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Thomas Kaplan

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Nationality
  
United States

Name
  
Thomas Kaplan

Ethnicity
  
Jewish

Net worth
  
1 billion USD (2015)

Spouse(s)
  
Dafna Recanati

Education
  
University of Oxford

Children
  
Three


Thomas Kaplan Tigris Financial Goes AllIn on Gold WSJ

Alma mater
  
B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Oxford University

Occupation
  
Investor, Conservationist, Philanthropist

Residence
  
New York City, New York, United States

Parents
  
Jason Kaplan, Lillian Jean Kaplan

Organizations founded
  
Panthera Corporation, Leor Energy

Profiles

Billionaire Investor Thomas Kaplan Started With Just $10,000


Thomas S. Kaplan (born 1962) is an American entrepreneur, natural resources investor, philanthropist and art collector. An admirer of Rembrandt, Kaplan is known as the world's largest private collector of the Dutch master's works.

Contents

Thomas Kaplan Billionaire39s sketchy Middle East gamble Meet the man

He is the chairman and chief investment officer of The Electrum Group LLC, a New York City-based investment, advisory and asset management firm with a focus on the natural resources sector.

Thomas Kaplan Thomas Kaplan Forbes

Rembrandt 'Spoke to Me,' Says Investor Thomas Kaplan


Early life and education

Thomas Kaplan Dafna and Tom Kaplan continue to work for the good of

Born in New York City, Kaplan was raised in a Jewish family in Florida, the son of Lillian Jean and Jason "Jay" Kaplan.

Thomas Kaplan wwwbelfercenterorgsitesdefaultfilesstyleshe

In his youth, he developed a passion for wildlife conservation and for Rembrandt, which decades later inspired him, respectively, to found leading felid conservation group Panthera, and to establish The Leiden Collection, the world's largest private grouping of works from the Dutch Golden Age. At Oxford University, Kaplan earned bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in history. He wrote his doctoral dissertation on the Malayan counterinsurgency and the manner in which commodities influence strategic planning. While earning his PhD, he worked as an analyst covering Israeli companies publicly traded in the US. On a business trip, he met his future wife, Daphne Recanati (the daughter of Israeli investor Leon Recanati), who had attended the same boarding school as Kaplan. Daphne's mother, artist Mira Recanati, introduced him to Israeli investor Avi Tiomkin, who hired him as a junior partner in 1991. Kaplan had impressed Tiomkin by correctly predicting Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion of Kuwait several years before it took place. When Tiomkin decided to concentrate his investments solely in Israel in 1993, Kaplan moved on to pursue his own entrepreneurial ventures.

Career

Thomas Kaplan Tom Kaplan Billionaire King Of Cats

Inspired by Marc Faber, who held that precious metals were insurance against the "monetary foolishness" of central governments, Kaplan focused on natural resources investing. In 1993, he founded Apex Silver Mines to capitalize on the improving supply/demand fundamentals of metals. While he was chairman and chief executive officer of Apex, his team discovered and financed the San Cristobal deposit in Bolivia, now one of the largest producers of silver and zinc in the world. Kaplan retired from Apex Silver at the end of 2004 to focus on his new exploration projects.

In 2003, a company related to Kaplan became the largest investor in African Platinum Plc (then known as Southern African Resources Plc), enabling it to explore and develop one of the largest platinum group metals projects in South Africa. In 2007, Kaplan sold his position in African Platinum as part of a transaction in which the company was acquired by Impala Platinum Limited, at a valuation of $580 million.

Also in 2003, Kaplan founded Leor Exploration & Production LLC, which became the fastest-growing privately held hydrocarbon exploration and production company in the United States. In 2007, Leor’s natural gas assets were sold to EnCana Oil & Gas (USA) Inc. for $2.55 billion.

Kaplan first began investing heavily in gold in 2000. Since the sales of African Platinum and Leor in 2007, Kaplan has focused on the Electrum Group. Its exploration arm, Electrum Ltd., which he co-founded with Dr. Larry Buchanan, owns a diversified international portfolio of gold exploration assets. Its other entities hold significant interests in several publicly traded companies, including NovaGold Resources Inc. and Gabriel Resources Ltd., two companies that own several of the largest proven gold resources in the world. Among its private interests, the Electrum Group is the controlling shareholder of Sunshine Silver Mining & Refining Corporation, which owns the Sunshine silver mine in Idaho, the most prolific silver mine in US history, as well as the Los Gatos silver-zinc deposit in Mexico, which it is developing in partnership with Dowa of Japan.

His view on gold has not changed. On February 25, 2009, he commented in Marc Faber’s Gloom, Boom & Doom Report: “Some will say that $800 gold seems expensive. I would suggest the contrary: that a few years from now, sub-$1000 gold will feel like a true gift... The forced liquidation of leveraged positions of all kinds in late 2008 and early 2009 has presented an extraordinary opportunity to build long gold positions at low prices… [It] should not be a surprise to see gold set new highs against all currencies, including a strong dollar, and an acceleration of the most enduring bull market in the world.”

In a January 2011 op-ed in the Financial Times’ Market Insights column, Kaplan discussed the Prudent Man construct as a tool to evaluate the benefits and risks of investing in gold. In that piece, he explained that a variety of factors – including the supply of and demand for gold, the devastation of financial industry and government balance sheets and the fact that gold is not tied to another person’s ability to pay – are causing asset managers and general banks to begin readmitting “gold back into the select group of prudent asset classes.” According to Kaplan, these developments suggest “interesting times ahead” for those who own the precious metal. Therefore, “the Prudent Man rule may well be golden indeed.”

As a leading investor in gold, Kaplan is credited with correctly predicting that gold prices would increase. His investment strategy and commitment to gold led Bloomberg Businessweek to refer to him as "Gold's Evangelist." In a May 2010 profile piece in the Wall Street Journal, Kaplan said, “I’ve reached a point where I feel the only asset I have confidence in is gold,” adding, “You’ve got a perfect storm with no apparent solution. If the world does well, gold will be fine. If the world doesn’t do well, gold will also do fine … but a lot of other things could collapse.”

Kaplan's robust presence in the gold market was recognized in a December 2010 Wall Street Journal article, which described Kaplan along with other investors including John Paulson, David Einhorn and John Burbank. The article stated that Kaplan is “making a bigger wager on gold than almost any investor,” noting that he believes junior miners provide the “greatest leverage to a bull market” and that the world is “entering an era defined by the scarcity value of great precious-metals assets.”

In a 2015 interview in the "Octavian Report," Kaplan reaffirmed his bullish views on gold, stating, "As a secular trend, I see a great many similarities between the Dow in the 1980s and where we are today in gold. During the 1980s, if one bought the DJIA at 1,100, 1,200, or 1,300, it didn't have a material impact on long-term returns. At any of those levels it was a great buy. I feel the same for gold. If one gets that one last leg down to complete the cycle, so much the better. But prices are headed much, much higher after this correction is over. I've been in this movie before." Kaplan further reinforced this stance in an article he authored for the January 2016 issue of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report entitled "The Tortoise and the Hare." "Having a second bite of the apple," he wrote, "is not reserved just for those who bought Apple. It can be had by carefully selecting an equity in an unpopular asset class with a global brand recognition greater even than Apple itself: gold."

Rembrandt and the Old Masters

Kaplan's passion for the Dutch masters began in his early childhood: "I was touched by Rembrandt in a very deep way when I first encountered one of his paintings at the Metropolitan Museum [in New York], when I was six... When I was eight, and my parents asked me where I wanted to go on vacation I said, 'Amsterdam,' because that's where Rembrandt was from. I was floored by the beauty of the Old Masters, the richness of the inner life that they were able to capture."

Kaplan and his wife, Daphne Recanati Kaplan, began to collect the art of the Dutch Golden Age in 2003. Their Leiden Collection is now among the largest private assemblages of Dutch art in the world, rivaling the holdings of many major museums. Named after Rembrandt's native city, the Collection currently numbers more than 250 paintings and drawings, most of which are included in a free, high-resolution online catalogue. The Kaplans' intention was to establish a "lending library for old masters", including loans for special exhibitions as well as loans to bolster long-term installations. Kaplan explained, "In effect we were absorbing these paintings and taking them out of private hands and into the public domain, in many cases for the first time... We got a lot more pleasure sharing."

The Collection focuses on Rembrandt and his School, illuminating the personalities and themes that shaped the Golden Age over five generations. How the Collection developed is explained in Kaplan's personal account of the journey: "A Portrait in Oil". At the core of the Collection is a group of eleven paintings and two drawings by Rembrandt himself, the largest private collection of the Master, and key members of his circle including his teacher, Pieter Lastman, and studio-mate Jan Lievens. In addition, the Collection encompasses the most extensive survey of his pupils outside of a museum, ranging from Gerrit Dou through to artists including Govert Flinck, Ferdinand Bol, and his last student, Aert de Gelder. The Collection also owns the last of the thirteen paintings that remains in private hands created by his most renowned pupil, Carel Fabritius.

A parallel focus of the Collection is the representation of other artists from Leiden, in particular the fijnschilders ("fine manner painters"), including Frans van Mieris and Gabriël Metsu, who flourished during mid-century under the influence of Rembrandt's first pupil, Gerrit Dou. The number of paintings by fijnschilders represented in the Leiden Collection is unmatched in any other private or public collection. In addition, tracing the interrelationships between Amsterdam and Leiden, the Collection also comprises masterpieces by artists from centers other than these two cities, including Frans Hals from Haarlem, Gerard ter Borch from Deventer, Hendrick ter Brugghen from Utrecht, and the only remaining privately held work by Johannes Vermeer from Delft.

The Kaplans aspire for the Collection to have an impact that reaches beyond the realms of scholarship and research. The couple believes in the power of art to help forge an alliance of civilizations and "transcend cultural differences." At the launch of their exhibition, "Masterpieces from the Leiden Collection – The Age of Rembrandt", which opened at the Louvre Museum in February 2017, Kaplan stated: "Our sense of mission is to use Old Masters to promote humanism and its noble offspring: tolerance and mutual respect... Art alone may not save the world, but it can help repair it."

In expanding upon his hopes for additional exhibitions planned for China and the Middle East, Kaplan explained that "rather than silently acquiescing to the building of walls or the burning of bridges, (my wife and I) are using the most powerful tools we have, Rembrandt and our passion, to build the connections that bind people together rather than tear us apart."

The unveiling of the Leiden Collection, along with its high-profile exhibition at the Louvre Museum, received extensive international coverage including profiles in, among others, The New York Times, Le Monde, Le Figaro, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and Handelsblatt.

Conservation

Kaplan is the executive chairman of Panthera Corporation, a charity which he and his wife co-founded in 2006. Panthera is devoted to preserving the big cats and their ecosystems and has been recognized as a leading force in felid conservation. Conservationist Doug Tompkins has referred to Panthera as "the foremost big cat conservation organization in the world," with National Geographic saying Panthera "represents the most comprehensive effort of its kind in wildcat conservation."

Panthera created and maintains the largest protected jaguar corridor in the Americas. In particular, the work of Panthera’s CEO, Dr. Alan Rabinowitz, and Kaplan to balance the preservation of the jaguar corridor in Brazil with sustainable ranching was the focus of a January 2011 profile by CBS's 60 Minutes. In that piece, Kaplan outlined his thesis for utilizing sustainable ranching and community development to protect the apex predator and its environment: "There is no better way to stop poaching than to make the local community say: 'Hey, wait a minute, our children have medicine and education because of the jaguar.' When you show that, you have won their hearts and their minds. Then you have won the war." For his work as an environmentalist, Kaplan was the recipient of the "Hero of the Year Award" by the IWFF in 2012.

Kaplan and his wife Daphne helped establish a globally recognized felid conservation program at Oxford University in collaboration with Dr. David MacDonald. In 2009, the couple endowed the Recanati-Kaplan Center at Oxford University's Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, the WildCRU, and the university's Postgraduate Diploma in International Wildlife Conservation Practice, which offers young conservationists from developing countries access to training at Oxford. In February 2012, Oxford's WildCRU was awarded the Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher Education in recognition of WildCRU's outstanding work in wildlife and environmental conservation.

In July 2015, a male lion named Cecil, one of those being studied by the WildCRU's Hwange Lion Research Project, was killed in Zimbabwe by a trophy hunter. The killing of Cecil led to a public outcry across the world. The Hwange project had been funded by the Kaplans directly and through Panthera's Project Leonardo. "For us, Cecil was like part of the family, so we don’t take this lightly," Kaplan said. "Cecil became a symbol while he was alive, but in death, he may very well have become the iconic representation of the precarious plight of his species." The campaign to highlight the plight of African lions brought considerable attention to the WildCRU and Oxford, prompting Professor MacDonald to remark to Forbes Magazine, "I think it’s also obvious that Tom and his wife Daphne have given more to big cat conservation than probably anybody else in history."

The Kaplans also founded the Orianne Society, focused on the conservation of the eastern indigo snake and its habitat, the last remaining long-leaf pine forests of the Southeastern United States. As part of this effort, the Kaplans created the Orianne Indigo Snake Preserve in Georgia through the purchase and donation of 2,500 acres of the snake’s winter habitat. In recognition for their work in wildlife conservation, in 2014 the Kaplans were awarded the New Species Award, and the naming of the newly discovered Orianne's Tree Snake, by the African Rainforest Conservancy.

Regarding his wildlife conservation work with big cats and snakes, Kaplan said, "If you want psychic gratification, one of the greatest ways is to know that you’ve made a real contribution to saving a species from blinking out during your lifetime." Kaplan cites American media mogul and philanthropist Ted Turner as one of the great inspirations of philanthropy and as a role model in saving imperiled species.

On June 1, 2014, in what Kaplan described as "a turning point for global cat conservation," environmental philanthropists from China, India, the United Arab Emirates and the United States formed an unprecedented new Global Alliance with Panthera, committing an initial $80 million over the succeeding ten years to conserve the world's wild cats and their ecosystems. Among the initial partners with the Kaplans was Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, and whose personal commitment to the Panthera alliance is managed through the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, established in 2009. The Global Alliance's commitment provides cornerstone funding for Panthera's $200 million initiative for wild cats.

Medical research

The Kaplans have funded the Lillian Jean Kaplan Renal Transplantation Center at the University of Miami as well as a variety of prizes and grants for medical science research. In 2012, the Kaplans created the Daisy and Paul Soros/Recanati-Kaplan Family Assistant Professor in Preventive Cardiology at Weill Cornell Medicine, a position held by Dr. Bassem Masri.

Academia and public policy

Kaplan is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He also belongs to the International Council of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University, where Kaplan, scholar Graham Allison and decorated American General David Petraeus created the Recanati-Kaplan Foundation Fellows Program. Intended to "intersect history with policy, intelligence, strategic studies, and maybe a little common sense," the program brings together intelligence officers from several countries. According to the Belfer Center, "Each fellow undertakes rigorous research projects, doing in-depth studies of everything from combatting terrorism to leading more effective organizations. They meet in small sessions with leaders in the intelligence field—directors and former directors of CIA, NSA, DIA—and other foreign and domestic intelligence agencies... Recanati-Kaplan Fellows are the best of the best: As the Center’s website notes, applicants must come with the personal recommendation of their agency heads."

Community and culture

Kaplan is also active in community philanthropy. He served as president (2009-2012) and chairman of the board of directors (2012-2015) of the 92nd Street Y, a prominent Jewish community and cultural center in New York City. His wife Daphne and Robert Gilson conceived of the Recanati-Kaplan Program for Excellence in the Arts, which funds scholarships based on artistic merit for children and teens to study with the 92Y's renowned School of the Arts.

Spitfire restoration

In 2015, after the passing of his boyhood friend, Simon Marsh, Kaplan parted with the two Spitfire Mark I fighter planes that he and Marsh had as partners restored with Historic Flying of Duxford, Cambridgeshire. The first of the planes, Spitfire N3200, was gifted in the presence of Prince William, the Duke of Cambridge, to the Imperial War Museum at Duxford, where it had last flown as the personal aircraft of the Commander of 19 Squadron, Geoffrey Dalton Stephenson, later personal pilot to King George VI. The second, Spitfire P9347, flown by Captain Peter Cazenove over Dunkirk, was sold at auction at Christies London, where it achieved a record price for any spitfire at auction, the proceeds of which were donated for the benefit of the RAF Benevolent Society, Panthera, Oxford's WildCRU and Stop Ivory.

Distinctions

In March 2014, Kaplan was awarded the rank of Chevalier in the Ordre national de la Légion d'honneur of France, the country's highest civilian distinction. In presenting the decoration, the French Ambassador to the United States, François Delattre, said of Kaplan: "Through your multifaceted life and your support for an incredible array of causes, I believe you are the very definition of a game changer and Renaissance man - a young Renaissance man: as Chairman of the Y, as an environmentalist in Brazil, as an entrepreneur, a historian, a philanthropist, an art collector and a politically engaged individual."

In March 2017, Kaplan was decorated as a Commandeur in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by France's Minister of Culture, Audrey Azoulay, at a ceremony at the Louvre Museum. The award was given in recognition of the Kaplan family’s contribution to the arts in France as well as globally.

Personal life

Thomas Kaplan is married to Daphne Recanati Kaplan, daughter of Israeli artist Mira Recanati and investor Leon Recanati. They have three children.

References

Thomas Kaplan Wikipedia