In the final closing hours of November 8, as the needle on The New York Times’s election forecast began swinging around like a compass in the Bermuda Triangle, there were still two thirty-something men who stood to land the title of first son-in-law. There was Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who had rapidly ascended the family hierarchy over the past year to become Trump’s most trusted campaign adviser. Then there was Hillary Clinton’s son-in-law, Marc Mezvinsky, who received far less attention in the press but was nonetheless the more likely of the two to earn the title.

Then, the world turned upside down: the candidate with no experience in government or public service but who once appeared in a soft-core porn video was elected president of the United States. Kushner, who, to be fair, wasn’t doing too shabby when he was merely the son of a billionaire ex-con and the in-law of a billionaire blowhard, suddenly became a senior adviser to the most powerful man on earth, thanks to the Trump family’s elastic view of nepotism. (Kushner stepped down as C.E.O. of Kushner Companies, his family’s real-estate empire, and divested his financial interests to take the job.) Mezvinsky, sadly, is now just a guy looking for work. Per Bloomberg:

Eaglevale Partners, the hedge fund co-founded by Marc Mezvinsky, the son-in-law of Hillary and Bill Clinton, closed in December, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. Eaglevale, based in New York, is in the process of returning money to clients, said the person who asked not to be named because the firm is private.

Eaglevale was started by former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. traders Bennett Grau, Mark Mallon, and Mezvinsky in 2011. They had previously worked together on the bank’s global macro proprietary-trading desk.

Things hadn’t been going so hot for Eaglevale for some time, with the firm suffering big losses after betting, thoroughly incorrectly, on the Greek economy to improve. (The great Greek economic slump continues to be worse than the Great Depression, in terms of G.D.P.)

The boutique hedge fund previously shut down its Hellenic Opportunity fund after losing 90 percent of the $25 million Mezvinsky and co. raised from investors. At the time the fund was shut down, Eaglevale managed about $330 million.

On the bright side, Trump has promised to bring back jobs, bigly, so perhaps Mezvinsky can score one of those.

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