Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street

Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street

by Sheelah Kolhatkar

Narrated by Kaleo Griffith

Unabridged — 12 hours, 32 minutes

Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street

Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street

by Sheelah Kolhatkar

Narrated by Kaleo Griffith

Unabridged — 12 hours, 32 minutes

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Overview

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER ¿ The story of the billionaire trader Steven A. Cohen, the rise and fall of his hedge fund, SAC Capital, and the largest insider trading investigation in history-for readers of The Big ShortDen of Thieves, and Dark Money.

The rise over the last two decades of a powerful new class of billionaire financiers marks a singular shift in the American economic and political landscape. Their vast reserves of concentrated wealth have allowed a small group of big winners to write their own rules of capitalism and public policy. How did we get here? Through meticulous reporting and powerful storytelling, New Yorker staff writer Sheelah Kolhatkar shows how Steve Cohen became one of the richest and most influential figures in finance-and what happened when the Justice Department put him in its crosshairs.

Cohen and his fellow pioneers of the hedge fund industry didn't lay railroads, build factories, or invent new technologies. Rather, they made their billions through speculation, by placing bets in the market that turned out to be right more often than wrong-and for this they have gained not only extreme personal wealth but formidable influence throughout society. Hedge funds now manage nearly $3 trillion in assets, and competition between them is so fierce that traders will do whatever they can to get an edge.

Cohen was one of the industry's greatest success stories. He mastered poker in high school, went off to Wharton, and in 1992 launched SAC Capital, which he built into a $15 billion empire, almost entirely on the basis of his wizardlike stock trading. He cultivated an air of mystery, reclusiveness, and extreme excess, building a 35,000 square foot mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut, and amassing one of the largest private art collections in the world. On Wall Street, Cohen was revered as a genius.

That image was shattered when SAC became the target of a sprawling, seven-year government investigation. Labeled by prosecutors as a "magnet for market cheaters" whose culture encouraged the relentless hunt for "edge"-and even "black edge," or inside information-SAC was ultimately indicted in connection with a vast insider trading scheme, even as Cohen himself was never charged.

Black Edge offers a revelatory look at the gray zone in which so much of Wall Street functions, and a window into the transformation of the U.S. economy. It's a riveting, true-life legal thriller that takes readers inside the government's pursuit of Cohen and his employees, and raises urgent questions about the power and wealth of those who sit at the pinnacle of modern Wall Street.

Praise for Black Edge

"A modern version of Moby-Dick, with wiretaps rather than harpoons."-Jennifer Senior, The New York Times 

"Excellent."-The Economist 

"If you liked James B. Stewart's Den of Thieves, Sheelah Kolhatkar's thrilling Black Edge should be next on your reading list."-The Wall Street Journal

"A lot of people do not trust Wall Street. They regard it as a moneymaking machine for those who work there, which has little interest in practice in its stated aim of channeling capital into businesses and helping them to grow for the broader benefit of society. For such skeptics, Steven Cohen is Exhibit A."-John Gapper, Financial Times

"A richly reported, entertaining tale about the cat-and-mouse game between the government and Cohen."-Andrew Ross Sorkin, The New York Times Book Review 

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times - Jennifer Senior

If Black Edge weren't about real life, it would be an uncomplicated pleasure to read. The book is many things: a Wall Street primer; a procedural drama; a modern version of Moby-Dick, with wiretaps rather than harpoons. Kolhatkar…expertly synthesizes an enormous amount of material, including court documents and hundreds of her own interviews. Cohen was not among them, alas…But his silence may also have been liberating to Kolhatkar, who was not psychologically constrained by gratitude to her subject for letting her in. She does not spare us her judgments of Cohen or of SAC Capital or of the hedge fund industry. They are not favorable.

From the Publisher

A modern version of Moby-Dick, with wiretaps rather than harpoons.”—Jennifer Senior, The New York Times

“Excellent.”The Economist

“If you liked James B. Stewart’s Den of Thieves, Sheelah Kolhatkar’s thrilling Black Edge should be next on your reading list.”The Wall Street Journal

“A lot of people do not trust Wall Street. They regard it as a moneymaking machine for those who work there, which has little interest in practice in its stated aim of channeling capital into businesses and helping them to grow for the broader benefit of society. For such skeptics, Steven Cohen is Exhibit A.”—John Gapper, Financial Times

“A richly reported, entertaining tale about the cat-and-mouse game between the government and Cohen.”—Andrew Ross Sorkin, The New York Times Book Review

“Masterfully deconstructing a massive web of Wall Street operating, New Yorker staff writer Sheelah Kolhatkar retraces the seven-year government investigation that took down the firm—though not the man—in a true-life thriller with Shakespearian stakes. . . . Her chilling account of a blighted industry is as mesmerizing as a human story as it is as a financial one.”Fortune

“There are few financial-industry struggles as titanic as the one portrayed in these pages.”Reuters BreakingViews

“One of the best books about the 2008 financial meltdown.”The Globe and Mail

“Well-written, with pointed characterizations of the ambitious players and their motives, this book is highly recommended for readers interested in finance, crime, and politics.”Library Journal (starred review)

Black Edge is not just a work of major importance, it is also addictively readable—and horrifyingly compelling. Sheelah Kolhatkar pulls back the curtain on the cheating, corruption, and skulduggery that underlie large swaths of the hedge fund industry and some of Wall Street’s most fabled fortunes. This book is as hard to put down as it is to stomach.”—Jane Mayer, New York Times bestselling author of Dark Money

Black Edge is a real-life thriller about the government’s attempt to get the legendary trader Steve Cohen on insider trading charges—and the lengths to which he goes to elude them. Using deep reporting and top-notch storytelling, Sheelah Kolhatkar is able to shed new light on one of the least known and most fascinating characters on Wall Street.”—Bethany McLean, co-author of The Smartest Guys in the Room

Library Journal

★ 01/01/2017
Kolhatkar's (staff writer, The New Yorker) book provides the most details about the Securities and Exchange Commision and FBI investigations into insider trading in New York in the past ten years, coming after Charles Gasparino's Circle of Friends, Anita Raghavan's The Billionaire's Apprentice, and the PBS Frontline documentary To Catch a Trader. The "black edge" of the title refers to insider information used by hedge fund traders to cheat. The subject of this book is Steven A. Cohen's former firm, SAC Capital, which pled guilty in 2013 to criminal insider trading and paid a $1.2 billion settlement. Cohen avoided personal liability. Organized chronologically, this volume starts with the FBI investigation into convicted billionaire Raj Rajaratnam. It ends in 2015 with Cohen emerging unscathed and ready to return to trading other people's money. Unlike Circle of Friends, which covers the same ground, this book benefits from Kolhatkar's access to the post-2013 criminal trials and government investigators. She notes wryly that the attorneys who pursued Cohen have moved into representing the industry, which is now more complex and successful than before. VERDICT Well-written, with pointed characterizations of the ambitious players and their motives, this book is highly recommended for readers interested in finance, crime, and politics. [See Prepub Alert, 8/26/16.]—Harry Charles, St. Louis

Kirkus Reviews

2016-12-08
A formulaic but still intriguing financial cops-and-robbers story. Billionaire Steven Cohen (b. 1956) was a perfect fit at Wharton, its culture "driven by the worship of money." Brilliant and driven, he was a perfect fit on Wall Street, where, in the 1970s, he became a pioneer of a certain kind of hedge fund, making millions every year right out of the gate. The time was perfect, too, in a deregulated Reagan-era financial market that thought nothing of risk and even less of the law. Cohen's methods hinged, writes New Yorker staffer and financial-industry veteran Kolhatkar, on the accumulation of huge amounts of information—much of it along the "gray" edge, much more of it deep into black territory, "information that was obviously illegal," the stuff on which insider-trading convictions hang. By the author's account, Cohen is emphatically not a nice guy; she writes of how he skillfully hid assets during a divorce and of his tyrannizing employees: "For traders, getting a job at SAC was like pulling the pin out of a grenade: It wasn't a question of if you would blow up, it was a matter of when." It was also not a question of if the authorities would eventually catch up, and here Kolhatkar's tale assumes a certain inevitability, with good but indifferently socialized investigators, forensic accountants, and informants chasing after enough hard evidence to put an end to Cohen's manipulations. The upshot of the book is an inevitability of another kind, perhaps: although the punishment leveled at Cohen was astonishing on paper—close to $2 billion—it brought a nonapology by way of apology ("we greatly regret this conduct occurred"), and Cohen is preparing to resume his activities on the trading floor. It's a story that requires lots of insider information of its own kind to write, and Kolhatkar handles the job well though without the narrative flair of Michael Lewis' kindred book Flash Boys.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172050916
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 03/28/2017
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 953,876

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Copyright © 2018 Sheelah Kolhatkar.
Excerpted by permission of Random House Publishing Group.
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