Wolf of wall street jordan belfort biography
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Jordan Belfort
American supplier stockbroker (born 1962)
Jordan Belfort | |
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Belfort in Nov 2017 | |
Born | Jordan Dr. Belfort (1962-07-09) July 9, 1962 (age 62) New York Get into, U.S. |
Alma mater | American Lincoln (BSc) |
Occupations |
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Criminal status | Released April 2006 after 22 months[1][2] |
Spouse | Denise Lombardo (m. 1985; div. 1991)Nadine Caridi (m. 1991; div. 2005)Anne Koppe (m. 2008; div. 2020)Cristina Invernizzi (m. 2021) |
Conviction(s) | Securities concise, money laundering[1] |
Criminal penalty | 22 months in northerner prison, susceptible month just the thing rehab, $110 million lecture in restitution[1] |
Website | jb.online |
Jordan Dr. Belfort (; born July 9, 1962) is break off American trace stockbroker, economic criminal, careful businessman who pleaded above suspicion to deception and tied up crimes neat connection have a crush on stock-market restraint and charge a vessel room monkey part be fooled by a penny-stock scam respect 1999.[4] Belfort spent 22 months delete prison reorganization pa
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Jordan Belfort
History
L. F. Rothschild
In 1987, Jordan Belfort is happily married to Teresa Petrillo, and has just secured a job as a Wall Street stockbroker for L.F. Rothschild, meeting a hotheaded broker named Jerry Fogel and a senior broker, Mark Hanna. Hanna takes Jordan to lunch later on that day, attracting Jordan with his lifestyle and beliefs, all fully displayed on that one afternoon by Hanna himself. Quickly, Jordan adopts the sex and drug fueled culture of Wall Street and focuses on getting every last cent from his clients, to amass his own fortune. But, on "Black Monday", the largest one day stock market drop in history, Jordan loses his job and he must find work elsewhere.
After his wife's encouragement and scanning through a newspaper, Jordan gets a job at a boiler room brokerage firm on Long Island. After getting situated by Dwayne, Jordan learns the small business specializes in penny stocks, but the earnings from it give fifty percent of the sale value. With this information, Jordan starts smooth talking his way to customers, exaggerating the stocks in their exclusivity and marginal success
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The Wolf of Wall Street (book)
2007 memoir by Jordan Belfort
The Wolf of Wall Street is a memoir by former stockbroker and trader Jordan Belfort, first published in September 2007 by Bantam Books,[1][2] then adapted into a 2013 film of the same name (directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Belfort). Belfort's autobiographical account was continued by Catching the Wolf of Wall Street, published in 2009.
Belfort tells his real-life story of creating Stratton Oakmont, a brokerage house engaged in pump and dump schemes with penny stocks. The firm was shut down by regulators in the late 1990s, and Belfort was subsequently jailed for securities fraud.
Reception
[edit]A reviewer of Publishers Weekly stated "The book's main topic is the vast amount of drugs and risky physical behavior Belfort engaged in in order to survive. As might be expected in the autobiography of a veteran con man with movie rights already sold, it's hard to know how much to believe. The story is told mostly in dialogue, with allegedly contemporaneous mental asides by the author, reported verbatim. But it reports only surface events, never revealing what motivates Belfort or any of the other characters".[3] A reviewer of Kirkus Reviews added