Source: YNetNews “He was this great combination of super polite, humble, and smart,” says Ron Tanemura, who okayed hiring Weinstein at Deutsche in 1998. Boaz Weinstein, 36, joined Deutsche Bank in 1998, became a managing director at 27 and was the youngest ever global co-head of credit in the German bank… Boaz Weinstein, one of world's leading credit traders, lost Deutsche Bank $1.8 billion in 2008. In first interview, he tells Calcalist what it … Weinstein rose to prominence in 2006 and 2007, when his "Saba" trading group at Deutsche Bank netted over $1.5 billion dollars in … Weinstein, the former co-head of credit at Deutsche Bank AG, generally does best when volatility is high, and the benign markets of recent … At age 27, Weinstein was promoted to managing director--the youngest MD in the bank's history. Weinstein joined Deutsche Bank in 1998 and worked there until 2009. Deutsche Bank, Germany's largest bank, reported Thursday that it lost $5 billion in 2008 - including $1.8 billion from trader Boaz Weinstein's group. I know Boaz and agree entirely with this: Oddly, for the cut-throat world of big egos and sharp elbows, nearly everyone who crosses paths with Weinstein seems to… like him. This is the exact path that has been chosen by Boaz Weinstein, a 35 year old trader who spent the last 11 years of his life at Deutsche Bank AG. Boaz Weinstein speaking at the 2017 Delivering Alpha conference in New York on Sept. 12, 2017. The losses by Weinstein, an Israeli who has lived in the United States for several years, exceed the estimated $1.5 billion in profits his group generated in 2006 and 2007. Yeah, he might have lost $1 billion at Deutsche Bank, but that’s old news. Boaz Weinstein’s Deutsche Bank proprietary trading operation suffered big losses during the 2008 financial crisis, but in the most challenging market since that time, Weinstein… Boaz Weinstein's main Saba Capital Management LP hedge fund reported a 33% gain in March through Friday amid coronavirus-led market turmoil, ... launched out of Deutsche Bank … Weinstein, the former co-head of credit at Deutsche Bank AG, generally does best when volatility is high, and the benign markets of recent …