Jeff Yass

Manager

Birth Year 1956

Age 68 years old

Nationality United States

#17746 Most Popular

1951

Gerald graduated with a BS from LIU Brooklyn in 1951, and worked as an accountant, rising to chairman of Datatab Inc. He later co-founded Philadelphia Trading, which became SIG.

1956

Jeffrey S. Yass (born 1956) is an American billionaire businessman.

According to Forbes, Yass had a net worth of $28.5 billion in 2023.

He is the co-founder and managing director of the Philadelphia-based Susquehanna International Group (SIG) and an early investor in TikTok.

1970

While at the State University of New York at Binghamton in the 1970s, Yass and five fellow students became friends and later co-founded Susquehanna International Group (SIG), the largest trader of liquid stocks in the US.

The billionaire trader Israel Englander sponsored Yass for a seat on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, and SIG was initially run from an office at the Exchange.

His father, Gerald Yass, also helped to found the company.

Prior to this, Yass was a professional gambler.

2001

In 2001, he joined the executive advisory council of the Cato Institute.

Yass is the richest man in Pennsylvania.

As of February, he is the largest donor in the 2024 US election cycle, having donated $34 million to Republican groups and campaigns.

According to Israeli newspaper Haaretz, he is a major supporter of Israeli right-wing think tanks.

Yass grew up in a middle-class Jewish family in Queens, New York.

He is the son of Gerald Yass, and his "childhood sweetheart" Sybil, who was at his bar mitzvah.

Gerald has a sister, Carole.

In 2001, Yass appeared as one of 76 Revolutionary Minds in Philadelphia magazine.

As of 2023, he was the richest man in Pennsylvania, according to The Intercept.

Yass is married to Janine Coslett.

They have lived in Haverford in Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania for some years.

They have four children, two sons and two daughters.

In December 2001, following the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, he announced a donation to the charitable fund established by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to assist the victims.

He has supported Save the Children, "Spirit of Golf Foundation", People's Emergency Center Families First building, and the Franklin Institute's Franklin Family Funfest Committee.

Jeff and Janine Yass have contributed to education reform, including the Yass Prize for Sustainable, Transformational, Outstanding, and Permissionless (STOP) education, launched during the COVID-19 pandemic.

This initiative aims to recognize and support innovative, non-traditional education models.

In 2022, the Yass Prize awarded over $20 million, including a $1 million grand prize to the Arizona Autism Charter Schools for their individualized learning programs.

2002

Yass became a member of the board of directors of the libertarian Cato Institute in 2002 and now is a member of the executive advisory council.

2015

In 2015, Yass donated $2.3 million to a Super PAC supporting Rand Paul's presidential candidacy.

2017

Yass and his wife, Janine Coslett, are public supporters of school choice, with Coslett writing a 2017 opinion piece for The Washington Examiner in support of then-incoming Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos's views at school choice.

2018

As of 2018, he still worked for SIG, as a senior executive and advisor.

Jeffrey Yass was educated at public schools in Queens.

He earned a BS in mathematics and economics from Binghamton University.

He pursued graduate studies in economics at New York University, but did not graduate.

In 2018 he donated $3.8 million to the Club for Growth, and $20.7 million in 2020.

2020

In November 2020, it was reported that Yass had donated $25.3 million, all to Republican candidates, and was one of the ten largest political donors in the US.

In March 2021, an investigation in Haaretz said that Jeff Yass and Arthur Dantchik were behind a large portion of the donations to the Kohelet Policy Forum in Israel.

In November 2021, he donated $5 million to the School Freedom Fund, a PAC that runs ads for Republican candidates running in the 2022 election cycle nationwide.

In June 2022 ProPublica claimed Yass has "avoided $1 billion in taxes" and is "pouring his money into campaigns to cut taxes and support election deniers".

In September 2023, The Wall Street Journal reported that Yass, an investor in TikTok's parent firm ByteDance, is a major donor to US politicians who have opposed restrictions on TikTok.