Profil
Mr. Moore co-founded Guerite Advisors in 2006.
Mr. Moore has been a frequent guest on CNBC’s Squawk Box and TheStreet.com discussing Guerite’s research.
Additionally, Mr. Moore’s comments have been featured in The Financial Times, BusinessWeek, Fortune and other leading business publications.
Mr. Moore has more than twenty years of business experience – as an investment banker and as an entrepreneur.
Between 1984 and 1986, Mr. Moore was an investment banking financial analyst for Merrill Lynch Capital Markets in New York, NY.
From 1988 to 1990, Mr. Moore was an Associate in Mergers & Acquisitions at J.C.
Bradford & Co. in Nashville, TN.
From 1990 to 1995, Mr. Moore was Director of Fixed Income in Corporate Finance for Stephens Inc. in Little Rock, AR.
In 1995, Mr. Moore purchased an interest in a subprime mortgage company, EquiFirst Corporation, in Charlotte, NC.
Between 1995 and 1998, Mr. Moore and his partner grew EquiFirst from six to 250 employees before selling the company to Regions Financial Corporation, headquartered in Birmingham, AL.
Mr. Moore continued with EquiFirst/Regions as EVP and CFO until 2001, helping to grow the company to 400 employees at his departure.
Since 2001, Mr. Moore has been a private investor and President of Miller-Ridgeway LLC, a private equity, real estate and venture capital firm in Greenville, SC.
Mr. Moore worked his way through college on the co-operative education program at the Georgia Institute of Technology where he graduated with a Bachelors of Industrial Engineering with High Honors (1984).
Mr. Moore earned a Masters of Business Administration degree from Harvard Business School (1988).
Anciens postes connus de Hugh Charles Moore
| Sociétés | Poste | Fin |
|---|---|---|
Guerite Advisors LLC
Guerite Advisors LLC Investment ManagersFinance KPAC focuses on acquiring and turning around distressed and underperforming manufacturing and industrial businesses in North America and Western Europe. They typically invest in subsidiaries or divisions of Fortune 1000 industrial companies. Companies should have revenues ranging from $30 to $300 million with negative EBITDA. KPAC looks for companies having one or more of the following issues: poor cash flow, overly-leveraged, operating problems, lack of a clear strategic direction, management that is unable to improve performance or a need for globalization of the business. | Directeur en chef des Investissements | 27/11/2007 |
EquiFirst Corp.
EquiFirst Corp. Finance/Rental/LeasingFinance Provides non-conforming residential mortgage programs | Directeur Financier/CFO | 31/12/2000 |
Stephens, Inc.
Stephens, Inc. Investment Banks/BrokersFinance Provides brokerage services | Corporate Officer/Principal | 31/12/1994 |
J. C. Bradford & Co., Inc.
J. C. Bradford & Co., Inc. Investment Banks/BrokersFinance Provides securities brokerage and investment management services | Corporate Officer/Principal | 31/12/1989 |
Formation de Hugh Charles Moore
Expériences
Fonctions occupées
Actives
Inactives
Sociétés cotées
Entreprise privées
Relations
Relations au 1er degré
Entreprises liées au 1er degré
Homme
Femme
Administrateurs
Exécutifs
Sociétés liées
| Entreprise privées | 6 |
|---|---|
Stephens, Inc.
Stephens, Inc. Investment Banks/BrokersFinance Provides brokerage services | Finance |
Harvard University
Harvard University Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
J. C. Bradford & Co., Inc.
J. C. Bradford & Co., Inc. Investment Banks/BrokersFinance Provides securities brokerage and investment management services | Finance |
Georgia Institute of Technology
Georgia Institute of Technology Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
EquiFirst Corp.
EquiFirst Corp. Finance/Rental/LeasingFinance Provides non-conforming residential mortgage programs | Finance |
Guerite Advisors LLC
Guerite Advisors LLC Investment ManagersFinance KPAC focuses on acquiring and turning around distressed and underperforming manufacturing and industrial businesses in North America and Western Europe. They typically invest in subsidiaries or divisions of Fortune 1000 industrial companies. Companies should have revenues ranging from $30 to $300 million with negative EBITDA. KPAC looks for companies having one or more of the following issues: poor cash flow, overly-leveraged, operating problems, lack of a clear strategic direction, management that is unable to improve performance or a need for globalization of the business. | Finance |
















