Archegos Founder Bill Hwang Arrested for Fraud in US

Archegos Founder Bill Hwang Arrested for Fraud in US

Bill Hwang, founder of collapsed family office Archegos Capital Management, has been arrested by US authorities and charged with racketeering, fraud and market manipulation. The indictment released on Wednesday accuses Hwang, 58, and former chief financial officer Patrick Halligan, 45, of using archegos as an “instrument of market manipulation and fraud” with “considerable consequences for…

I Played Every Role in the Overwatch 2 Beta. Here’s What I Learned

I Played Every Role in the Overwatch 2 Beta. Here’s What I Learned

It was a relief to see the Monitor 2 beta loading screen on my monitor for the first time. We’ve been waiting for this game since it was announced in 2019. The sequel to 2016’s popular first-person shooter title was mostly a mystery until the last six months. It was announced that the Overwatch League…

Four charged in connection with multi-billion dollar collapse of Archegos Capital Management

Four charged in connection with multi-billion dollar collapse of Archegos Capital Management

An indictment was released today accusing Sung Kook (Bill) Hwang, the founder and head of a private investment firm known as Archegos, and Patrick Halligan, Chief Financial Officer of Archegos, racketeering conspiracy, securities fraud and wire fraud offenses in connection with interrelated torts. schemes to illegally manipulate the prices of publicly traded securities in Archegos’…

Plastic-eating enzyme could eliminate billions of tons of landfill waste – UT News

Plastic-eating enzyme could eliminate billions of tons of landfill waste – UT News

AUSTIN, Texas — An enzyme variant created by engineers and scientists at the University of Texas at Austin can break down environmentally strangling plastics that typically take centuries to degrade in hours to days. This discovery, published today in Nature, could help solve one of the world’s most pressing environmental problems: what to do with…

Wealthy investors aren’t convinced that big stock market losses mean it’s a time to buy

Wealthy investors aren’t convinced that big stock market losses mean it’s a time to buy

It’s been a tough year for an investor, and the wealthy are no exception. Losses in the stock and bond markets this year have made portfolio conversations between Wall Street investment advisers and clients more difficult. The most conservative portfolios performed as badly if not worse than the riskiest portfolios, with bonds offering little protection….