Investing News

Citadel’s Ken Griffin buys a stegosaurus for $45 million in a record auction sale

People look at a virtually complete Stegosaurus fossil on display at Sotheby’s on July 10, 2024 in New York City.
Alexi Rosenfeld | Getty Images

Billionaire investor Ken Griffin, founder and CEO of hedge fund Citadel, purchased a late-Jurassic stegosaurus skeleton for $44.6 million at Sotheby’s Wednesday, marking the most valuable fossil ever sold at auction.

The 150 million-year-old stegosaurus named “Apex” measures 11 feet tall and nearly 27 feet long from nose to tail and it is a nearly complete skeleton with 254 fossil bone elements. Apex was only expected to sell for about $6 million.

Griffin won the live auction in New York Wednesday after competing with six other bidders for 15 minutes. He intends to explore loaning the specimen to a U.S. institution, according to people familiar with his plans.

“Apex was born in America and is going to stay in America!” Griffin said after the sale.

Apex shows no signs of combat-related injuries or evidence of post-mortem scavenging, Sotheby’s said. The stegosaurus was excavated on private land in Moffat County, Colorado.

In 2018, Griffin gifted $16.5 million to Chicago’s Field Museum to help fund the display of a touchable cast of the biggest dinosaur ever discovered —  a giant, long-necked herbivore from Argentina.

In 2021, he paid $43.2 million for a first-edition copy of the U.S. Constitutionoutbidding a group of cryptocurrency investors. He later loaned it to the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas.

Articles You May Like

David Einhorn to speak as the priciest market in decades gets even pricier postelection
Trump is the most pro-stock market president in history, Wharton’s Jeremy Siegel says
5 More Trump Stocks to Trade
Hedge funds performed better under Democratic presidents than Republican ones, history shows
Top Wall Street analysts are upbeat on these stocks for the long haul