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What you need to know on Wall Street today

Matt Turner   

What you need to know on Wall Street today
Home2 min read

Paul Manafort

AP Photo/Matt Rourke

Paul Manafort.

Welcome to Finance Insider, Business Insider's summary of the top stories of the past 24 hours. Sign up here to get the best of Business Insider delivered direct to your inbox.

He's the bond king you may have never heard of.

Josh Barrickman, 42, oversees $625 billion in fixed-income assets for Vanguard. That includes the world's two largest bond funds: the Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund and the Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund, with $190 billion and $139 billion respectively, according to Morningstar.

We recently caught up with Barrickman to get his views on bond markets, how passive behemoths like Vanguard are changing markets, and what it's like to oversee so much money. You can read the interview here.

Elsewhere in finance news, President Donald Trump is likely to nominate Fed Governor Jerome Powell as the next Fed chair. Maverick Capital, a $10.5 billion hedge fund that's had a lousy year, has a plan to turn it around. The president of struggling $2 billion hedge fund Hutchin Hill Capital is set to depart.

The asset management industry is going to boom in the next decade - but it's set for "seismic changes." The CEO of Goldman Sachs cryptically tweeted about the bank's post-Brexit plans in the UK.

And Steve Bannon is reportedly on the warpath against hedge fund titan Paul Singer.

Elsewhere in politics news, Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, surrendered to the FBI on Monday. The FBI's indictment of Paul Manafort shows he spent over $12 million on Range Rovers, men's clothing, and home improvements in the Hamptons. The investigation is making the Republican tax plan rollout a "sideshow" - but that might not be a bad thing for Republicans.

In deal news, CVS is plotting a $66 billion takeover - and it has a lot to do with fending off Amazon. Lennar's $9.3 billion merger with a rival perfectly captures two of the biggest problems with housing in America.

Strayer Education and Capella agreed to a $1.9 billion merger. Akzo Nobel is in talks to merge with a smaller US rival. And China is eyeballing a major strategic investment in Saudi Arabia's oil.

In markets news and views:

Lastly, a "private palace" with a 200-person dining room and columns from the ruins of Pompeii is on sale in London.

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