Charles Payson "Chase" Coleman III (born June 1, 1975)[1] is an American billionaire hedge fund manager, and the founder of Tiger Global Management.[2] As of July 2023, his net worth is estimated at US$8.5 billion by Forbes making him the 258th richest person in the world.[3]
His grandfather, Charles Payson Coleman, who was managing partner of the New York law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell until his death in 1982, was married to Mimi C. Thompson (née Louise Stuyvesant Wainwright), a descendant of Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch Governor who surrendered New Amsterdam to the British.[8][9]
Coleman started his career in 1997, working for Julian Robertson and the latter's hedge fund, Tiger Management.[11] He had grown up with Robertson's son, Spencer, who lived close to Glen Head, in Locust Valley. In 2000, Robertson closed his fund, and entrusted Coleman with over $25 million to manage, making him one of the 30 or more so-called "Tiger Cubs", fund managers who started their fund management careers with Tiger Management.[4] “I’ve known Chase since he was a young boy on Long Island and a good friend of my son Spencer,” [Julian] Robertson said.[12]
On the Forbes 2019 list of the world's billionaires, he was ranked #458 with a net worth of US$4.5 billion.[11] According to Business Insider, he was born into "old money" and has made a lot of "new money" as well.[15] According to Institutional Investor, he made an estimated $2.5 billion in 2020.[16]
The couple resides in New York City with their 4 children.[19] In 2007, they bought an estate on Meadow Lane in Southampton for $32.5 million.[21] In 2008, they bought the entire sixth floor of a Fifth Avenue building at 66th Street from Veronica Hearst, the daughter-in-law of William Randolph Hearst, for US$36.5 million.[4] In 2016, the Colemans bought the fifth floor for $52 million and infamously allowed party guests to graffiti its walls in 2018 before demolishing its interior to combine it with their existing home.[22] They also own properties in Palm Beach, Florida.
^David Marcus; Marie T. Finn; Marie T. Hough; Linda D. Estelle; Mindy Toomay; Nancy L. Jellison; Diana L. Richardson; Jeanie J. Clapp; Bernadette B. Grabb (1986). The American Bar, the Canadian Bar, the International Bar. R.B. Forster & Associates. p. 2198. ISBN9780931398124. Retrieved September 8, 2015.
^Parmar, Hema; Karsh, Melissa; Alexander, Sophie (June 27, 2019). "Charmed Life". Bloomberg. Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. Retrieved August 21, 2019.