Bernanke
to advise hedge fund Citadel: NYT
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[April 16, 2015]
(Reuters) - Ben Bernanke, former
chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, has agreed to become a senior
adviser to Citadel Investment Group, a $25 billion hedge fund founded by
billionaire investor Kenneth Griffin, the New York Times reported on
Thursday.
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Bernanke, who handed the reins of the U.S. central bank to Janet
Yellen last year, will advise Citadel's investment committees on
global economic and financial issues and meet the fund's investors,
the newspaper said. (http://nyti.ms/1Oh5f4A)
Reuters was not immediately able to reach Citadel or Bernanke for
comment outside regular U.S. business hours.
Big-name hedge funds are making a habit of hiring former central
bankers and other government officials as their funds grow in size
and scope.
Bernanke's predecessor, Alan Greenspan, joined hedge fund Paulson &
Co as adviser in 2008. Jeremy Stein, a Federal Reserve Board
governor for two years, joined hedge fund BlueMountain as a
consultant last month.
Bernanke told the New York Times that he was sensitive to public
anxiety about the "revolving door" between Wall Street and
Washington.
He chose Citadel, in part, because the fund is not regulated by the
Federal Reserve and his role would not involve any lobbying.
Bernanke told the newspaper that he had declined offers from banks.
Chicago-based Citadel, founded in 1990, is a multi-strategy hedge
fund and ranks as one of the industry's biggest. Bernanke will
receive an annual fee, which he did not disclose, but will neither
own a stake nor receive a bonus based on the fund's performance.
His arrangement with Citadel is not exclusive and he could take on
other consulting roles, the New York Times reported.
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Bernanke's eight-year stint as Federal Reserve chairman was marked
by the financial crisis and a frustratingly slow recovery that
prompted him to drive rates to near zero and launch three rounds of
bond purchases to stimulate the U.S. economy.
In his introductory post last month on a new blog hosted by
Brookings Institution, Bernanke wrote: "Now that I'm a civilian
again, I can once more comment on economic and financial issues
without my words being put under the microscope by Fed watchers."
Bernanke will remain a full-time fellow at the Brookings
Institution.
(Reporting by Supriya Kurane in Bengaluru; Editing by Anupama
Dwivedi and Robin Paxton)
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