Henry Swieca Net Worth

Henry Swieca, born in 1957 in New York, is a Wall Street veteran and the founder of Talpion Fund Management. He co-founded the hedge fund firm Highbridge Capital Management with his childhood friend Glenn Dubin in 1992, and sold part of the business to JP Morgan Chase in 2004 and the rest in 2009. He then opened Talpion Fund, which manages his own fortune and invests in real estate and startup cash for new money management firms.
Henry Swieca is a member of Investments

Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? Founder, Talpion Fund Management
Birth Year 1957
Birth Place New York, New York, United States
Age 66 YEARS OLD
Alma mater Stony Brook University (B.A.) Columbia Business School (M.B.A)
Occupation Hedge fund manager
Spouse(s) Estee Tobaly
Children 4

💰 Net worth: $2.2 Billion (2024)

Henry Swieca, a renowned figure in the finance industry, is estimated to have a net worth of $2.2 billion by 2024. As the founder of Talpion Fund Management, a prominent investment firm based in the United States, Swieca has demonstrated his exceptional entrepreneurial skills and financial acumen. With vast experience and expertise in managing funds, he has achieved remarkable success in his career. Swieca's net worth is a testament to his incredible achievements and the significant contributions he has made to the finance industry.

2009 $1.1 Billion
2010 $1.2 Billion
2011 $1.25 Billion
2012 $1.2 Billion
2013 $1.2 Billion
2014 $1.35 Billion
2015 $1.5 Billion
2016 $1.6 Billion
2017 $1.7 Billion
2018 $1.73 Billion

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Biography/Timeline

1955

Swieca grew up in a Jewish family in Washington Heights, New York. He is the son of two Holocaust survivors from Poland who emigrated from France in 1955. Both his parents died when he was nineteen. Mr. Swieca’s life took a tragic turn at the age of 19 when his mother died of Lou Gehrig’s disease. Within months, his Father passed away from a heart attack. Through an uncle who was a dentist and avid stock investor, Mr. Swieca was introduced to financial markets. Now orphaned, Mr. Swieca turned to the stock market as a way to pay for his own education as well as that of his younger brother. With $50,000 of inheritance, he bought 1,000 shares in Warner Communications, nearly all the money he had at the time. He then used the shares as collateral to invest in option based trading strategies, and in the process gained a strong understanding of risk management while also generating additional investment income. He held the Warner shares for two years, doubling his money.

1984

Henry began his career trading stocks with $50,000 that his parents left for him. He was able to support his brother through Medical School with the money he made from investing. After graduation, Swieca worked at Merrill Lynch, becoming one of the founding traders on the New York Futures Exchange where he traded equity index options. He later joined Dillon Read as an institutional investor advisor. In 1984, Henry Swieca and Glenn Dubin formed the Dubin and Swieca Group at E.F. Hutton. They pioneered the integration of traditional securities Investments and derivative investment strategies.

1992

In 1992 Swieca started Highbridge Capital Management with childhood friend Glenn Dubin. Swieca served as the firm's chief investment officer from inception to its acquisition. They sold a 55% stake to JP Morgan Chase in 2004 and substantially all remaining shares in 2009. As Highbridge CIO, he guided the firm through multiple market cycles as it achieved one of the best risk adjusted returns in the hedge fund industry.

2012

He currently runs his family office, Talpion Fund Management, which invests proprietary money in a hedge fund like structure as well as direct fixed income investing. In 2012 he seeded Clearline Capital, an equity investor. The family office has also branched into direct real estate investing and venture capital.

2014

Mr. Swieca was later accepted into Columbia Business School on a two-year deferment. He used that time to travel and work abroad, and accept a job at Merrill Lynch — a position he found by knocking on the doors of investment banks throughout Manhattan. “I told them I was hungry and would work for very little money,” Mr. Swieca said. “I had no connections; I had to hustle and struggle.”