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11-877: Safra or SAFRA may refer to: People (surname) [ edit ] Alberto J. Safra (born 1979/1980), Brazilian banker Edmond Safra (1932–1999), Syrian-Brazilian banker Jacob Safra (1891–1963), Syrian banker Jacqui Safra (born 1948), Swiss investor and actor Joseph Safra (1939–2020), Brazilian banker Lily Safra (1934–2022), Brazilian philanthropist and socialite Moise Safra (1934–2014), Brazilian businessman and philanthropist Rav Safra (280–338), Babylonian Amora Shmuel Safra , Israeli computer scientist Vicky Safra (born 1952/1953), Brazilian-born philanthropist People (given name) [ edit ] Safra Catz (born 1961), American business executive Organizations [ edit ] Safra Group , an international network of companies controlled by

22-637: A billionaire. Vicky and her children as of October 2024 were collectively worth $ 19.6 billion. In November 2006, he married Maggy Candi; they have 5 children. Safra family The Safra family is a prominent Brazilian family of Syrian Jewish descent. The Safras were bankers and gold traders originally from Aleppo. They were engaged in the financing of trade between Beirut , Aleppo , Istanbul and Alexandria . In 1914, Jacob Safra settled in Beirut, and he opened his first Bank, Banque Jacob E. Safra, in 1920. It quickly prospered, benefiting from

33-471: A village in Lebanon Safra Square , Jerusalem's municipal plaza Other uses [ edit ] Battle of Al-Safra Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Safra . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to

44-709: Is a Brazilian-born businessman who founded ASA and is a member of the Safra family . Safra was born to a Jewish family, the son of Vicky (née Sarfaty) and Joseph Safra (1938–2020). He has three siblings: Jacob J. Safra , Esther Safra Dayan (married to Carlos Dayan  [ pt ] , son of Sasson Dayan ), and David J. Safra . He graduated from the Wharton School of Business . and then went to work for his father where he shared responsibility for Banco Safra in Brazil with his younger brother David (Alberto

55-540: The Joseph Safra family Banco Safra Bank Jacob Safra Switzerland Safra National Bank of New York SAFRA Radio , a Singaporean broadcasting company SAFRA National Service Association , Singapore NSmen Recreation Club Places [ edit ] Safra, Iran , a village in Khuzestan Province, Iran Safra-ye Moqaddam , a village in Khuzestan Province, Iran Safra, Lebanon ,

66-466: The company's future. ASA had established itself as a full-service financial institution, operating in the segments of Asset Management, Wealth Management, Private Banking, Corporate Banking, and retail. According to the Forbes list of The World's Billionaires , as of October 2021, his mother was worth $ 7.4 billion; and he and his siblings were collectively worth $ 7.3 billion making each individually

77-461: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Safra&oldid=1097333580 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Alberto J. Safra Alberto J. Safra (born 1979/1980)

88-481: The mental capacity due to his suffering from advanced Parkinson's disease . In January 2023, Bloomberg reported that Alberto Safra is close to reaching an agreement to sell his stake in Grupo J.Safra to his siblings.  By 2024, Alberto and his family reached an amicable agreement that set new business directions for all. From that, Alberto turned his full attention to ASA, focusing on consolidating his vision for

99-812: Was ranked among the best in the market, reaching first place in September in the ranking published by UOL, with its profitability emphasized by G1 among multimarket funds with the highest return in 2022: 318% of CDI. ASA Hedge defied a trend of record redemptions for the Brazilian fund industry in 2022, recording around R$ 1.7 billion in net raising for the year, compared to R$ 84 billion in net redemptions in multimarket funds. In October 2020, his father died leaving his fortune to his wife and four children. In 2021, he challenged three new wills his father executed in November and December 2019, arguing that his father lacked

110-473: Was reported that he left after a dispute with his brother David over Banco Safra's expansion into retail banking. He then founded ASA Investments, a São Paulo-based asset-management firm with offices in Rio de Janeiro and New York. In 2022, ASA acquired CORE, a real estate fund. The multimarket ASA Hedge, Alberto Safra's main fund, showed the best profitability in 2022 out of 188 funds monitored by Bloomberg, and

121-540: Was responsible for corporate banking while David was responsible for investment banking). His brother Jacob managed the Safra group's international operations ( Safra National Bank of New York and J. Safra Sarasin of Switzerland). In 2012, his father acquired 100% of Banco Safra. In 2019, Alberto stepped down from the bank's administration and from his position on the Board to dedicate himself to personal projects. It

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