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As Wall Street titans gather, finance museum searches for a home

The Museum of American Finance gala held in New York last week brought together prominent figures from the financial industry to support the institution, which had lost its iconic Wall Street address.

March 10, 2024 / 07:36 IST
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Billionaire Ken Griffin greeted attendees via massive video screens set up in the Ziegfeld Ballroom, located in Manhattan's art deco-style building
Billionaire Ken Griffin greeted attendees via massive video screens set up in the Ziegfeld Ballroom, located in Manhattan's art deco-style building

Financial industry heavyweights convened in New York last week to raise funds for a finance museum that has lost its iconic Wall Street address.
At the Museum of American Finance gala, billionaire Ken Griffin welcomed attendees on enormous video screens in Manhattan's art deco-style Ziegfeld Ballroom.

Mark Carney, chair of Brookfield Asset Management and ex-Bank of England governor, honored former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Richard Clarida. JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo bought tables.

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"The philosopher Santayana said: those who are ignorant of history are doomed to repeat it," Howard Marks, billionaire co-founder of Oaktree Capital Management, told Reuters before he received an award. "This is equally true in the investment business: those who are ignorant of history are doomed to lose money and/or miss opportunity."

The 455 attendees raised $1.5 million for the museum. Yet its collection -- which includes a bond signed by George Washington, a ticker tape from the 1929 stock market crash and early examples of U.S. currency -- languishes in temporary storage in Georgia after spending several years in the Queens borough of New York City.