Ken Griffin has never been one to hold back his opinion — there are just more people listening now.
After decades of influencing the world of finance and markets, the billionaire founder of Citadel and Citadel Securities has lately found himself talking more about education and immigration than his firms. He’s stepped into national debates — saying Trump’s tariff policies were “eroding” the US brand, for example — and is helping shape Miami, where he’s set to headline a leadership summit alongside Will Smith and Lionel Messi.
As one of the biggest donors to the GOP and one of the country’s most generous philanthropists, Griffin is shaping conversations well beyond Wall Street or Greenwich country clubs. These days, there is just as likely to be a headline about him in Politico as in The Wall Street Journal. And he’s in demand.
“We’re batting down 10 requests for every speaking engagement he does,” said Cason Carter, Citadel’s head of public affairs, in an interview with Business Insider.
Griffin hasn’t sought out more publicity in recent years, say those close to him. He’s on pace to speak roughly the same amount of time this year as he has in years past — roughly 20 times per annum — but his increased political clout, thanks to his ever-expanding wealth, has given his words more oomph.
His goals are clear. Griffin has laid out his priorities for donating his billions via Griffin Catalyst, his “civic engagement initiative.” He’s backed research into Parkinson’s, invested in charter schools, and helped pay for a new coach for the US men’s soccer team. He produced a musical about World War I, and just last month, he bought a rare copy of the Emancipation Proclamation.
What ties it all together isn’t a stated political agenda but a set of values Griffin consistently returns to, such as innovation, meritocracy, and national pride.
In theory, it’s a map of how the 56-year-old Florida native, who has given more than $2 billion to charity, wants to change the world. In practice, it’s how he’s building his legacy beyond finance.
Policies, not politics
Griffin — who is worth more than $48 billion, according to Bloomberg — burst into national recognition during the GameStop trading frenzy in early 2021.
His market-making firm was targeted by Reddit-reading retail investors who believed it was manipulating trading because of its relationship with upstart platform Robinhood. Websites and hashtags claiming Griffin was lying or deceiving day traders emerged. The firms denied the conspiracy claims, and reports from the SEC and House Financial Services Committee backed them up.
In the years since Griffin appeared in front of Congress to explain his firms’ role in the meme-stock mania, the billionaire has enjoyed one of the best stretches in his fund’s history — with a staggering 38.1% gain in 2022 when stock markets were down globally — and accelerated a large-scale effort to mold the country into a version he believes has been lost.
The website for Griffin Catalyst, which launched in the fall of 2023, outlines his priorities: education, science and medicine, communities, upward mobility, freedom and democracy, and enterprise and innovation.
Courtesy Sotheby’s
The causes Griffin has backed, even before the formal creation of Catalyst, range from apolitical topics like funding technology that uses robotics to plant new coral reefs to ones that could be branded as partisan, such as free speech or aiding the COVID-19 vaccine creation and distribution. Carter said that Griffin’s giving — both charitably and in the political realm — is “focused on policies and principles.”
His relationship with President Donald Trump is a clear example. He gave more than $100 million to congressional GOP politicians and super PACs last election cycle; he did not back Trump’s 2024 campaign but said he voted for him in November. (He gave $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund, as did many companies and donors. He also gave money to former President Joe Biden’s inauguration fund in 2021.)
The two billionaires have plenty in common — an Ivy League education, sprawling Palm Beach properties, a love of McDonald’s — but Griffin is not afraid to publicly deride policies he disagrees with, while acknowledging the administration’s wins.
Viewing his giving solely through a political lens ignores the broader goals of Griffin Catalyst. There’s a nonpartisan pride in the country he aspires to bring back, a source familiar with Griffin’s goals said.
Catalyst is one of the supporters of a project beneath the Lincoln Monument that’s set to be unveiled at the 250th anniversary of the US in 2026. He quoted John Adams in an op-ed in Harvard’s student paper last year and produced a play that “tells the epic story of America’s triumph in World War I” with the conductor of Hamilton arranging the music. He gave millions to charter planes to bring home Americans living in Wuhan during the outbreak of COVID-19.
On a podcast hosted by S&P Global this year, talking about the nitty-gritty of running his firms, he quoted not Warren Buffett or Jack Welch, but Abraham Lincoln: “Things may come to those who wait, but only things left by those who hustle.”
Not yet leaving his perch
Earlier this year, in a LinkedIn poll peppered with emojis, a former investor for Griffin, Doug Garber, asked what his network thinks his former boss will do after his “rebrand from the hedge fund GOAT to a top philanthropist.”
The choices Garber, who now hosts the podcast “Pitch the PM,” gave did not capture every path Griffin could take, but provided a snapshot into what people think the billionaire may do next, namely, politics. Two of the four options — a presidential run or a campaign for Florida governor — were political, though the top-selected answer was staying in his seat atop Citadel and Citadel Securities.
People close to Griffin said the same thing Griffin has when asked about a campaign or a potential job in government: It’s not in the cards, but if he were asked to serve his country or if the US needed him, he would do it.
He’s built his firms to last beyond him. Citadel Securities has a CEO, Peng Zhao, who handles the day-to-day operations, while Griffin’s hedge fund has a co-CIO, Pablo Salame, who worked for decades at Goldman Sachs before joining the firm in 2019. Griffin has sold a stake of his market-making business and said last year that he’d be open to selling a stake in Citadel to the right partner.
If he does pursue a political office one day, he will face an electorate skeptical of the top 1% of the 1%. For example, Michael Bloomberg’s 2020 presidential campaign flopped even though he outspent his opponents.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images
Hedge funds will always be seen with a “jaundiced view” by the general public, said Chris Keohan, a partner at Shawmut Strategies, a consulting group started by Mitt Romney campaign alums.
“For someone like Ken Griffin, you really have to put the effort in on raising your profile on the community level,” who might only know you as the rich guy on the news, Keohan said. In Miami, where the headquarters of Griffin’s two firms’ has been located since 2022, his presence is felt in plenty of ways.
He’s building a new tower that will change the city’s skyline and has taken public stances on local issues such as marijuana legalization and the expansion of casinos in Florida. He’s spoken at local schools, including his Boca Raton high school, and donated to area hospitals.
He’s funding the construction of 50 mini soccer fields around Miami-Dade County. He bought a $107 million compound in the city’s posh Coconut Grove neighborhood and owns acres of ultra-exclusive Star Island.
Because of his political giving, “he can really control the field” in Florida if he were to decide to run, Keohan said.
“Do his ideas meet the moment” will determine his fate in any race, but a Senate seat from Florida or the Sunshine State’s governorship are in range, Keohan said.
“Maybe even the presidency at some point.”