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ownership stake in the Pittsburgh Steelers football team

Fund Boss Made $7 Billion in the Panic
by Gregory Zuckerman
Monday, December 21, 2009

In this comeback year for investors, David Tepper may have scored one of the biggest paydays of all.

Mr. Tepper’s hedge-fund firm has racked up about $7 billion of profit so far this year—with Mr. Tepper on track to earn more than $2.5 billion for himself, according to people familiar with the matter. That is among the largest one-year takes in recent years.

Behind the wins: a bet worth billions of dollars that America would avoid a repeat of the Great Depression.

Through February and March, Mr. Tepper scooped up beaten-down bank shares as many investors were running for the exits. Day after day, Mr. Tepper bought Bank of America Corp. shares, then trading below $3, and Citigroup Inc. preferred shares, when that stock was under $1. One of his investors insisted more carnage loomed. Friends who shared his bullish beliefs were wary of aping his moves amid speculation that the government was about to nationalize the big banks.

“I felt like I was alone,” Mr. Tepper recalls. On some days, he says, “no one was even bidding.”

The bets paid off. A resurgent market has helped Mr. Tepper’s firm, Appaloosa Management, gain about 120% after the firm’s fees, through early December. Thanks to those gains, Mr. Tepper, who specializes in the stocks and bonds of troubled companies, manages about $12 billion, a sum that makes Appaloosa one of the largest hedge funds in the world.

Mr. Tepper, whose office overlooks the parking lot of a Hilton hotel in Short Hills, N.J., across from an upscale mall, now is taking aim at a new target. He’s purchased about $2 billion of beaten-down commercial mortgage-backed securities. Among his purchases are bonds backed by chunks of the debt of Peter Cooper Village & Stuyvesant Town and 666 Fifth Ave. in New York, two high-profile real-estate deals that have fallen in value over the past two years.

Some experts predict more bad news for commercial real estate—and say that if Mr. Tepper’s move doesn’t pan out, it could jeopardize a chunk of his recent gains. Mr. Tepper says he remains optimistic.

Hedge funds, once darlings of well-heeled investors, suffered dearly in 2008, dropping 19%. Nearly 1,500 funds, or 16% of the total, shuttered last year. This year, hedge funds are clawing back, with gains of 19% through November, on pace for their best annual gains in a decade, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc.

A handful of funds—including Everest Capital’s emerging-market funds and the stock-focused Glenview Capital—have racked up fat gains this year. In sheer dollars, though, none appear to have come close to matching Appaloosa’s winnings.

Mr. Tepper grew up in a middle-class neighborhood in Pittsburgh, the son of an accountant who worked seven days a week and once won a $715,000 lottery payout. In the late 1980s, he helped run junk-bond trading at Goldman Sachs. Mr. Tepper wears jeans and sneakers to work, and can be self-deprecating, playing down his successes. He claims to have popularized on Wall Street the phrase “it is what it is” to explain the need to adjust a portfolio if facts on the ground shift.

After he was repeatedly passed over for a partnership, Mr. Tepper left Goldman to start Appaloosa in 1993. By 2008, he had a track record of annual gains averaging about 30% and a net worth estimated at about $2 billion.

Mr. Tepper lives in a two-story home in New Jersey he bought in 1990 for $1.2 million. He recently purchased an ownership stake in the Pittsburgh Steelers football team, and flies to every home game. In 2004 he gave $55 million to Carnegie Mellon University’s business school, his alma mater, which renamed itself the Tepper School of Business.

The husky, bespectacled trader laughs easily, but employees say he can quickly turn on them when he’s angry. Mr. Tepper keeps a brass replica of a pair of testicles in a prominent spot on his desk, a present from former employees. He rubs the gift for luck during the trading day to get a laugh out of colleagues.

His biggest scores over the years have come from buying large chunks of out-of-favor investments. When Asian markets crumbled in 1997, Mr. Tepper added Korean stocks to a portfolio laden with Russian debt. The moves led to hundreds of millions of dollars in profits when markets rebounded two years later. He scored big on junk bonds in 2003, and his 2007 wager on steel, coal and other resource companies paid off in 2008 when commodity prices soared.

But because he sometimes places more than half of his portfolio in a single trade idea, Mr. Tepper also is prone to brutal, abrupt losses.

That approach cost him more than $1 billion last year. In January 2008, Societe General SA trader Jerome Kerviel was revealed to have lost €5 billion ($7.2 billion), one of the world’s largest trading loss. Mr. Tepper sold large chunks of his holdings, fearing a market tumble. Prices held up, though, hurting Appaloosa. In the spring of last year, he turned bullish on large-company stocks and did some buying, but suffered as markets declined.

Mr. Tepper made a big wager on Delphi in 2006. But in April of last year he and a group of investors withdrew from a deal to inject as much as $2.6 billion in the bankrupt auto-parts supplier, sparking a nasty legal battle that was resolved this summer. Appaloosa lost almost $200 million on its investment in Delphi.

Mr. Tepper’s largest fund dropped 25% for 2008, worse than the industry’s 19% average decline.

“Investing with David is like flying, with hours of boredom followed by bouts of sheer terror,” says Alan Shealy, a client of more than 18 years. “He’s the quintessential opportunist, investing in any asset class, but you have to have a cast-iron stomach.”

Mr. Tepper entered 2009 cautiously, with more than 30% of his firm’s assets in cash, or more than $2 billion. He itched to do some buying. Mr. Tepper explains his investment philosophy with a line from Allan Meltzer, a professor at his alma mater: “Trees grow.” In other words, growth is the natural state of economies, so optimism usually is rewarded.

On Feb. 10 of this year, Mr. Tepper read that the Treasury Department was introducing the so-called Financial Stability Plan. It included a commitment by the government to inject capital into banks by buying their preferred stock, or shares that carry less chance of reward but also less risk than common stock.

At the time, investors worried that the government ultimately would have to nationalize big banks. U.S. officials said they had no intention of such a move, which could wipe out common shareholders, but investors were dubious.

The news from the Treasury Department struck Mr. Tepper as proof that the government would stand behind the banks. He directed his traders to begin buying bank stock and debt.

Few investors were feeling as optimistic. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 382 points on the day Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner introduced the plan, nearly 5%. Bank shares continued to tumble in the days that followed. Bank of America shares fell as low as $2.53 on Feb. 20. By March 5, Citigroup traded as low as 97 cents.

“This is ridiculous, it’s nuts, nuts, nuts!” Mr. Tepper recalls saying to Michael Lukacs, one of his partners, on the firm’s small trading floor. “Why would the government break its word? They’re not going to let these banks go under, people aren’t being logical!”

Mr. Tepper huddled with Mr. Lukacs and Jim Bolin, another top Appaloosa executive. Mr. Tepper insisted that stimulus spending and low interest rates would boost the economy. He said he estimated there was only a 20% chance that the U.S. would nationalize banks such as Citigroup.

Mr. Bolin, who people at the firm say tends to be more conservative than Mr. Tepper, was bullish about banks, but still thought it safer to stick to bank debt than to riskier shares. Mr. Tepper says he listened to the arguments, but said it was time to place a big bet.

Over several weeks, Mr. Tepper’s team bought a variety of bank investments, including debt, preferred shares and common shares. Just months earlier, the government had injected billions of dollars to keep companies such as American International Group Inc. going, much as they were now doing with the banks. But that didn’t prevent shares of those companies from tumbling.

At one point in March, the firm was down about 10% for the year, or about $600 million. Mr. Tepper got on the phone to make more trades, something he often left to subordinates. This time, he wanted to talk directly to Wall Street brokers to test how bad things really were.

The answer: really bad. Mr. Tepper says he was told that he was the only big investor doing much buying.

“Clients were nervous that the game had changed and capitalism wouldn’t be the same. There was real fear,” recalls Timothy Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Asset Management, a $2 billion investment firm, who says he only bought a small amount of bank shares during this period.

One day in late winter, Mr. Tepper heard from a skeptical client of his own, Mr. Shealy.

“This thing is far from over,” Mr. Shealy recalls saying, referring to the bank problems. Still, Mr. Shealy, who runs an investment firm in Boise, Idaho, stuck with Mr. Tepper. “I figured the positions were fairly liquid, so if he was wrong, he would get out.”

Mr. Tepper hadn’t paid his investors’ nerves much heed since 2000. That year, he bet that the tech-heavy Nasdaq index would fall. But so many investors complained that Mr. Tepper was straying from his roots in debt investing that he canceled his bets. When the Nasdaq collapsed months later, Mr. Tepper fumed.

By late March of 2009, Citigroup shares had tripled, and Mr. Tepper’s other holdings, including junk bonds, were rising. He and his team bought more, spending more than $1 billion, when various banks conducted share sales. Mr. Tepper says his average cost for shares of Citigroup was 79 cents; for Bank of America it was $3.72.

At one point in the summer, Mr. Tepper had recorded about $1 billion of profits in shares of just Citigroup and Bank of America, and his overall gains soared past $4.5 billion, or 70%, since January.

After Mr. Bolin, the Appaloosa executive, urged caution, Mr. Tepper did some selling to lock in gains. But the firm remains a big holder of both Bank of America and Citigroup shares, which now trade at $15.03 and $3.40, respectively.

Mr. Tepper remains upbeat. He says he expects interest rates to stay low, and argues that stocks and bonds are reasonably priced.

This belief is driving another risky bet. At the end of each quarter this year, Mr. Tepper noticed that investors were dumping holdings of troubled bonds backed by commercial properties. He had never dabbled in these investments, but he and his 10-person team did some research and judged them attractive, with some seemingly safe debt trading at yields above 15%.

Mr. Tepper slowly spent more than $1 billion to gain ownership of between 10% and 20% of highly rated slices of commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CMBS. He focused on debt backed by loans of properties including Stuyvesant Town and 666 Fifth Ave. in New York.

His bet: If the economy improves, he’ll earn hefty interest payments on the bonds. But if the properties can’t make their payments, Mr. Tepper believes he owns so much of the debt that he’ll have a big say in how the properties get restructured. That means he could ultimately end up ahead.

He’s taking a big risk, some analysts warn. The value of commercial real estate continues to fall. Owners of debt classes don’t always have much power to influence a commercial real-estate restructuring. And because the debt of these big properties was carved into many pieces, and many investors are involved, any battle for control will be complicated.

Mr. Tepper says the worrywarts have it wrong: “If you think the economy will be fine, as we do, then we’re going to do very well.”

Write to Gregory Zuckerman at gregory.zuckerman@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications

David Tepper has purchased bonds backed partly by debt of 666 Fifth Ave. in New York. A previous version of this story described the property as 666 West 57th Street in New York.

Oregon Ducks Civil War Game 2008

Football Greatness

Getting a spot on a college football roster is no easy feat, no matter what level of football you want to play in

HighSchool FootballThe following information is good to know and comes from a very reliable source.

Getting a spot on a college football roster is no easy feat, no matter what level of football you want to play in. Some say that there are also a ton of football recruiting services out there who say they can help you reach your goal of playing at the next level. The question is, are they worth the fees they charge?

Is there a way to give yourself an edge over your competition as you try to make it to the college level? That’s a question that will provide you with a variety of answers depending on who you ask. There are a lot of opinions out there about whether or not there are any shortcuts to the athletic recruiting and scholarship process. football recruiting services are one possibility to consider, but they don’t come cheap.

The average service will charge you in the thousands of dollars to help you get your name out there to college coaches. Their services are not cheap by any stretch of the imagination.

In return for the money you pay them, they will usually do the following:

1- Develop Your Athletic Resume
2- Develop Your Athletic Profile
3- Match your skills, talents and physical size to the right type of college football programs
4- Work with you to develop a list of colleges you are interested in
5- Make contact with college football coaches and tell them about you

Clearly, football recruiting services can provide a great and needed service. They help many athletes who would not have played college football get to the collegiate level. I applaud them for helping these kids fulfill dream. However, I don’t think it’s necessary for high school football players to pay thousands of dollars to be promoted to college coaches. Why? Because they can and should market and promote themselves!

If you look at the list of five things I listed football recruiting services can do for you, you will see that you can all of these things yourself. It only takes a little research, time, effort and patience. There is nothing magical about what these services can do, because you can do it all yourself.

I leave you with this question:

Who cares more about your football future…you or football recruiting services that are dealing with hundreds or even thousands of athletes at one time. I think you know the answer to that one. Take control and market and promote yourself!

football helmets have a number of features to consider…

Football HelmetWhether you need an NFL helmet as a collectible item or to wear while playing football, helmets have a number of features to consider. There are various price ranges depending on the brand name, and prices are generally less for youth-sized helmets. NFL helmets may also vary in the way they fit and the amount of protection offered. So depending on why you wish to buy a helmet, it’s good to know all the facts before spending your money. Read these helpful tips before getting started.

For Players

College helmets and NFL helmets are stylish with your team logo of choice printed on them, but there’s so much more to a helmet than appearance. It’s important to choose a high quality helmet for ultimate comfort and protection if you plan to wear it while playing. Facemasks are generally made of carbon steel, titanium or stainless steel. They are designed to protect certain areas of the face while offering optimal visibility based on the player’s position. Open cage masks are recommended for wide receivers, quarterbacks, running backs, and defense players in the backfield. Closed cage helmets are often used by linemen.

Consider the helmet shell materials. High-end helmets often have GE Lexan molded polycarbonate alloy, while others may use non-branded molded polycarbonate. For youth helmets, manufacturers often use ABS plastic, which offers protective shock absorbent properties. Other features to consider are the chinstraps, helmet padding, and air systems, which tend to offer better cushioning than foam pads.

Collectible NFL Helmets

If you plan on buying a keepsake helmet, safety features aren’t as important but you’ll still want a good quality NFL helmet that will last for years to come. This doesn’t mean you should spend a fortune. Shop around for a great quality NFL helmet that fits your budget. You might consider shopping online to find great bargains. Some online sports shops offer helmets with NFL football team logos at reasonable pricing without sacrificing quality. No matter where you buy, expect to pay $150 to $250 for a full size collectible helmet, depending on the brand and team. High end products such as Riddell helmets are often around $235 to $250, but shop around to find these items on sale, especially around holidays or around the time of a special football event.

Creative Gifts for the Football Lover

If you’re seeking a great gift for a football lover during the holidays, birthdays, Father’s Day, or other occasions, consider Riddell or Schutt helmets for high quality gifts. If you’re on a tight budget when gift shopping, opt for mini replica helmets. Mini replica helmets look and feel like the life-size helmets, but are usually about half the size. These cost around $35.00 with team logos and work well as a display on your loved one’s collectible football shelf or in a display case! They’ll make a wonderful gift for a co-worker, father, son, brother, husband, or even a lady friend who just so happens to adore football.

When shopping for NFL helmets online, you’ll likely discover many great sports products. From MLB items to NASCAR merchandise, you can take advantage of bargain deals on throw blankets, duffle bags, doormats, NFL flags, cooler bags and more to demonstrate your team pride!

Best Football Plays of All Time

Everyone knows that it is the element of surprise that creates that opportunity for SUCCESS! Check this playbook out.

OREGON FOOTBALL GO DUCKS!

What Determines Greatness!

What is that nebulous quality about certain people which produces greatness? Tom Brady, of the New England Patriots, was never expected to achieve such greatness. Yet he has become one of the stars of the NFL. In this article, we will biographically examine the quarterback Tom Brady. But here we will do more then just list his achievements. We will examine how Tom Brady was able to achieve sports greatness. And from this information, possibly understand what is possible for all of us, whatever our endeavor.

The information presented here is solely our opinion, simply because we were not able to talk to Tom Brady directly. But in doing research for this article, we did find some common threads among individuals who have obtained a certain level of greatness. Tom Brady seem to be a good choice for characterizing those qualities. These common threads which are presented here, are the most important elements of this article. Lets start by examining a short biography of Tom Brady.

Tom Brady grew up in San Mateo, California, near San Francisco. He attended Junípero Serra High School in San Mateo, where he became a star athlete. Junipero Serra is an all male high school noted for it’s rich athletic tradition. He regularly attended 49ers games in the 1980s, where he became a fan of quarterback Joe Montana. After high school graduation in 1995, he attended the University of Michigan. When he first came to the University of Michigan, there was six other quarterbacks on the Michigan roster which were better then he was. During this time, teammate and future NFL quarterback Brian Griese led the Wolverines to a National Championship with a win in the 1997 Rose Bowl.

At the University of Michigan, he struggled to get playing time. During this time, he even considered transferring to the University of California, at Berkeley. But he stuck it out, and slowly and surely he worked his way up to the starting position for the Wolverines. He eventually started every game in the 1998, 1999 seasons under head coach Lloyd Carr.

During his Junior and Senior years at the University of Michigan, he started to do very well as a quarterback. The Wolverines won 20 of 25 games when he started and shared the Big Ten Conference title in 1998. In the 1999 season, Brady led Michigan to an overtime win in the Orange Bowl over Alabama, throwing for 369 yards and four touchdowns. The NFL scouts started to display an interest in Tom Brady, but he was never considered a highly sought after quarterback. This resulted in him being drafted 199 in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL draft, by the New England Patriots.

When New England drafted Tom Brady, it was unusual in that they decided to have four quarterbacks on the roster that year of 2000. If it had been any other year, he may have not been drafted, at least not by New England. During Brady’s first season at New England, he worked his way up from the number four position, to the number two position, and he completed 1 of 3 passes for six yards.

Tom Brady’s opportunity to advance to the starting position came on September 23, 2001, during a Patriots home game against their AFC East rival, the New York Jets. At that time, starting quarterback Bledsoe, went down with an injury, and Brady stepped in to become the starting quarterback. From that point onward, Brady led the Patriots to four Super Bowls, with three Super Bowl victories. He won two Super Bowl MVP awards, and has been selected to four Pro Bowls. He was Sporting News Sportsman of the Year for 2004 and 2007. And he was Sports Illustrated Sports Man of the Year for 2005. Not bad for someone who was a compensatory pick of 199 in the sixth round of the NFL draft.

The New England Patriots saw something in Tom Brady, that most NFL teams did not see. In one word, they saw potential. To put it simply, they saw a diamond in the rough, and they new it. So what is it about Tom Brady that has resulted in his amazing accomplishments. Another words, why has he been able to achieve a certain level of greatness. There does seem to be some common threads which make up the core of any individual who has obtained a certain level of greatness. Lets examine some of these common threads.

Tom Brady has always had a burning desire to become the best at what he does. From working his way up at the University of Michigan, to working his way up within the New England Patriot organization, he knows what it is like to struggle. He obviously has God given talent, but he also had a burning desire to develop his talent. Why did he have such a burning desire? Maybe it was the struggle itself and his desire to prove the naysayers wrong. Maybe it is what was instilled in him during his upbringing. Most likely it is a combination of these factors which has resulted in him becoming one of the great quarterbacks of the NFL. But there is something else that we believe is involved here.

Most of us all have a desire to be the best at what we do. But what is it about Tom Brady, who can carry a team 70 yards down field within the last minute of a game, which results in a come from behind victory? What is it that makes him thrive in must perform clutch situations, while many athletes with similar talent are not able to do so? It is that nebulous quality that some individuals have which undoubtedly has to do with the ability to be one hundred percent focused when it counts, no matter what the situation. Tom Brady has this ability. He is able to get into what many refer to as the groove, for a short period of time, where absolutely nothing can interfere with his focus on the situation. And during that situation of intense focus, he is able to use his talents to achieve the objective.

But there is something else which seems to distinguish greatness from mediocrity. That one entity which seems to exist in most people who have achieved a certain level of greatness, no matter what the endeavor may be, is the realization that we are put here on this earth for a purpose. And each of us must fulfill our own reason for being here. You need to be focused in order to fulfill your purpose.

All of us can develop that ability to be one hundred percent focused on the task at hand. But to have a good reason to do so, is what really makes it happen. I am sure Tom Brady, and others who have achieved a certain level of greatness, feel they are put here on this earth for a purpose. And during the drop of time we are here, we all must fulfill our God given purpose and reason for being here. You get one chance, and I believe it is this basic attitude which in the end, is what ultimately leads to greatness. Something that we all can aspire to.

KETTLEBELL SNACHES RECIPE FOR SUCCESS!

To have an elite football fitness workout you have got to include kettlebell snatches into your workout equation. The single arm overhead kettlebell snatch is a very explosive and dynamic lift that is sure to change your performance on the field for the better. Take a minute to continue reading on about this particular lift in order to take your football conditioning to the next level.

Successful football fitness drills have to focus on the development of muscular power, endurance, explosiveness, and overall superior cardiovascular conditioning. By adding the single arm overhead kettlebell snatch to your strength training workouts you are covering all of the areas of focus that I just mentioned. To execute the overhead snatch you must lift the kettlebell from either the ground or from between your legs to a held position above your head. This is done by you initiating a technique known as the hip snap.

The hip snap is performed by you forcefully and smoothly flexing and then extending at both your hip and knee joints to build momentum to elevate the kettlebell to a lateral position to your head. Once the kettlebell is at this lateral position to your head you must then vertically punch your palm towards the sky in order to complete the lift. This lift will help you to build extraordinary core strength and hip power which are much needed traits to be successful in the game of football. The kettlebell is a tool that will forge your body into the perfect physical specimen for any sport!

If you haven’t included this ancient style of training into your personal football fitness workouts then you are really missing out! Take the time to learn more about this ancient art form by accessing the rest of my articles on the matter for free. Remember that anyone can train hard, but only champions train smart my friend!

OREGON DUCKS GOT IT~!