Continue reading this on our app for a better experience

Open in App
Floating Button
Home News Company in the news

D.E. Shaw joins other hedge funds in opening Singapore office

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 2 min read
D.E. Shaw joins other hedge funds in opening Singapore office
The firm has applied for a fund management license from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).
Font Resizer
Share to Whatsapp
Share to Facebook
Share to LinkedIn
Scroll to top
Follow us on Facebook and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.

D. E. Shaw & Co. will open an office in Singapore next year, joining other hedge funds expanding in the city-state to extend their reach in Asia.

The firm, one of the world’s biggest hedge funds with more than US$50 billion ($67.97 billion) in investment capital, has applied for a fund management license from the Singapore central bank, adding to existing Asian operations in Hong Kong and Shanghai, according to a statement Thursday.

D.E. Shaw is the latest fund management giant to open Asian offices beyond Hong Kong amid rising social and political uncertainty in the city. Billionaire Ken Griffin’s Citadel announced in August it would open an office in Singapore, as is London-based Marshall Wace, the Financial Times reported last month. All three firms have offices in Hong Kong.

While Singapore hasn’t been actively courting money managers worried about turmoil in Hong Kong, it has reaped some benefits. The number of single family offices in Singapore has grown in recent years to about 200, while overall assets under management rose by 16% last year to $4 trillion.

“Opening an office in Singapore will further enable us to tap into the region’s talent, capital, and investment opportunities,” D.E. Shaw Group Asia Pacific General Manager Kevin Patric said in the statement. “This is a logical next step in the growth of our geographic footprint.”

China is a key market for New York-based D.E. Shaw, which was granted a fund license there last year to raise private capital to invest in the domestic market. Fundraising for its first onshore product largely concluded in May.

The firm has also been attracting money from other parts of the world despite the pandemic. In July it was planning to raise about US$1 billion for its latest private equity-style fund, according to filings and people familiar with the matter. And in March, when it opened its doors to fresh capital for the first time in seven years, it raised US$2 billion.

Founded in 1988 by computer scientist David Shaw, the group runs one of the world’s longest-running hedge funds and was among the earliest to use complex mathematical models for trading.

The company opened its Hong Kong office in 2007 and has been in Shanghai since 2010.

×
The Edge Singapore
Download The Edge Singapore App
Google playApple store play
Keep updated
Follow our social media
© 2025 The Edge Publishing Pte Ltd. All rights reserved.