We Spent A Day With The 18-Year-Old Wunderkind Who's Starting A Hedge Fund In His Dorm Room
Julian Marchese, 18, lives in New York University's Founders Hall, home to 700 first-year students. His room on the 24th floor also serves as an interim office for Remora Capital, the nascent hedge fund he's founding with a partner at Yale.
Marchese, a native of Toronto, Canada, has developed a quantitative, long-short equity strategy that runs on an automated basis on a computer program. It serves as the backbone of Remora. While he's in class, it can make trades that satisfy his algorithm, which can be simplified as: "If the time is X and the rate of change is Y, buy the stock."
He invented the strategy when he was 14, so he could continue trading during school hours. In his first serious year trading, he made a 20% return on $30,000 of his parents' money in stocks. He took his model to "Dragon's Den," Canada's equivalent to "Shark Tank."
The venture capitalist "Dragons" adored him, and four offered to invest $12,500 each in exchange for 50% ownership of Marchese's company. He took the deal, but — being under 18 — legal complications kept it from coming to fruition.
Now Marchese is ready to put his strategy in action, and with more than just his parents' money. But launching a hedge fund while balancing life as a college freshman can't be easy. We recently spent the day with Marchese to see how he does it.
Marchese wakes up around 11. He was up late with friends, doing homework and eating pizza at Joe's in Greenwich Village. His first and only class of the day doesn't start until 3.
The first thing he does in the morning is hop on his computer. He checks Tweetdeck to learn what the financial experts and journalists are saying, and reads Brett Steenbarger's TraderFeed blog.
He then walks the 15 minutes from his dorm to NYU, where Marchese plans to major in finance and statistics at the Stern School of Business (but is currently filling core requirements). "If you want to work in business or finance, there's really no better place to be than New York City," Marchese says.
With a few spare moments before his first meeting of the day, Marchese sits in Washington Square Park and whips out his iPhone. As a full-time student, keeping up with the markets before the closing bell means being addicted to your phone.
He opens MarketWatch in a web browser and previews the Private Offerings Sector Summary. "I'm just checking quotes. Then I'll look at The Financial Times to see what news is coming out," Marchese says. "It's a combination of reading news and seeing where the market is."
At 12:20, he heads to the Stern School of Business, where the Quantitative Finance Society is about to meet. The club's upperclassmen leadership team teaches teaches a new financial topic each week, covering basic trading, portfolio management, investment analysis, and macroeconomics over the course of the year.
Today's topic is Anatomy of a Trade. The club's leadership team runs through a slideshow that breaks down some best practices. Thomas Li, the president, warns: "All of us have massive egos, in case you haven't realized." Everybody laughs. "Recognize your biases and avoid them. It's easier than trying to remove them."
For Marchese, the challenge is not keeping his ego in check, but getting other people to take him seriously. His first struggle came at age 9, when he unsuccessfully tried to convince his parents to buy shares in a uranium company. The stock tripled in the next month, and they began to listen.
At an early age (when his father worked in a lightbulb factory and mother sold cosmetics), Marchese read the bestseller "Rich Dad Poor Dad." "I realized my parents were in the so-called rat race," he once said to the "Dragon's Den" judges. "It was my goal from about 8 years old to someday take them out of the rat-race and into financial freedom." Markets presented the answer.
A few years later, he began cold-emailing analysts for advice on how to jumpstart his career in finance. "When you're 12, the 'pro' is, you're really cute and people want to talk to you," Marchese says. "But when I was actually serious, they brushed me off because I was 12."
While Marchese's biggest challenge now is securing interest in Remora, he's still a normal 18-year-old guy. He heads to the dining hall with one of his suite-mates, Nate, and they jokingly rap "Let the DOW drop" to a dubstep beat.
Like any college freshman, he eats an inordinate amount of food. The NYU food court's Chick-fil-A is his go-to. "I have the metabolism of a race horse," he says.
At 3 o'clock, he heads to a midterm review in Calculus 1, where students play a Jeopardy-inspired game that asks them to solve derivatives using real-world examples. "P(d) denotes the price of a cup of pumpkin spice latte, as a function of demand, d ..."
When students go on for five minutes asking the professor what exactly they need to study ("Will delta epsilon stuff be on the midterm?" "Do we need to know proofs?"), Marchese finally raises his hand and suggests she posts a list of items to review. He's not one to waste time.
Then it's back to the dorm for a meeting over Skype with the co-founder of Remora Capital, John-Paul Pigeon, a sophomore at Yale.
Pigeon became famous at age 13 for writing a money management book for kids, "John-Paul's Secret Recipe." He appeared on "The Martha Stewart Show" and was mentored by Robert Kiyosaki, author of "Rich Dad Poor Dad."
While Remora hasn't taken funds from investors yet, Marchese and Pigeon are testing Marchese's automated investment strategy in real time using real market data, meeting with mentors, and speaking to lawyers. The immediate goal is to prove the strategy in a small initial stage with one investor, and then scale up once they've proven live money returns.
The Skype session goes on for about a half an hour while his friends do homework and goof off in the background.
And in the time Marchese was in meetings, class, and the dining hall, the S&P dropped 30 points and his automated program picked up 16 new positions. Out his window, the sun sets to the west of the Freedom Tower. It's just another day at the office.
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