Bloomberg Markets used to publish an annual list of the "50 Most Influential", featuring 50 individuals with "the ability to move markets or shape ideas and policies." The last list was in 2016:
Theresa May (1), Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump (2), Xi Jinping (4), Jeff Bezos (5), Angela Merkel (6), Mario Draghi (7), Janet Yellen (8), Warren Buffett (9), Sérgio Moro (10), Elon Musk (11), Bill McNabb (12), Jamie Dimon (13), Zhou Xiaochuan (14), Lloyd Blankfein (15), Larry Fink (16), Jack Ma (17), Jay Y. Lee (18), Loretta Lynch (19), Carl Icahn (20), Sergio Ermotti (21), Jeffrey Gundlach (22), John Stumpf (23), Mary Erdoes (24), Masayoshi Son (25), Charlie Scharf (26), Paul Taubman (27), Mark Carney (28), Joseph Stiglitz (29), Vladimir Putin (30), Stephen Schwarzman (31), Paul Singer (32), Michael Pettis (33), Lael Brainard (34), Marc Benioff (35), Robert Gordon (36), Margrethe Vestager (37), Ruth Porat (38), Mark Zuckerberg (39), Travis Kalanick (40), Jorge Paulo Lemann (41), Prince Mohammed Bin Salman (42), Wang Jianlin (43), Raj Chetty (44), Ken Moelis (45), Blythe Masters (46), Mary Barra (47), Jim Coulter (48), Larry Summers (49), John Oliver (50)
Since he’s a billionaire investor, I’m sure he knows of this adage in the Mutual Fund industry:
“Past Performance is no Guarantee of Future Results”
This Jeff Gundlach?
https://www.businessinsider.com/the-insane-firing-of-rock-star-bond-investor-jeffrey-gundlach-2010-3
I predicted Donald Trump would win the 2016 U.S. Presidency. Where is my attaboy?
Not a tough call after looking at the opposition and seeing
Freebie and the Feeb.