American family office
Archegos Capital Company type Private Industry Investment management Founded 2013 Founder Bill Hwang Defunct March 26, 2021; 3 years ago (2021-03-26 ) Fate Defaulted on margin calls Headquarters New York City, New York[ 1]
Archegos Capital Management was a limited partnership [ 1] family office that managed the personal assets of Bill Hwang ,[ 2] [ 3] at one time managing over $36 billion in assets.[ 4] On April 27, 2022, Hwang was indicted and arrested on federal charges of fraud and racketeering.[ 5]
On March 26, 2021, Archegos defaulted on margin calls from several global investment banks , including Credit Suisse and Nomura Holdings ,[ 6] [ 7] as well as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley .[ 8] [ 9] The firm had large, concentrated positions in ViacomCBS , Baidu , Vipshop , Farfetch , and other companies,[ 10] and the firm's use of total return swaps had helped to hide its high exposure from lending banks.[ 11] Its derivative contracts "exposed the firm to severe losses when the trades went bad."[ 10] The Wall Street Journal reported that Hwang lost $8 billion in 10 days,[ 12] while Bloomberg News reported that Hwang lost $20 billion in 2 days.[ 13] The fate of Archegos has been compared to the meltdown caused by Long Term Capital Management .[ 14]
^ a b "Archegos Capital Management LP - Company Profile and News" . Bloomberg.com . Retrieved April 9, 2021 .
^ "Who is Archegos' Bill Hwang?" . finews.asia. March 29, 2021.
^ Cook, James (March 28, 2021). "Mystery figure behind $20bn stock sell-off unmasked" . The Telegraph . Telegraph Media Group Limited.
^ Stempel, Jonathan (December 3, 2022). "Archegos' Bill Hwang says prosecutor misconduct justifies indictment's dismissal" . Reuters . Archived from the original on December 3, 2022.
^ Ramey, Corinne; Pulliam, Susan; Chung, Juliet. "Archegos Founder Bill Hwang and CFO Charged With Securities Fraud" . The Wall Street Journal . Retrieved April 27, 2022 .
^ Foy, Simon (March 29, 2021). "Credit Suisse and Nomura flag giant losses from hedge fund sell-off" . Telegraph Media Group Limited.
^ Chung, Juliet; Farrell, Maureen (March 28, 2021). "Ex-Tiger Asia Founder Triggers $30 Billion in Large Stocks Sales" . Dow Jones & Company, Inc. The Wall Street Journal.
^ Papuc, Andreea; Sivabalan, Srinivasan. "Investors brace for fallout after hedge fund default reportedly triggered $20 billion fire sale of stocks" . National Post, a division of Postmedia Network Inc. Bloomberg News.
^ Maureen Farrell; Margot Patrick; Juliet Chung (March 30, 2021). "Goldman, Morgan Stanley Limit Losses With Fast Sale of Archegos Assets" . The Wall Street Journal . ISSN 0099-9660 . Wikidata Q114833181 . Retrieved October 23, 2022 .
^ a b Benoit, Alexander Osipovich and David (April 1, 2021). "Archegos Blowup Puts Spotlight on Gaps in Swap Regulation" . Wall Street Journal . ISSN 0099-9660 . Retrieved April 1, 2021 .
^ "The Last 72 Hours of Archegos" . Bloomberg News . 2024.
^ Zuckerman, Gregory; Chung, Juliet; Farrell, Maureen (April 1, 2021). "Inside Archegos's Epic Meltdown" . The Wall Street Journal . Retrieved April 2, 2021 .
^ Schatzker, Erik; Shridhar, Natrajan; Burton, Katherine (April 8, 2021). "Bill Hwang Had $20 Billion, Then Lost It All in Two Days" . Bloomberg News . Retrieved April 10, 2021 .
^ Burton, Lucy (March 29, 2021). "Bill Hwang and the debt-fuelled Archegos implosion that triggered a Wall Street earthquake" . Telegraph Media Group Limited.