How Paul Singer Became the World’s Most Feared Investor

Singer's Elliott Management Corp. manages $34 billion in assets.

Paul Singer, Founder and President, Elliott Management, at the 2015 Delivering Alpha Conference on July 15, 2015 (Adam Jeffery/CNBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)

Paul Singer, Founder and President, Elliott Management, at the 2015 Delivering Alpha Conference on July 15, 2015 (Adam Jeffery/CNBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images)

By Matthew Reitman

Paul Singer has his eyes on global domination, but his path is often taking out a few CEOs along the way. Managing $38 billion, the activist investor runs Elliott Management Corp., a hedge fund that’s made waves and headlines recently.

In the last 18 months, Singer’s gone after the world’s largest mining company and went toe-to-toe with Warren Buffett for the largest electricity distributor in Texas. He’s also knocked off multiple CEOs and world leaders too, sparking a domino effect that culminated with the impeachment of South Korea’s president.

Singer started by managed his friends and family’s money in 1977, Bloomberg reports. Beginning with just $1.3 million, the wealth manager investing in debt and equity to generate $93 billion.

He’s most known for going battle with Argentina over its debt default. In the 15-year financial scuffle, Bloomberg reports Singer got one of the country’s warships impounded.

According to Bloomberg, this has given Singer a successful reputation, including his strong-arm tactics conflated with bullying.”It doesn’t bother me anymore,” Singer said to Bloomberg. “It’s good when a corporate executive listens with the understanding that we are real, that we have the capacity to carry through.”

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