Posts Tagged ‘Hedge Fund Collapse’

Epic Capital Management LP | Hedge Fund Notes

admin | Thursday, October 23rd, 2008 | No Comments »

Epic Capital Management LP

Epic Capital Management LP | Hedge Fund Notes

Wall Street Epic Capital Management LP | Hedge Fund NotesThe following piece on Epic Capital Management LP is being published as part of our Hedge Fund Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track hedge funds in the industry.

Resource #1: (10.28.08) Toronto-based Epic Capital Management is shuttering its flagship hedge fund as returns sink and investors head for the door.

Epic, which focuses on mid-cap Canadian companies, has seen the flagship fall by 38% this year, leading many investors to seek redemptions, the Globe and Mail reports. The fund’s assets have fallen by C$100 million amidst the market volatility, leading the firm to seek investor approval for a liquidation.

“We wanted to do it while we could and didn’t have a gun to our head,” Epic CEO David Fawcett said. Source

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Hedge Fund Industry Meltdown? | One expert predicts a 30% Decline in AUM

admin | Monday, October 6th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Meltdown?

Hedge Fund Meltdown? | 30% Decline in AUM?

GayFinances SeptArt Hedge Fund Industry Meltdown? | One expert predicts a 30% Decline in AUMOne of the most frequent questions I keep receiving is, “What does this (the financial crisis) all mean for the hedge fund industry as a whole?” It is relatively straight forward to predict the short-mid-term consequences, but over the long-term I disagree with many. Some experts are predicting a 30% decrease in total assets under management within the hedge fund industry, others have been predicting for some time that the industry will disappear altogether. I believe with banks less able to take on the types of risks which hedge funds get paid to take, hedge funds will recover what has been lost and come out only stronger within 3 years of today. There will be funds closed, as they are always are, someone new will go to jail, and some investors will feel the pain of gating clauses but in the end hedge funds as a group are more diversified than banks, private equity firms or sovereign wealth funds. They will survive and thrive over the long-run.

Here’s an excerpt from a recent story predicting a 30% decline in AUM within the industry:

In happier times, the bronzes in the window of WH Patterson’s gallery in London’s Mayfair would have been quickly snapped up. Their titles — Lioness Attacking, Lioness Stalking and Cheetah I and II — would have appealed to the hedge-fund managers who work in the area and fancy themselves as financial-market predators.

To them, the asking price of £10,000-plus would have been little more than small change; but those days have gone and the hunters are rapidly becoming the hunted.

A handful of managers in London and New York were forced last week to liquidate funds, including the flagship funds at MKM Longboat and Powe Capital, as investors demanded their money back. It is only the beginning.

Experts are predicting a 30% reduction in the hedge-fund industry — there are roughly 10,000 funds worldwide, and the industry is worth approximately $2 trillion. One broker said: “Small firms are bleeding. Assets are being sold off, investors are redeeming money and the managers are scuttling off to work somewhere else.” Read more…

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Hedge Fund Collapse

admin | Friday, April 11th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Collapse

Hedge Fund Tequesta Collapses

Hedge Fund CollapseFortune examines “The Death of a Hedge Fund”, specifically the Tequesta Mortgage Hedge Fund.

Tequesta’s story is similar to other, larger hedge funds that have imploded recently when they were unable to satisfy brokers’ demands for more collateral. However, Tequesta is unique for its effort to avoid the credit risk that befell other funds. Despite this fact, Tequesta collapsed when its prime broker, Citigroup, decided to pull its credit.

Tequesta is remarkable because it was performing relatively well, achieving a steady influx of returns to its investors. The hedge fund was cautious in trading prime jumbo mortgage funds with low levels of default. Tequesta would have continued its success, had it not been for the unexpected stall in the market for triple-A rated bonds. This evaporation of the market led to a fall in value for jumbo mortgage funds and to make matters worse for Tequesta, its primary brokers were forced by the credit crisis to demand more collateral. The mortgage hedge fund shut down, primarily forced by Citigroup’s desperate margin call demanding collateral that Tequesta simply did not have.

Tequesta’s fall shows that even hedge funds with strong returns are not invincible to the credit market’s decline; or, as Roddy Boyd puts it, “the wolf can be right outside the front door.”

- Richard

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Tags: Hedge Fund Collapse, Hedge Funds Collapse, Hedge Fund of Fund Collapse, List of Failed Hedge Funds, Hedge Fund Implode, Hedge Fund Shut Down

Hedge Fund Collapse – Survival of the Fittest

admin | Monday, March 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Collapse

Survival of the Fittest Hedge Funds

hedge fund collapseIn 1859, Charles Darwin introduced his theory on “On the origin of species” through this now famous preamble: As many more individuals of each species are born than can possibly survive; and as, consequently, there is a frequently recurring struggle for existence, it follows that any being, if it vary however slightly in any manner profitable to itself, under the complex and sometimes varying conditions of life, will have a better chance of surviving, and thus be naturally selected.” The (very non organic) species of the hedge fund industry have been aptly playing out this struggle for existence over the last few months as famous names such as Peloton Partners, Carlyle Fund, Carrington Capital, Amaranth Advisors and the mother load at Bear Stearns end up in the obituaries column of financial journals. The much vaunted “strategy” which typifies the various hedge fund species be it equity long-short, event driven, arbitrage or other clearly needs to evolve to be naturally selected under the current complex and varying conditions of the market. As an example, consider Andrew Lahde’s Lahde Capital Management, a California based hedge fund: by betting against sub prime, his fund returned over 1000% in 2007 to investors. Mr. Lahde is already developing other contrarian strategies to prepare for the market’s next set of probable directions.

On March 18, Martin Wolf wrote in the Financial Times that collapses are inherent in the hedge fund model because hedge fund managers have thus far been more lucky than skilled. I believe there definitely is a certain percentage of Alpha seeking managers who are indeed truly skilled but a large majority of managers have ignored the lessons of the efficient market hypothesis or unlike my MBA students have skipped class when the classic Black-Sholes option pricing model was being discussed. I have always argued that Alpha is a constantly moving target and seekers of Alpha may want to study Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle which describes how the momentum of an uncertainly moving target may be described more accurately through a probabilistic distribution rather than an assumed intermittent occurrence. This failure of managers to constantly seek a changing alpha which may occasionally have low probability occurrences will result in an extinction of their species.

The fittest species to survive in the hedge fund universe will be those who, as Darwin wrote, “vary however slightly in a manner profitable to itself” or in other words constantly seek Alpha by having an evenly spread probabilistic distribution of returns rather than maximize returns from higher probability events. Indeed this will be the species that will not only survive but also thrive. – Guest Blogger Eric Abhyankar

Eric Abhyankar is a professor of finance at the University of Northern Virginia, Prague and provides consulting to the funds industry on finding new markets for asset gathering.

- Richard

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