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  • 2021-08-19 (xsd:date)
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  • Firm led by top donor to Fla. Gov. Ron DeSantis isn’t a major Regeneron investor (en)
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  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has staked out positions contrary to public health guidance on COVID-19, opposing some preventive measures, while emphasizing treatment. Now the Republican is being accused by a liberal group of favoring one of his political donors in his response to the pandemic. DeSantis has been discouraging masking and downplaying Covid vaccines, and instead is urging Floridians to use a treatment from the drug company Regeneron after getting infected, Democratic Underground says in an Instagram post . You’ll be amazed to learn that the second-largest investor in Regeneron is Citadel Investment Group, whose CEO, Ken Griffin, is DeSantis’ number one political donor, the post claims. The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) Griffin is a major campaign donor to DeSantis, but his firm is only a small investor in Regeneron, and one of more than a thousand institutions with a stake in the company. The governor’s press secretary, Christina Pushaw, said DeSantis decided to actively promote Regeneron because it’s a clinically proven treatment that saves lives and alleviates pressure on hospitals. No donor had anything to do with the Governor’s decision. Regeneron and its COVID-19 product On Nov. 21, 2020, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization to Tarrytown, N.Y.-based Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. for its REGEN-COV to treat mild to moderate COVID-19. The product consists of two monoclonal antibodies, which are laboratory-made proteins that mimic the immune system’s ability to fight off harmful pathogens such as viruses. On Aug. 10, 2021, the FDA revised the authorization, allowing for emergency use of REGEN-COV as a preventive drug for people who are exposed to the virus and are at high risk of developing severe COVID-19. The agency said the treatment is not a substitute for vaccination. DeSantis has urged people infected with the virus to take the drug, which was used by former President Donald Trump after he became infected. On Aug. 18, DeSantis announced the opening of another state clinic that offers the treatment. The state promotes a website that lists sites for the treatment, along with COVID-19 testing and vaccinations. The governor’s office also referred us to the website. Citadel is not Regeneron's second-largest investor To support the first part of its claim — that Citadel Investment Group is the second-largest investor in Regeneron — Democratic Underground cited a June 28 Yahoo Finance article that says the second-largest stake in Regeneron is held by Citadel Investment Group, which holds a $171.2 million call position. But that article was referring to a group of 39 hedge funds tracked by Insider Monkey, a finance website. Among those 39 hedge funds, the article said, Citadel had the second-largest investment in Regeneron. That does not make it the second-largest overall investor in Regeneron — not by a long shot. The article said Citadel’s position was a $171.2 million call position. A call position by itself does not represent ownership — it’s an option to purchase stock. Asked about that discrepancy, Democratic Underground changed the text in its post to mention the call position and added a correction, but still erroneously referred to Citadel holding the second-largest call position in Regeneron. Data from Nasdaq shows that as of June 30, Regeneron had more than 1,000 institutional investors. The top five were FMR LLC (known as Fidelity Investments), Blackrock, Vanguard Group, Capital World Investors and State Street. Each had between 4 million and 11 million shares. Citadel Advisors, part of Griffin’s company, owned 57,768 shares as of June 30, tripling its holdings from the previous quarter, according to Nasdaq. That amounts to less than 0.1% of Regeneron’s 105 million shares outstanding. DeSantis’ 'No. 1 donor' The second part of the claim — that Griffin , CEO of Chicago-based Citadel, is DeSantis’ No. 1 donor — doesn’t state a time frame. But there is evidence that Griffin is a major donor. Democratic Underground cited a May 10 Florida Politics article about donations to DeSantis’ political action committee in April. The article said Griffin was the largest donor, giving $5 million of the $14 million taken in that month. According to the Florida Division of Elections, Griffin made contributions totaling $5.75 million to DeSantis’ political action committee in 2018, when DeSantis won election as governor; and the $5 million contribution in April 2021. DeSantis is up for re-election in 2022, and is considered a likely candidate for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. Florida Republican Party Executive Director Helen Aguirre Ferré told PolitiFact that Griffin is one of the governor’s top donors. Our ruling Democratic Underground claimed that the second-largest investor in Regeneron is a firm whose CEO is DeSantis’ number one political donor. Citadel’s CEO is a major donor to the Florida governor’s political action committee, and his firm has investments in Regeneron, a company that makes a drug product for treating COVID-19. But it is far from being the second-largest investor in Regeneron. We rate the post Mostly False. (en)
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