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- <text id=93TT1800>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: The Man with the Midas Touch
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- INVESTMENT, Page 54
- The Man with the Midas Touch
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Robin Hood or robber baron? The two faces of superspeculator
- GEORGE SOROS, who humbles central banks as he strives to save
- Eastern Europe
- </p>
- <p>By SALLY B. DONNELLY/NEW YORK
- </p>
- <p> What does George Soros know that the rest of the world doesn't?
- When news leaked out that he had purchased a $400 million stake
- in the largest U.S. gold-mining company, investors piled into
- the market, pushing the price of the precious metal to a 17-month
- high two weeks ago. Last week gold soared to a two-year high.
- Was Soros betting on a new era of inflation caused by governments'
- printing their way out of debt? Was he hedging against some
- looming financial Armageddon?
- </p>
- <p> Soros the Speculator was not saying, but in a sense it didn't
- matter. The mere fact that he was buying into gold was enough
- to cause a stampede. When unexpected reports of inflation caused
- the price to rise again last week, it just seemed to confirm
- his legendary nose for the market. After all, this was the man
- who led the raid on the Bank of England during last September's
- European currency crisis, a robber baron, as some called him,
- who emerged with profits estimated at $2 billion by selling
- sterling short.
- </p>
- <p> Like King Midas, George Soros has the golden touch. But unlike
- the miser of mythology, he is happy to part with his wealth.
- A latter-day Robin Hood, he takes from the exchequers and pockets
- of the rich West in order to provide much needed capital for
- the poor East. After the sterling coup, Soros wasted no time
- in redistributing the spoils: within the next three months he
- set up a $100 million fund to support science in the former
- Soviet Union, organized a $25 million loan to Macedonia and
- then made the largest single private donation ever to a humanitarian
- cause when he gave $50 million to aid organizations in Bosnia
- and Herzegovina.
- </p>
- <p> While Western governments dawdle over assistance to the former
- Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, Soros, 62, delivers--perhaps
- as much as $300 million to date. From his pocket. No strings
- attached. Since 1984 the financier has provided everything from
- transmitters for independent radio stations in the former Yugoslavia
- to scholarships in the West for Eastern academics. Through his
- New York City-based Soros Foundation, he has funded struggling
- Czech artists as well as education projects in Albania and
- Ukraine. His philanthropy has made Soros "the most important
- single force affecting developments in the region," says Steve
- Larrabee, a specialist on Eastern Europe at the Rand Corp.
- </p>
- <p> Why does Soros spend his money in a region many consider to
- be a black hole? "I have a fascination with risk," he says in
- his heavily accented English. ``It makes me feel alive. I can
- get bored just living." While that confession may explain his
- activities as a speculator and breakneck downhill skier, it
- is only part of what drives a man who is himself a refugee from
- the region.
- </p>
- <p> During World War II in Budapest, the Soros family, Hungarian
- Jews, became fugitives from Nazi persecution, living under assumed
- names and at times hiding out in a basement. Soros, his parents
- and his brother barely survived the war, only to see Hungary
- fall under the fist of the Soviet Union. It was a harrowing
- time, yet, in retrospect, a positive one for the young Soros.
- "Nineteen forty-four was the best year of my life," he maintains.
- "I was 14 when the world intruded on my life. I was old enough
- to be aware of what was happening, and young enough to be excited
- by it."
- </p>
- <p> Fleeing Hungary, Soros and his brother ended up in Britain in
- 1947. George enrolled at the London School of Economics, where,
- from philosopher Karl Popper, he learned about the links between
- communism and fascism and the importance of "open societies."
- The lessons stuck with Soros and now underpin his efforts on
- behalf of the part of Europe that bore the brunt of both repressive
- isms and where, he fears, freedom may be at risk if economic
- and political chaos provokes a return to authoritarian rule.
- "There are two reasons why I support open societies," he explains.
- "One is the possibility of actually having an impact, of turning
- a tragic situation around; and the other, because, simply, history
- has no end. People may see a black hole where Yugoslavia once
- was, but in the future those people will survive, and some form
- of organization will emerge. What we preserve or support now
- will have a chance later on."
- </p>
- <p> Ivan Berend, a former president of the Hungarian Academy of
- Sciences and now a professor at the University of California,
- Los Angeles, describes Soros as a "man on a mission," an heir
- to the powerful East European tradition of intellectuals guiding
- a political transformation. "He has become consumed with making
- a difference," says Berend, former head of the Soros Foundation
- in Hungary.
- </p>
- <p> Soros can afford to make a difference in the East because he
- makes money in the West. Lots of it. His personal wealth is
- estimated at $1 billion, and as the founder and manager of the
- Quantum Fund--in effect a series of funds speculating in commodities,
- currencies, stocks, bonds and sophisticated financial instruments--he is the brains behind one of the most successful investment
- vehicles ever created. Fund equity has increased about 400%
- since 1988. In 1981 Institutional Investor magazine crowned
- the former L.S.E. philosophy student "the world's greatest money
- manager."
- </p>
- <p> Deserved as it was, it took Soros a long time to acquire the
- title. After university he pursued a relatively lackluster career
- in the City of London and on Wall Street until 1969 when, with
- partner Jim Rogers and $250,000 in capital, he set up an offshore
- investment fund that he dubbed Quantum. The name, a tribute
- to Heisenberg's uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics,
- was highly appropriate: Soros' investment philosophy is suffused
- with the belief that markets are constantly in a state of uncertainty
- and flux and that money is to be made by discounting the obvious
- and betting on the unexpected. Thanks to his special brand of
- financial alchemy, he appears to have discovered a modern-day
- philosophers' stone, not for turning base metal to gold but
- for turning risk into reward. The original Quantum Fund has
- spawned several others, and Soros now manages $9 billion--enough to move markets and make central bankers quake.
- </p>
- <p> There have been risky times and breathtaking losses along the
- way. Although Soros predicted the 1987 stock-market crash, he
- lost $800 million by mishis withdrawal from the market. That
- hit, which wiped out close to a third of Quantum's book value
- at the time, persuaded Soros, who by then was increasingly committed
- to foundation work, to step back from day-to-day fund management
- and focus on the broader investment picture. "The crash was
- an indicator that I could not do two things at once," he concedes.
- Yet being detached from the daily battle has its drawbacks.
- Last January, for example, one of his top advisers paid a $640,000
- fine to settle charges brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange
- Commission, which claimed he had profited from inside information.
- Although Soros was not involved in the case, he is known to
- challenge his employees to act aggressively. Soros once asked
- one of his traders, who was confident of a market move, how
- much he was willing to commit. When the man answered, "$1 billion,"
- Soros responded dismissively, "You call that a position?"
- </p>
- <p> Despite his talent for trading, Soros has always seen himself
- more as a thinker than as a money earner, and claims his foundation
- work "has brought me closer to realizing a real sense of satisfaction
- than making large amounts of money." His father's experience
- of losing a lucrative legal business during the war but living
- well nonetheless provides insight for Soros. "Part of what I
- learned was the futility of making money for money's sake,"
- he says. "Wealth can be a dead weight."
- </p>
- <p> Only the truly rich can afford statements like that, and fortunately
- Soros is not about to apply his theories on wealth to the struggling
- economies of Eastern Europe and Russia where, he fears, the
- future hangs in the balance. "A traditional market dynamic is
- that after a crash there is a rebound," he explains. "Right
- now I see a crash with no bound." Still he remains optimistic,
- despite the obstacles to creating truly democratic free-market
- societies in the near future. Rather than backing off, he is
- stepping up the pressure, urging governments in the West to
- provide a $10 billion safety net for the unemployed and working
- poor of the former Soviet Union. He is also planning to add
- more of his own money. "What is at stake," he says simply, "is
- the future of civilization."
- </p>
- <p> To other observers, the East may be the apotheosis of Heisenberg's
- theories of uncertainty; to Soros the Speculator it is the land
- of opportunity. "The worse a situation becomes, the less it
- takes to turn it around," he observes, adding with the logic
- of the consummate trader, "the bigger the upside." It is a quantum
- leap he is prepared to take.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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