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Angeles Wealth Management Appoints Jonah Cave as Chief Growth Officer

Business

Angeles Wealth Management Appoints Jonah Cave as Chief Growth Officer
Business

Business

Angeles Wealth Management Appoints Jonah Cave as Chief Growth Officer

2025-11-24 22:08 Last Updated At:11-26 10:22

SANTA MONICA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov 24, 2025--

Angeles Wealth Management (“Angeles Wealth”), a national wealth management firm serving generationally wealthy families, today announced the appointment of Jonah Caveas Chief Growth Officer. In this newly developed role, Cave will lead business development and growth initiatives. Cave’s appointment comes as Angeles Wealth continues its strong growth, with assets under management of approximately $2.6 billion, a more than tenfold increase since the beginning of 2018.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251124241446/en/

Based in Dallas, Texas, Cave will leverage his 30-year career across capital markets, private investments, family office and wealth management to build and manage a strategic business development program that supports advisor growth and strengthens client engagement. Cave will also identify and support strategic inorganic growth opportunities in the high-net-worth (HNW) and ultra-high-net-worth (UHNW) segments.

“I’m energized by the opportunity to help our advisors share our story and unlock new opportunities across the firm,” said Cave. “Nationally and in our key markets of California, New York and Texas, we see a tremendous opportunity to serve more families with sophisticated needs.”

Since its founding in 2011, Angeles Wealth has operated within a model that combines private wealth expertise with the institutional-quality investment capabilities of its endowment and foundation advisory OCIO affiliate, Angeles Investment Advisors (“AIA”).

“As the industry awakens to the convergence of advisory needs between private wealth and institutional clients – and the solutions and services required across the advice continuum – Angeles Wealth is uniquely positioned and truly independent,” added Cave. “The platform that other firms are assembling, Angeles Wealth and AIA have already built.”

An experienced financial services veteran, Cave joins Angeles Wealth from CH Investment Partners, a Dallas-based multi-family office now part of Cresset Capital. He served as senior managing director, and head of the Partner Relations Team. In that role, he managed growth – including relationships with external single- and multi-family offices. Prior to CH Investment Partners, Cave held senior leadership roles in the global equity divisions at Merrill Lynch, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and UBS. In these roles, he was directly responsible for managing teams and large institutional client relationships.

“From day one, Angeles Wealth was built to give families access to the same institutional-quality investments available to billion-dollar organizations, and on the same terms,” said Jonathan Foster, President and CEO of Angeles Wealth. “Jonah understands the power of our integrated model and brings the leadership needed to advance our growth to serve more families and deepen collaboration with our institutional team.”

For more information about Angeles Wealth Management and its sophisticated, customized global investment solutions and wealth management services, please visit its website.

About Angeles Investment Advisors

Founded in 2001, Angeles Investment Advisors is an institutional multi-asset investment firm, managing customized portfolios for institutional investors in the United States. Headquartered in Santa Monica, CA, Angeles Investment Advisors oversees nearly $7.1 billion in discretionary assets under management (AUM) and $35.6 billion assets under advisement (AUA) as of June 30th, 2025, and is an advisor to recognized endowments, foundations and institutions.

About Angeles Wealth Management

Angeles Wealth Management is a national, SEC-registered wealth management firm serving generationally wealthy families. Providing high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth families with comprehensive wealth advice and institutional-quality investment solutions typically available to large institutional investors. The firm’s private wealth clients gain access to an institutional caliber investment process and opportunity set by investing alongside its affiliate, Angeles Investment Advisors. Angeles Wealth, which manages approximately $2.6 billion in assets under management (AUM) as of September 30th, 2025, works with the families it serves to understand their unique needs, including generational planning and family dynamics. Founded in 2011, Angeles Wealth has offices in Santa Monica, New York City and Houston. For more information, follow us on LinkedIn or visit our website.

Disclosures

1) Angeles Wealth Management, LLC is an investment advisor registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The information herein is provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment, legal, or tax advice. All AUM figures are as of September 30th, 2025 and subject to change. Certain services, such as legal or tax services, are provided by third-party professionals. More information about Angeles Wealth Management's investment advisory services can be found in its Form ADV Part 2, which is available upon request.

2) Angeles Investment Advisors, LLC is an investment advisor registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Registration does not imply a certain level of skill or training. More information about Angeles Investment Advisors' investment advisory services can be found in its Form ADV Part 2, which is available upon request.

Angeles Wealth Management appoints Jonah Cave as Chief Growth Officer

Angeles Wealth Management appoints Jonah Cave as Chief Growth Officer

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — More than 200 years after being sunk by Adm. Horatio Nelson and the British fleet, a Danish warship has been discovered on the seabed of Copenhagen Harbor by marine archaeologists.

Working in thick sediment and almost zero visibility 15 meters (49 feet) beneath the waves, divers are working against the clock to unearth the 19th-century wreck of the Dannebroge before it becomes a construction site in a new housing district being built off the Danish coast.

Denmark’s Viking Ship Museum, which is leading the monthslong underwater excavations, announced its findings on Thursday, 225 years to the day since the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801.

“It’s a big part of the Danish national feeling,” said Morten Johansen, the museum’s head of maritime archaeology.

A great deal has been written about the battle “by very enthusiastic spectators, but we actually don’t know how it was to be onboard a ship being shot to pieces by English warships and some of that story we can probably learn from seeing the wreck, Johansen said.

In the Battle of Copenhagen, Nelson and the British fleet attacked and defeated Denmark’s navy as it formed a protective blockade outside the harbor.

Thousands were killed and wounded during the brutal hourslong naval clash, considered one of Nelson’s “great battles.” The intention was to force Denmark out of an alliance of Northern European powers, including Russia, Prussia and Sweden.

At the center of the fighting was the Danish flagship, the Dannebroge, commanded by Commodore Olfert Fischer.

The 48-meter (157-foot) Dannebroge was Nelson’s main target. Cannon fire tore through its upper deck before incendiary shells sparked a fire aboard.

“(It was) a nightmare to be on board one of these ships,” Johansen said. “When a cannonball hits a ship, it’s not the cannonball that does the most damage to the crew, it’s wooden splinters flying everywhere, very much like grenade debris.”

The battle also is believed to have inspired the phrase “to turn a blind eye.” After deciding to ignore a superior’s signal, Nelson, who had lost sight in his right eye, reportedly remarked: “I have only one eye, I have a right to be blind sometimes.”

Nelson eventually offered a truce and a ceasefire was later agreed with Denmark’s Crown Prince Frederik.

The stricken Dannebroge slowly drifted northward and exploded. Records say the sound created a deafening roar across Copenhagen.

Marine archaeologists have discovered two cannons, uniforms, insignia, shoes, bottles and even part of a sailor’s lower jaw, perhaps one of the 19 unaccounted-for crew members who likely lost their lives that day.

The dig site will soon be enveloped by construction work for Lynetteholm, a megaproject to build a new housing district in the middle of Copenhagen Harbor that is expected to be completed by 2070.

Marine archaeologists began surveying the area late last year, targeting a spot thought to match the flagship’s final position.

Experts say the sizes of the wooden parts found match old drawings. Dendrochronological dating, the method of using tree rings to establish the age of wood, match the year the ship was built. They also say the darkened dig site is full of cannonballs, a hazard for divers navigating waters darkened by clouds of silt stirred up from the seabed.

“Sometimes you can’t see anything, and then you really have to just feel your way, look with your fingers instead of with your eyes,” diver and maritime archaeologist Marie Jonsson said.

Chronicled in books and painted on canvases, the 1801 battle is deeply embedded in Denmark’s national story.

Archaeologists hope their discoveries may help reexamine the event that shaped the Scandinavian country and perhaps uncover personal stories of those who went into battle on that day 225 years ago.

“There are bottles, there are ceramics, and even pieces of basketry,” Jonsson said. “You get closer to the people onboard.”

Morten Johansen, head of maritime archaeology at Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, shows part of a human lower jawbone recovered from the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Morten Johansen, head of maritime archaeology at Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, shows part of a human lower jawbone recovered from the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Archaeologists sail with boat through the harbor in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Archaeologists sail with boat through the harbor in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

An archaeologist points to a computer screen, showing a map of the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801. in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

An archaeologist points to a computer screen, showing a map of the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801. in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Morten Johansen, head of maritime archaeology at Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, shows a metal insignia recovered from the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Morten Johansen, head of maritime archaeology at Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, shows a metal insignia recovered from the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Morten Johansen, head of maritime archaeology at Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, shows a metal insignia recovered from the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

Morten Johansen, head of maritime archaeology at Denmark's Viking Ship Museum, shows a metal insignia recovered from the wreck of Danish flagship "Dannebroge" that sank during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/James Brooks)

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