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Billionaire hedge fund boss Ken Griffin pays for 1,200 staff and family members to visit Disney Tokyo and hear performances by Maroon 5 and Calvin Harris

Sarah Jackson   

Billionaire hedge fund boss Ken Griffin pays for 1,200 staff and family members to visit Disney Tokyo and hear performances by Maroon 5 and Calvin Harris
  • Citadel's Ken Griffin treated roughly 1,200 staffers and family members to a visit to Tokyo Disneyland.
  • The event, honoring Citadel's 30th anniversary and $4 20th, also included a Maroon 5 concert.

Hedge fund boss Ken Griffin paid for more than 1,000 $4 and Citadel Securities employees and family members to go to Disney in Tokyo last week in honor of the companies' recent anniversaries.

The roughly 1,200 attendees, including about 300 children, received tickets to $4, including Tokyo Disneyland and DisneySea, and saw musical performances by Maroon 5 and Calvin Harris, the company told Insider. Bloomberg first $4 the news.

Attendees at the celebration, held October 27-29, came from six of the companies' offices in Asia Pacific: Hong Kong, Singapore, Sydney, Shanghai, Tokyo, and Gurugram. $4, worth $35.4 billion, according to the $4, covered the costs of travel, hotels, food, Disney tickets, entertainment, and childcare, the company said.

Griffin spoke at the anniversary celebration Saturday before introducing Maroon 5.

"Today, the range of talent we have brought together is simply astonishing. We've created not one, but two firms at the forefront of the industry. Together, we have imagined and built the future of finance," he said.

The extravaganza honored Citadel's 30th anniversary in 2020, which the company did not celebrate with an event at the time due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and Citadel Securities' 20th anniversary last year.

US, Canada, and Europe employees of the companies marked $4 with a trip to Disney World and Universal Studios, as well as a Coldplay concert, but COVID-19 restrictions in parts of Asia kept many APAC employees from attending. Roughly 10,000 people, including 2,500 children, attended last year's event, which Griffin also covered.



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