Discussion:Jean Chalopin (réalisateur)

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Liens intéressants[modifier le code]

J'ai parcouru le net pour trouver des infos sur Jean Chalopin :

— X-Javier courriel | discuter ] 3 février 2017 à 17:41 (CET)[répondre]

Lieu de naissance[modifier le code]

J'ai un problème pour le lieu de naissance ; les sources sont contradictoires :

  1. France : [1]
    1. Paris : [2] [3]
    2. Tours : [4]
  2. Chine : état civile ?

Il nous faudrait une source fiable. — X-Javier [discuter] 23 juillet 2013 à 13:14 (CEST)[répondre]

Naissance à Sannois en région parisienne.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lTVrlEaeQ8 à1'17 2A02:8428:810D:6901:CD1B:EAED:3F16:7EA8 (discuter) 24 mars 2023 à 19:19 (CET)[répondre]
✔️ Merci. — X-Javier courriel | discuter ] 25 mars 2023 à 12:58 (CET)[répondre]

Jean Chalopin est président de Deltec Bank and Trust au Bahamas[modifier le code]

Vu sur Bloomberg :

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2021-10-07/crypto-mystery-where-s-the-69-billion-backing-the-stablecoin-tether

Le passage incroyable concernant Jean Chalopin :

"Tether still hasn’t disclosed where it’s keeping its money. The only financial institution I could find that was willing to say it’s currently working with the company was Deltec Bank & Trust in the Bahamas. I met the bank’s chairman, Jean Chalopin, in Deltec’s office, on the top floor of a six-story building ringed with palm trees in a nice part of Nassau. In a past life, Chalopin co-created the cartoon Inspector Gadget, and a painting of the 1980s trenchcoat-wearing cyborg policeman hung on his office door. Magazine covers featuring Chalopin’s wife, a former model, and his daughter, a singer, were displayed on a shelf. Now 71, Chalopin has a mop of red hair and wears rimless round glasses. As we sat down, he pulled a book about financial fraud, Misplaced Trust, off the shelf. “People do funny things for money,” he said, cryptically. He made himself a cup of tea and told me he’d come to the Bahamas in 1987 after selling his first animation studio, DIC Entertainment. The sale had made him rich—he bought a castle outside Paris and a pink colonial in the Bahamas, which later served as the villain’s home in the 2006 James Bond film Casino Royale. He banked at Deltec, then befriended its aging founder. The bank, which once conducted investment banking throughout Latin America, had dwindled to just a few billion dollars of assets. Chalopin invested, eventually becoming the biggest shareholder. Bahamian banks are often depicted in movies as a haven for money launderers, but Chalopin said Deltec’s edge was customer service, not secrecy. He decided to seek out clients in new lines of business, such as biotech, gene editing, and artificial intelligence, that were too small to get personal attention from bigger banks. Another area was cryptocurrencies. “Crypto was like, ‘Don’t touch, it’s very dangerous,’ ” he said. “Well, if you dig a little bit deeper, you realize it’s not, actually.”

He said he was introduced to Devasini in 2017 by a customer who’d gotten rich from Bitcoin. Devasini cooked Chalopin a risotto lunch and impressed him with his forthrightness. When they discovered that Devasini had grown up in the same Italian village as Chalopin’s mother, they began calling each other cugino (cousin). Devasini bought a house near Chalopin’s in the Bahamas, and together they purchased and divided the waterfront lot between the two properties. Chalopin told me Tether had been unfairly maligned. “There’s no agenda or plot,” he said. “They are not Enron or Madoff. When there’s a problem, they fix it honorably.”

Chalopin said he investigated Tether for months before taking the company on as a client in November 2018. He signed a letter vouching for its assets. He was surprised that critics still insisted Tether’s currency was not backed by cash. “Frankly, the biggest thing was at the time ‘the money doesn’t exist,’ ” he said. “We knew the money exists! It was sitting here.”

But when I asked Chalopin if he knew for sure that Tether’s assets were fully secure now, he laughed. It was a difficult question, he said. He only held cash and extremely low-risk bonds for Tether. But recently the company had started using other banks to handle its money. Only a quarter of it—$15 billion or so—is still with Deltec. “I cannot speak about what I cannot know,” he said. “I can only control what’s with us.” ' — Le message qui précède, non signé, a été déposé par l'IP 163.62.112.97 (discuter), le 8 octobre 2021 à 09:49 (CEST)[répondre]

J'ai complété la page avec cette information (assez « hallucinante ») sur sa carrière actuelle comme banquier au Bahamas et son implication dans la cryptomonnaie Tether. J'en ai profité pour vérifier, sourcer et compléter la partie « Vie privée ». FoxyFr (discuter) 23 février 2022 à 06:52 (CET)[répondre]