While junior investment bankers spend years slogging their way up through a fixed career path, it's well known that if you're a talented trader your progress can be vastly expedited. However, even by the standards of some of Europe's most exceptional trading prodigies, Hamza Lemssouguer looks impressive. In 2013, Moroccan-born Lemssouguer was studying maths and statistics at École Polytechnique, one of France's most prestigious universities. He spent that summer interning on Goldman's structured credit desk in London, but rather than returning to Goldman the next summer, he spent five months interning at Credit Suisse, and joined the Swiss bank when he graduated a year later in 2015. Just four years after graduating, when people in investment banking divisions are stuck as second year associates, Lemssouguer became Credit Suisse's head of high yield credit trading in Europe. Bloomberg today explains why: in 2020, Lemssouguer's high-yield desk generated about $220m,or 5.5% of the bank's entire fixed income trading revenues for the year. “His ability to understand the psychology and risk tolerance across market participants and assess liquidity in that context led to some of the most profitable years in the trading desk’s history,” gushed Credit Suisse of Lemssouguer in a presentation seen by Bloomberg. “He was instrumental in the visibility and risk-taking capacity of the group and introduced rigorous investment and risk-management processes." Success seems to have made him enemies and Bloomberg suggests there were complaints against Lemssouguer too, none of which came to anything or were substantiated and some of which came from hedge funds that lost money on the other side of his trades. Insiders suggest they were simply gripes against well-earned success. Still aged just 30, Lemssouguer is reportedly now branching out on his own after a newly risk-averse Credit Suisse cancelled a promise it made to back his hedge fund in an effort to prevent him being poached by Citadel. Lemssouguer's new fund - Arini Credit Strategies - is expected to launch in the next few months. Jeysson Abergel, another French trader from Blackrock is likely to join him. Other ambitious young credit traders may want to prime their CVs. https://www.efinancialcareers.com/news/2021/06/hamza-lemssouguer https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ssouguer-was-rising-star-until-risk-reckoning wrbtrader
Good for him. Bet he blows out in a few years like other "super traders", then gets another fund, rinse and repeat
I think he should have avoided the hedge fund route when he went on his own and instead should have just become a private independent trader considering he had the income for such prior to going the hedge fund route. wrbtrader
Credit is actually a great place for hedge funds. It's a much cleaner dynamic since there is less noise in the price (random day traders/retail people).
it’s hard to trade credit in an E*TRADE account. You will likely need isda’s and access to bank inventory
It is a remarkable achievement in an area that is almost purely based on merit. I got from new grad to director in 3.5 years and prided myself in that achievement. But it pales in comparison to rising through the ranks so quickly. Your cynicism is like saying fuck you to Tiger Woods 6 years into his career and suggesting that he would implode anyway.
Director? lol, where? American Skandia? Dice that's quite a fall from a 3rd tier firm to trading FX in a $30K IBKR account while your wife cleans house in Vanco.