
Title: President and Founder
Company: Curve Publishing, Curve Asset Management
Location: Saint Petersburg, Florida, United States
Larry Domash, President and Founder at Curve Publishing, part of Curve Asset Management, has been recognized by Marquis Who’s Who Top Business Owners for dedication, achievements, and leadership in Systematic Trading.
Mr. Domash has established himself as a pioneering figure in the field of systematic trading, with a career spanning more than four decades and marked by innovation, leadership and a commitment to quantitative excellence. Since 2012, he has excelled as the founder, president and portfolio manager at Curve Asset Management and Curve Publishing. In these roles, Mr. Domash has developed and operates the only systematic trading intellectual property designed for the world’s largest corporations, encompassing both corporate debt and equity. His approach, which requires no active trading, was initially conceived during his graduate studies at Northwestern University’s business school and first implemented for Jackson National Life, where he served as its chief investment officer.
At Curve Asset Management, Mr. Domash’s disciplined and systematic methodology leverages publicly available financial disclosures from the top 255 global companies, each with a minimum of $15 billion in tradable liquid debt, to generate trade indicators that cover over 75 percent of all bonds traded daily and over 80 percent of the largest-cap equities across the top eight markets. This comprehensive system has demonstrated a 95 percent success rate in back-tested trade indicators. The firm currently publishes its results on Substack and is preparing to launch a dedicated website to make this information accessible to a broader audience, with expectations of attracting between 10,000 and 20,000 daily users. The interrelation between systematic trading, systematic credit and systematic equity that Mr. Domash has engineered is unprecedented in the U.S.
Recognized as the G-255 trading model, its creation was unimaginable a decade ago and has served as the culmination of Mr. Domash’s life’s work. A purely quantitative, stochastic trading model, what makes it truly unique is its uncompromising focus on objective trade indicators. In essence, the G-255 places the power of the world’s largest, most liquid issuers directly into the process, with pure, data-driven precision that no other system can match.
Before his tenure at Curve Asset Management and Curve Publishing, Mr. Domash held several influential positions in the investment industry. From 2004 to 2012, he was the head of corporate fixed income at Ronin Capital, where he managed complex portfolios and further refined his expertise in fixed income securities. Between 2002 and 2004, he served as the director of high-yield research and head of proprietary trading at Société Générale, overseeing research initiatives and proprietary trading strategies. From 1999 to 2002, Mr. Domash also excelled as the director of high-yield research at Robertson Stephens, following his role as the chief executive officer at Cleary Gull Reiland & McDevitt between 1997 and 1998.
Mr. Domash’s earlier career was distinguished by significant leadership roles at Fidelity Investments. As the director of high-yield research from 1990 to 1992, director of U.S. and European research between 1992 and 1995, and director of investment operations from 1995 to 1997, he led what became the world’s largest research department. Mr. Domash was responsible for both equity and fixed-income research in the U.S. and spent considerable time stationed internationally. During this period, he developed risk management guidelines for Fidelity’s fixed-income departments and back-tested his systematic model using millions of dollars in resources provided by Fidelity’s leadership.
Having begun his career in 1985, Mr. Domash spent five years as the head of fixed income and head of equity research at Gofen and Glossberg in Chicago, Illinois. It was during this foundational period that he honed his skills in both asset classes.
Mr. Domash’s academic background laid the foundation for his innovative work. He completed a Bachelor of Arts in economics at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, in 1981. He later acquired a master’s degree in management with concentrations in economics and finance, graduating with honors from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, in 1986. Mr. Domash holds several professional credentials, including a Securities and Exchange Commission license, as well as Series 6, 7, 30 and 67 licenses, and an FCA license.
Beyond work, Mr. Domash’s civic engagement includes serving as a volunteer on the cancer research board at his alma mater, Lawrence University, as well as membership on the board of trustees. He also holds board positions on the boards of directors of several other organizations.
While pursuing his undergraduate degree at Lawrence University more than 45 years ago, Mr. Domash notably authored one of the first computer-aided labor economics abstracts titled ‘Entry Barriers in Professional Baseball.’ His research used statistical analysis to demonstrate wage and opportunity discrimination against minorities between 1947 and 1977.
Throughout his career, Mr. Domash has been recognized for his ability to bridge fundamental research with quantitative modeling, a rare achievement in the investment industry. He has served as a chief investment officer three times and overseen hundreds of billions of dollars in assets while executing trillions of dollars in bond trades annually.
Since entering the field decades ago, Mr. Domash has noted a significant rise in systematic trading. The systematic trading and quantitative investing community has notably become one of the most dynamic forces in global finance. Systematic and quant-driven strategies now manage over $1 trillion in dedicated assets worldwide and represent a rapidly growing share of the hedge fund industry, which recently surpassed $5 trillion in 2025. Having dedicated his career to proving that transparent, repeatable, mathematics-driven processes outperform subjective storytelling over time, Mr. Domash credits the G-255 to that passion.
Mr. Domash attributes much of his success to lessons learned from setbacks throughout his career, as well as to formative influences who introduced him to equity modeling and provided resources and support for his independent projects. The former president of Fidelity Investments also played a pivotal role in his development by granting him access to the resources necessary to build his models.
Reflecting on his life’s work, Mr. Domash’s enduring contributions have shaped modern approaches to systematic trading across corporate debt and equity markets worldwide. His achievements are rooted in decades-long dedication to quantitative rigor, intellectual curiosity and leadership within some of the world’s most prominent financial institutions.
For more information, please visit:
Contact Mr. Domash: