Ronald S. Baron

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Ron Baron
Born 1943 (age 7071)
Residence New York, New York
Nationality United States
Ethnicity Jewish
Education Bucknell University
Net worth IncreaseUS $ 1.6 billion (March 2013)[1]
Spouse(s) Judy Baron
Children two

Ronald Stephen Baron (born 1943)[2] (also known as Ron Baron) is the founder of Baron Capital Group, an investment management firm. The New York City based firm, markets the Baron Funds. As of 2006, the funds had 700,000 investors and a market value of USD $16 billion.

Early life and education

Baron grew up in a Jewish family[3] in Asbury Park, New Jersey, one of two children of Morton Baron, an engineer, and his wife Marian.[4] Baron invested $1,000, saved from shoveling snow, waiting tables, working as a life guard, and selling ice cream, and turned it into USD $4,000 by investing in stocks, prompting cohorts to call him "Count", a nickname which still sticks.[5]

He studied chemistry at Bucknell University and attended George Washington University Law School at night on scholarship. His first job out of school was with the United States Patent Office.

Career

Ron Baron worked for several brokerage firms from 1970 to 1982. During this time, he developed a reputation for investing in small, unloved companies.[6]

Baron Capital Management

He founded Baron Capital Management in 1982. Baron Capital is well known for its long-term strategy and investment outlook. The firm will typically hold a stock for 4-5 years, sometimes as many as 10-15 years. The firm prefers to invest in mega-trends driven by broad societal and demographic trends, including baby boomer demands for healthcare - trends where demand is expected to remain steady for years, or even decades.[7] The firm seeks to invest in companies that have strong management teams, investing in people not assets. They look for companies that have strong growth opportunities, are appropriately financed, have competitive advantages, and are a leader in their field. Baron Capital places a unique focus on the strength of the management teams of the companies they invest in, looking for credible, dependable, trustworthy leadership.[8] In 2011, Baron Capital had approximately USD $19.5 billion in assets under management. In an effort to thank investors, Baron hosts an annual shareholder meeting which typically features rock acts such as Elton John, the Beach Boys, and Lionel Richie.[9]

Personal

In 2007, he paid USD $103 million for a house in East Hampton, New York—the most ever paid for a residential property at that time—from Adelaide de Menil, heiress to the Schlumberger fortune.[10] de Menil's house had been built by piecing together historic East Hampton buildings that she moved to the property to protect them from demolition. Prior to the close of the sale, de Menil broke up the structures and moved them to various locations in the town for protection, including six that were moved a mile north to where they will form the new campus of the East Hampton Town government.[11] Baron is now completing a new 28,000-square-foot (2,600 m2) house, designed by Hart Howerton, a New York architectural firm with several other projects in the Hamptons, which specializes in large-scale land use. The house was included in a 2008 Vanity Fair article.[12]

Criticisms

Baron Capital, which owned 59% of Sotheby's Class A stock, lost nearly USD $267 million when Sotheby's was accused of collusion with Christie's in 2000.[13]


References

External links

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