James
Beeland Rogers, Jr. is an American investor and chairman of Rogers Holdings and
Beeland Interests, Inc. He also is an author, financial commentator and has
been frequently featured in Time, The Washington Post, The New York Times,
Barron’s, Forbes, Fortune, The Wall Street Journal, The Financial Times, and
most publications dealing with the economy or finance. Jim Rogers was the
co-founder of the Quantum Fund with George Soros and creator of the Rogers
International Commodities Index (RICI). He does not consider himself a member
of any school of economic thought, but has acknowledged that his views best fit
the label of Austrian School of economics.
Rogers was
born October 19, 1942 in Baltimore, Maryland and raised in Demopolis, Alabama.
He started in business at the age of five by selling peanuts and by picking up
empty bottles that fans left behind at baseball games. He got his first job on
Wall Street, at Dominick & Dominick, after graduating with a bachelor's
degree in History from Yale University in 1964. Rogers then acquired a second
BA degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics from Balliol College, Oxford
University in 1966.
In 1970,
Rogers joined Arnhold and S. Bleichroder and 3 years later he co-founded the
Quantum Fund with George Soros. During the following 10 years, the portfolio
gained 4200% while the S&P advanced about 47%. The Quantum Fund was one of
the first truly international funds. In 1980, Rogers decided to
"retire", and spent some of his time traveling on a motorcycle around
the world. Since then, he has been a guest professor of finance at the Columbia
Business School.
In 1989 and
1990, Rogers was the moderator of WCBS' The Dreyfus Roundtable and FNN's The
Profit Motive with Jim Rogers. From 1990 to 1992, he traveled through China
again, as well as around the world, on motorcycle, over 100,000 miles across
six continents, which was picked up in the Guinness Book of World Records. He
tells of his adventures and worldwide investments in Investment Biker, a bestselling
investment book.
In 1998,
Rogers founded the Rogers International Commodity Index. In 2007, the index and
its three sub-indices were linked to exchange-traded notes under the banner
ELEMENTS. The notes track the total return of the indices as an accessible way
to invest in the index. Rogers is an outspoken advocate of agriculture
investments.
Between
January 1, 1999 and January 5, 2002, Rogers did another Guinness World Record
journey through 116 countries, covering 245,000 kilometers with his wife, Paige
Parker, in a custom-made Mercedes. The trip began in Iceland, which was about
to celebrate the 1000th anniversary of Leif Eriksson's first trip to America.
On January 5, 2002, they were back in New York City and their home on Riverside
Drive. He wrote Adventure Capitalist following this around-the-world adventure.
It is currently his bestselling book.
On his
return in 2002, Rogers became a regular guest on Fox News' Cavuto on Business
and other financial TV shows. In 2002, Rogers said that Fed Chairman Alan
Greenspan's "reaction to the stock-market bubble has caused two more
bubbles to grow: a real-estate bubble and a consumer-debt bubble." In
2006, Rogers said he was shorting US financial, home builders and Fannie Mae.
In 2005, Rogers wrote Hot Commodities: How Anyone Can Invest Profitably in the
World's Best Market. In this book, Rogers quotes a Financial Analysts Journal
academic paper co-authored by Yale School of Management professor, Geert
Rouwenhorst, entitled Facts and Fantasies about Commodity Futures. Rogers
contends this paper shows that commodities investment is one of the best
investments over time, which is a concept somewhat at odds with conventional
investment thinking.
In December
2007, Rogers sold his mansion in New York City for about 16 million USD and
moved to Singapore. Rogers claimed that he moved because now is a
ground-breaking time for investment potential in Asian markets. Rogers's first
daughter is now being tutored in Mandarin to prepare her for the future. He is
quoted as saying: "If you were smart in 1807 you moved to London, if you
were smart in 1907 you moved to New York City, and if you are smart in 2007 you
move to Asia."
In a CNBC
interview with Maria Bartiromo broadcast on May 5, 2008, Rogers said that
people in China are extremely motivated and driven, and he wants to be in that
type of environment, so his daughters are motivated and driven. He also stated
that this is how America and Europe used to be. He chose not to move to Chinese
cities like Hong Kong or Shanghai due to the high levels of pollution causing
potential health problems for his family; hence, he chose Singapore. He has
also advocated investing in certain smaller Asian frontier markets such as Sri
Lanka and Cambodia, and currently serves as an Advisor to Leopard Capital’s
Leopard Sri Lanka Fund.
Rogers has
two daughters with Paige Parker. Hilton Augusta (nicknamed Happy) was born in
2003, and their second daughter Beeland Anderson in 2008. His latest book, A
Gift To My Children, contains lessons in life for his daughters as well as
investment advice and was published in 2009. On November 4, 2010, speaking at
Oxford University’s Balliol College, Rogers urged students to scrap career
plans for Wall Street or the City, London’s financial district, and to study
agriculture and mining instead. “The power is shifting again from the financial
centers to the producers of real goods. The place to be is in commodities, raw
materials, natural resources."
In February
2011 Rogers announced that he has started a new index fund which focuses on
"the top companies in agriculture, mining, metals and energy sectors as
well as those in the alternative energy space including solar, wind and
hydro."The index is called The Rogers Global Resources Equity Index and
according to Rogers, only the best and most liquid companies go into the index.
Our Sources:
Wikipedia
Guru Focus
Hedge Journals
Official Jim Rogers website
Our Sources:
Wikipedia
Guru Focus
Hedge Journals
Official Jim Rogers website
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