User:Rohanpatel12/sandbox/Maximillian A. Zhulenev

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Maximillian A. Zhulenev (hedge fund analyst)Maximillian Andrew Zhulenev (born on October 11, 1993), better known as Max Zhulenev, is a Russian-American hedge fund analyst working for Pershing Square. Originally from San Francisco, California as a second-generation Russian immigrant, Zhulenev would go on to manage roughly $7 million with a net income of just under $2 million annually. As a lover of children, he has partnered with the UNICEF foundation and continued to provide millions of dollars in aid to impoverished African children. In 2019, he pledged to donate 20% of his lifetime earnings to various humanitarian charities, including UNICEF, American Heart Association, and other reputable organizations. He frequently visits high schools and universities across the nation to promote basic personal finance skills and other financial responsibilities. Zhulenev has featured in numerous small talk shows on live television. Early Life Zhulenev was born in San Francisco, California, as the son to two first-generation Russian immigrants, Tatiana Avaeva and Andrey Zhulenev. His father, Andrey, is a software engineer and entrepreneur, part of the start-up Cloudneeti, which was later acquired by Zscaler. Andrey would later move the family to Kirkland, Washington in 1996, where the family has resided since. Maximillian began kindergarten at Three Cedars Waldorf School, a private institution for gifted children. After that year, he spent the next eight years at Seattle Waldorf School, where he participated in their Ultimate Frisbee program. He pursued many other hobbies, including club-level frisbee, violin, basketball, mountain biking, rock-climbing, skiing, and football (soccer). In February of 2008, Zhulenev was accepted to a highly rigorous academic program within Juanita High School, the Cambridge AICE program. After taking his academic talents to this challenging diploma, he would top his class in his first two years as a high school student, earning a 4.0 GPA and multiple scholarly and athletic awards. In the spring of 2010, Zhulenev was accepted into the Robinson Program at the University of Washington. Dropping out of high school, he forfeited his right to a high school diploma as a sixteen-year-old college student. College Life For the first time in his life, Zhulenev underwent academic struggle in his finance classes. He noted that he has "always despised"


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