billion in assets, down from roughly $12.5 billion – largely because of online trading propelled by the Reddit forum r/WallStreetBets.
Steve Cohen’s Point72 Raises $1.5 billion After Supporting Melvin Capital During the GameStop Saga, Report Says (Business Insider) Steve Cohen‘s hedge fund Point72 has raised $1.5 billion after suffering heavy losses in January and providing a lifeline to Melvin Capital, as short-sellers were hit by the GameStop saga, according to a report in Bloomberg and other outlets. Point72 Asset Management, which is run by New York Mets-owner Cohen, lost around 9% in January, Bloomberg reported.