
Photo Illustration: Corbis (Pandit); Photo: iStockphoto (crown)
1957: Born in Nagpur, India.
1973: Moves to New York and enrolls at Columbia, where he gets a degree in electrical engineering, followed by a master's and Ph.D. in finance.
1983–2004: Goes to work at Morgan Stanley, where he designs trading systems that cut transaction costs in half. "What attracted me to the industry was that this was a business that could be interesting and a lot of fun. But to do well, you have to put a lot of yourself into it," he told New York. "I have to admit there is a sense of accomplishment that comes along with it."
1986: Partially solves an unsolvable asset-pricing problem for his Ph.D. dissertation.
2003: Named to Columbia Board of Trustees.
April 2006: Founds Old Lane hedge fund.
July 2007: Only thirteen months later, sells Old Lane hedge fund to Citigroup for $800 million. Let that sink in for a second: Eight hundred. Million. Dollars.
October 2007: Hired as head of Citigroup investment banking, trading, and alternative investments.
September 2007: Purchases Tony Randall's ginormous apartment in Central Park West's Beresford building for $17.9 million. Pocket change!
December 2007: Named CEO of Citigroup, described by Reuters as "a sprawling mess."
Congratulations, Vikram!
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