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Citadel's big 2020

Aug 10, 2020, 17:55 IST
Business Insider
Larry Busacca/Getty; Shayanne Gal/Business Insider

Happy Monday.

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Second quarter earnings continue to roll out. Some big ones to keep an eye on this week: Softbank (Tuesday), Tencent (Wednesday), and Cisco (Wednesday).

If you're not yet a subscriber, you can sign up here to get your daily dose of the stories dominating banking, business, and big deals.

Like the newsletter? Hate the newsletter? Feel free to drop me a line at ddefrancesco@businessinsider.com or on Twitter @DanDeFrancesco.

Citadel's big summer

Ken Griffin, Founder and CEO, Citadel, speaks during the Milken Institute's 22nd annual Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S., April 30, 2019.Mike Blake/Reuters

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It's a good time to be Ken Griffin.

To be honest, it's never really a bad time to be a billionaire. But 2020 has been particular nice for Griffin, whose $34 billion hedge fund, Citadel, has enjoyed big returns. Griffin's success comes at a time when many of Citadel's peers have struggled to make heads or tails of the wild market thus far.

Bradley Saacks has all the deets about which funds are doing particularly well and how that stacks up to its competitors.

Cold storage is 2020's red-hot real estate play. Here's how the private-equity backed industry leader is spending $500 million to tighten its grip on the market.

A polar bear walking on very thin, submerged ice.Christopher Michel/Flickr

Cold storage is so hot right now. With the e-grocery industry on the rise, cold-storage facilities are in high demand. Daniel Geiger has the scoop on the latest plans for Lineage Logistics, the largest player in the space.

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Real-estate developers are betting on a risky strategy to reimagine retail space as apartments or last-mile logistics in hopes of rescuing struggling shopping centers

The food court at Brookfield Place, a shopping mall in Manhattans Financial District, is cordoned off on May 5, 2020 in New York City.Bryan Thomas/Getty Images

If you miss going to the mall, don't worry. You might be able to live in one soon. Alex Nicoll spoke to commercial real-estate experts about developers and landlords switching retail buildings into residential or industrial spaces.

A student-housing developer with a crushing debt load pressured Georgia to bring college kids back to campus so it could keep its dorms full and revenues up

Jordan Silverman/Getty Images

Rounding out our real-estate coverage, we have Meghan Morris examining a developer that is in hot water for how it looked to influence return-to-campus plans at colleges it operates student house. Meghan has all the juicy details about how Corvias, who previously faced congressional scrutiny for its military housing, was communicating with colleges in Michigan and Georgia.

3 charts track the epic poaching war between top hedge funds and Big Tech, and show which firms are coming out ahead in an escalating battle

iStock; Samantha Lee/Business Insider

Some of the most important trading the world's largest hedge funds are doing isn't on the markets, but on tech talent instead. Bradley Saacks has some great data on the war for engineers and data scientists between the likes of Two Sigma, Citadel, Bridgewater, Amazon, and Microsoft.

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A peek inside Goldman Sachs' internal idea factory that's hatched products like a LinkedIn for Wall Street. Here's what else it's trying to disrupt at the bank.

Reuters/ Lucas Jackson

Every bank likes to say that it operates like a fintech, but here's one example of how one of the largest on Wall Street really is. Reed Alexander got an exclusive look at demo day for Goldman Sachs' internal incubator program where everyone from first-year analysts to the most senior managing directors can pitch ideas in the hopes of getting backing from the bank.

Billionaire Dan Loeb lays out how $13 billion Third Point's strategy has shifted amid the market chaos and why he's betting on the growth prospects of Amazon, Alibaba, and Disney

REUTERS/Phil McCarten

Who says you can't teach an old dog new tricks? Dan Loeb built a career taking activist positions in companies and facilitating change. But the founder and chief executive of $13.4 billion Third Point is singing a different tune to investors due to the current market environment. Bradley Saacks has the rundown for Loeb's latest letter to investors that calls for quality as an "essential" screen for new investments.

Odd lots:

First Impressions of What It's Like to Be Back in the Office (Bloomberg)

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Inside the Mark Cuban-backed search engine that wants to defeat Amazon's fake review problem and help consumers find American-made products in the process (Business Insider)

How to Move Your Elephant During a Pandemic (NYT)

Amazon and Mall Operator Look at Turning Sears, J.C. Penney Stores Into Fulfillment Centers (WSJ)

A Season of Grief and Release: 5 Months of the Virus in New York City (NYT)

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