Eric Rosenfeld
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eric Rosenfeld was a trader and principal in the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund, a landmark Wall Street disaster.
Prior to LTCM, Rosenfeld was an instructor at Harvard University. About one year after LTCM's rescue, in 1999, he joined John Meriwether as a partner in JWM Partners LLC, which started operations with about $500mm under management. He left JWM Partners to join Paloma Partners, a Greenwich fund-of-funds.
In 2007, Rosenfeld founded Quantitative Alternatives LLC in Rye Brook, NY with Bruce Wilson and Robert Shustak.[1]
As a graduate student at MIT, he worked with Mitch Kapor, future founder of Lotus, to create and sell a financial statistics program written in BASIC for an Apple II. [2]
[edit] References
- ^ Long-Term Capital's Rosenfeld Opens Fund, Person Says
- ^ Sterling, Bruce (1992). The Hacker Crackdown. ISBN 0-553-56370-X.