Posts Tagged ‘Hedge Fund Managers’

Public Hedge Fund Mangers

admin | Thursday, August 20th, 2009 | No Comments »

Public Hedge Fund Mangers

Public Hedge Fund Managers Vary in Reporting

report Public Hedge Fund MangersThere is widespread pressure coming from regulators and investors for hedge funds to provide regular reports and increase transparency. This push to report the performance of hedge funds is even greater on public hedge fund managers, but of the public hedge fund managers in the U.S., the reporting of performance varies significantly. There are only three U.S. public companies that manage hedge funds and each reports its funds’ performance in different ways from monthly reports, to quarterly, to never.

Since Och-Ziff Capital Management Group (OZM) is the best at regularly reporting, offering monthly updates on how each of its four main hedge funds are performing. Fortress Investment Group (FIG) has started to provide quarterly reports after the Securities and Exchange Commission pushed the firm.

The Blackstone Group (BX) has resisted the SEC thusfar arguing that fund performance does not have to be reported and that it is not important anyway. Nearly half of Blackstone’s AUM is in hedge funds, hedge fund of funds or other investment in alternative assets. The rest of the firm’s assets are in long-term private equity and real estate funds.

Hedge funds, after suffering their worst year on record in 2008, were up an average of around 9% this year through June 30, according to Hedge Fund Research. Stocks of the three publicly traded managers, after suffering along with the rest of the industry last year, have seen good stock performance lately. Fortress’ stock has nearly tripled so far this year, although it’s still under $3 and is down 70% from a year ago. Och-Ziff’s stock is up almost 60% this year to more than $8, but it’s off about 50% from a year ago. Blackstone’s is up around 35% year-to-date, to almost $9, but is down more than 40% from a year ago.

The question, of course, is whether Blackstone is obliged to report performance in its hedge funds – which include the GSO Capital Partners credit hedge fund – or whether that is information that, as Blackstone has said, isn’t “meaningful.”

To investors, it just might be.

Read more…

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Tags: Public hedge funds, publicly traded hedge funds, hedge fund managers, fortress capital, fortress hedge funds, blackstone hedge funds, och ziff hedge funds, public hedge fund managers

Patrick Fauchier of Fauchier Partners

admin | Thursday, June 11th, 2009 | No Comments »

Patrick Fauchier of Fauchier Partners

Analysis and discussion with Patrick Fauchier of Fauchier Partners Chairman and David Sun of Ernst & Young China Chairman. They talk about the effects of hedge funds in the market. This video is also on the recent uptick of performance by large hedge funds and whether this is a shot-term gain or the building of long-term durable strategies.

View over 100 videos on hedge funds within our Hedge Fund Video Library.

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Hedge Fund Developments This Week

admin | Sunday, May 10th, 2009 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Developments This Week

Our team has been updating several Hedge Fund Tracker profiles over the last week. To read these news updates on specific hedge fund managers please see the following links:

Tags: hedge fund, hedge funds, alternative investments, private equity, hedge fund managers, investing, investments

Hedge Fund Tracker News Rally

admin | Sunday, April 5th, 2009 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Tracker News Rally

Hedge Fund Alternative Investment news Hedge Fund Tracker News RallyThe recent economic environment has produced dozens of recent headlines on top hedge fund managers. To view various news stories on specific hedge fund managers please see the links below. These are all hedge funds who have had their HedgeFundBlogger.com based Hedge Fund Tracker profiles recently updated:

To view over 1,000 profiles of hedge fund managers please see our Hedge Fund Track Tool.

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Hedge Fund Tracker Updates

admin | Monday, March 2nd, 2009 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Updates

Hedge Fund Tracker Updates

Much of what we do for HedgeFundBlogger.com happens behind the scenes. One of these activities is the building of Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles. Our team is consistently building free-to-access profiles on over 1,000 hedge funds. Over the last week we have updated these hedge fund manager profiles:

Browse over 1,000 hedge fund manager profiles within our Hedge Fund Tracker Tool.

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Hedge Fund Tracker Updates

admin | Sunday, January 25th, 2009 | No Comments »

Tracker Updates

Hedge Fund Tracker Tool

Our team has recently updated the following Hedge Fund Tracker profiles:

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Hedge Fund Managers | Manager Profiles & Notes

admin | Saturday, January 10th, 2009 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Managers

Hedge Fund Managers | Manager Profiles & Notes

Below is a tool developed by HedgeFundBlogger.com which provides profiles, news and trend notes on hundreds of hedge fund managers.

Hedge Fund Manager Tracker Profiles:

Fund of Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles

Tags: Hedge Fund Managers, Hedge Fund Manager, Hedge Fund bios, Hedge Fund Manager Profiles, Hedge Fund Profile Notes, Information on hedge fund managers

Hedge Fund Tracker Note Updates | Managers

admin | Sunday, December 7th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Tracker Updates

Hedge Fund Tracker Notes | Updates

Our team has recently updated the Hedge Fund Tracker Notes on these hedge funds:

Read through profiles on over 1,000 hedge fund managers within our Hedge Fund Tracker Tool.

Tags: Hedge Fund managers, hedge fund, hedge funds, investment managers, investments, investment, stock market, stock markets, hedge fund investments, hedge fund bios

Hedge Fund Maguire | Letter Blasts the Actions of Desperate Hedge Fund

admin | Friday, November 21st, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Maguire

Hedge Fund Maguire | Letter to Hedge Funds

425.cruise.maguire.110707 Hedge Fund Maguire | Letter Blasts the Actions of Desperate Hedge Fund(http://HedgeFundBlogger.com) Below is a short excerpt from the NY Post and their comments on a letter which Sandra Manzke sent out earlier this week regarding the recent actions of many desperate hedge fund managers. If anyone has the full version of this letter please shoot it over or post it below. For now here is an excerpt of the review article:

Fed up with misbehavior in the hedge-fund industry, respected hedge fund investor Sandra Manzke is fighting back.

A pioneer in hedge-fund investing and best known for founding Tremont Capital Management, Manzke sent an angry missive to hundreds of her peers earlier this week, calling on them to join together to push for reform in the $1.5 trillion industry.

“I am appalled and disgusted by the activities of a number of hedge-fund managers,” said the letter, which raises a fist against what Manzke sees as a general degradation of ethics in the industry.

The letter, reminiscent of the way in which Tom Cruise’s Hollywood agent character penned a manifesto blasting his cutthroat industry in the hit movie “Jerry Maguire,” comes amid a historic shakeout of this once-lucrative business. Hedge funds are battling the double blows of poor performance – down an average of 20 percent so far this year – and billions in investor withdrawals, known as redemptions. Read more…

Here is the actual letter:

MAXAM Capital Management LLC
RE: AN IMPORTANT LETTER TO HEDGE FUND INVESTORS
Dear Sir/Madam:

I was one of the earliest investors in hedge funds. I made my first investment in 1985 when the industry was exclusive to the United States and there were only 68 funds in existence. As such, I have watched the industry grow from a small private investment club to its current state managing in excess of a trillion dollars with more than 10,000 funds. I was an early proponent of the fund of funds business which enabled smaller investors the ability to access the talent pool, and gain diversification with lower minimum investment. I once was proud of the industry, now I am concerned.

While we all recognize the difficulties of the current market environment, I am appalled and disgusted by the activities of a number of hedge fund managers. The increased use of gating, side pocketing, suspension of redemptions, failure to post an NAV, fund liquidations that favor management are just a few of activities that are giving this industry a bad name. Worse, there are managers who are attempting to get their money out ahead of investors, attempts to eliminate high water marks, asking investors to increase fees to pay for fund expenses, receiving fees on liquidating funds, receiving fees on illiquid securities, and mispricing their books.

We have seen funds which claimed to have no leverage, in fact, facing margin calls that wipe out capital. And managers who have received millions of dollars in incentive fees, walking away and leaving investors with nothing. Further, management fees have crept up to outrageous levels and hedge fund organizations are paying employees lucrative wages, while investors are bearing these costs, unjustified by mounting losses.

I was in favor of SEC registration and oversight and 2008 is certainly a poster child for the need for better regulation. Now, I feel that investors need to form an organization to protect against the egregious hedge fund manager. Hedge fund managers do not disclose their investors and we are each operating in a vacuum. We should be able to unite to change how this industry operates. I am proposing that we form the “Hedge Fund Investors United Forum” to propose reform in the industry that would protect our clients’ and our own interests.

Carl Icahn has started his shareholders group to change the behavior of corporate America. I urge everyone to go to his blog and join, because corporate America has lost its way. Corporate management needs to get back to running companies to make money for shareholders, not for personal gain. We need to get hedge fund managers to work for their investors and not for their personal gain.

As a group we can influence the future of the industry. We can start to define neutrally beneficial terms, not punitive investor terms. If we want to survive, we have to restore confidence and reshape the industry. I am not saying everyone out there is a bad apple, but there are too many bad apples for my taste and it only takes a few to bring the industry to its knees.

If you are interested in joining with me to bring reform to this industry, please email me and together we can start the process.

With great concern,
Sandra L. Manzke
Chief Executive Officer

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Upcoming Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles

admin | Tuesday, November 11th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Profiles

Upcoming Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles

Our team is building over 1,000 Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles. We have 200 of them complete which you can read here: Hedge Fund Tracker Tool .

Below are the names we are still working on. Please let us know if you have any publicly available resources on the managers noted below. Thank you in advance for the help.

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Tags: Hedge fund managers, hedge funds, hedge fund, hedge fund tracker, hedge fund llc, hedge fund LP, hedge fund LTD, hedge fund profiles, hedge fund bios, hedge fund in New York

State of the Hedge Fund Industry | Industry in Turmoil

admin | Friday, October 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Turmoil

State of the Hedge Fund Industry

(http://HedgeFundBlogger.com) An increasing number of hedge funds are telling customers they cannot have their money back just now (though not a new practice) as rising withdrawals on top of problems in getting collateral back from prime brokeragesrehypothecations (such as most notably at Lehman Brothers), plus talk of the past year being especially bad for hedge funds’ performance – are all supposedly hitting retail and institutional confidence in hedge funds. Hedge fund performance at minus 10% is described as “shocking!”, but as many have done better than that as have done worse than that.

HFbydecile State of the Hedge Fund Industry | Industry in Turmoil
There are at least 3 thousand relatively reputable hedge funds. They are not a homogeneous instrument or asset class that performs as one. When the stock market has fallen 25% and given the enormous sensitivity of hedge funds because of their ultra-high leveraging, and their liquidity mix of long and short term funds, -10%. measured at the point of maximum pessimism or market floor, is really a good performance! But, it is only the aggregate across the industry. Many funds have performed much worse. The fear is that hedge fund liquidations that could surpass 2005, when roughly 10% of Hedges closed. Leverage is harder to get, limiting absolute returns (losses or profits), though 20-25% of hedge fund assets appear to be in cash and treasuries just now anyway.

Institutional investors in hedge funds have their own clients’ anxieties and any losses kill performance fees. Losses can invite liquidation if managers reckon the road back to previous high water marks (carryforward provisions and hurdle rates) before they can charge performance fees is too hard or too long. For HNWs and other investors able to take a longer view, then hedge funds may well be considered a great place to be to buy distressed assets at fire-sale prices, especially financial assets that may soon become more standardised, commoditised, easier to net clear and credit-worthy again. Not so, however, if the roll-over leveraging by which hedge funds counter-intuitively stake-out volatile markets looking for spectacular short to medium term gains. Macro-funds have outperformed others – they do not just analyze the technical market risk indicators but base their strategy on macro-economic risk drivers and think about cycles.

Anyone not wanting to be invested in an underperforming hedge fund right now can normally withdraw on the first day of any quarter? It may be that in exchange for refusing to permit investors to withdraw hedge funds have ensured that investors funds are placed in safe money market funds. The hedge fund industry is variously said to have $2tn or $3tn under management. There may be a total of 56,000 funds (19,800 “distinct” hedge fund and fund of funds of which 15,400 report performance, and 13,675 single manager funds of which 10,200 reported, and 6,100 funds of funds). 40% of these are less than 3 years old. 90% of closures tend to be single-manager funds and the attrition among new funds is bound to be high, maybe 60%, which is typical of all new start-ups. Note that of single manager funds, two thirds are domiciled off-shore. Therefore, the estimate that 2,000 hedge funds and 500 hedge funds of funds may be at death’s door is not fanciful, although less than 200 have gone in Q1-Q3 of 2008.

I doubt that a wave of clients requesting their money back as predicted over the next 6 months will pull down asset prices simply because in today’s volatile markets 6 months is a very long time. Also, the range has never been wider between good and bad performing funds. Therefore, investors may shift from fund to fund more that withdraw entirely from hedge fund investments, though not necessarily from small to large given that power to leverage and short-selling are not the basis for performance that it was before August 2007. A sign of this may have been Lehman Bros selling Neuberger Berman for $2.15bn when its book and peer value was $8bn. People involved described the process of persuading them to sign on to the deal as akin to “herding cats.”

A hedge fund shake out will, I suggest, not be brutal, if as before 90% of closures are single manager funds. We might know more about the systemic risk of hedge fund closures if the industry was regulated. In the UK, the FSA regulates hedge fund but not regulate the funds themselves (despite as win most major countries these are open to retail investors). The FSA has long promised some thematic work on the adequacy of systems and controls in hedge fund managers, but may be waiting to see what the SEC does. The FSA said, “We do not and cannot regulate the hedge funds themselves or set standards for them to achieve. However, all firms based in London, including the hedge fund managers, must take reasonable care to maintain systems and controls appropriate to their business. Hedge fund managers should be properly qualified and controlled when undertaking investment activities for their client fund. Any hedge fund manager in breach of these standards would be in breach of the rules.” The rules are basically the same for any investment intermediaries, advisors and brokers.
SEC chairman Christopher Cox has sought more regulatory supervision, but been overturned in federal court in June 2006. Concerns have been voiced by all and sundry, including a few hedge funds, and not least in Europe, such as Angela Merkel no less, about the lack of transparency as well as inordinate fast growth of hedge funds. Under the SEC’s proposals of 2004, hedge funds would have to register and open their books to the SEC. Mr Cox told the Senate Banking Committee that without regulation “the potential for retail investors to be harmed by hedge fund risk” (is a serious concern), and “the growth in hedge fund fraud that we have seen accompany the growth in hedge funds implicates the very basic responsibility of the SEC to protect investors from fraud, unfair dealing and market manipulation…;” “These are not investments for Mom and Pop.” Currently, investors must have assets worth at least $1m, but Cox wanted this upped to $1.5m. Since then hedge fund assets grew fivefold. But, while at that time Mr Cox’s demands were not supported by all other SEC commissioners, or by the Fed’s Ben Bernanke (who opted for free market discipline in place of constricting rules), it must now be easy to get SEC regulatory oversight passed.

Ten days ago EU lawmakers were set to adopt a report calling on EU Internal Market Commissioner, Charlie McCreevy, to come forward with a legislative proposal to toughen oversight of hedge funds and private equity companies. But, in prepared remarks to the European Parliament, McCreevy, said, “I don’t believe it is necessary at this stage to tar hedge funds and private equity with the same brush as we use for the regulated sector.” This surprising statement implies a backwards or relativist view of the virtues of regulation?

Guest post by Robert Mcdowell from his great blog Banking on Economics.

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Private Equity Funds

admin | Monday, September 8th, 2008 | No Comments »

Private Equity Funds

Private Equity Funds vs. Hedge Funds

Private Equity FundsI just found an interesting PowerPoint presentation describing the different types of private equity funds and hedge funds available today. This is pretty high level but within one presentation it covers much of both industries relatively well.

Here is a direct link to the PowerPoint.

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Viresco International Capital Management Karim Salamatian

admin | Monday, September 1st, 2008 | No Comments »

Viresco International

Viresco International Capital Management – Fund Profile

Viresco International Capital Management Karim SalamatianWhile this fund seems especially timely given the current commodity/gas pricing environment I have always thought green hedge funds would consistently increase in terms of number of players and demand in the future, when I started this blog I predicted green hedge funds to be one of the top 5 high growth niche areas of the industry.

The following piece on Viresco International Capital Management is being published as part of our daily effort to track hedge fund events in the industry. To review other hedge fund related announcements please see our Hedge Fund Tracker Tool.
___________________________________

Viresco International Capital Management is surfing the green wave with the launch of a clean technology fund. The San Diego-based firm has recently launched the Viresco Opportunities Global Fund, a long/short hedge fund that aims to capitalize on the worldwide boom in clean energy and technologies.

“Viresco Opportunities Global Fund’s objective is to achieve superior absolute total returns through investment in clean technology,” states the fund’s offering memorandum, which was obtained by FINalternatives. “Viresco achieves this investment objective by actively managing a globally diversified portfolio consisting primarily of long and short strategies of publicly traded clean technology equity, debt and derivative securities on a leveraged basis.”

The offering documents say that the fund is unique, “because it covers the entire global spectrum of clean technology verticals. This strategy allows for diversification, risk management and predictability.” The fund is being managed by Karim Salamatian, a partner and chief investment officer at the firm. Prior to joining Viresco, Salamatian was a managing director with BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, Canada. Read more…

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Analyst & Due Diligence Positions

admin | Tuesday, August 12th, 2008 | No Comments »

Analyst & Due Diligence Jobs

Please see below for open analyst and due diligence jobs within the hedge fund industry:

Finance Accounting Job Analyst & Due Diligence PositionsPosition #1: Operational Due Diligence Analyst (New York Tri-State Area)
A New York Tri-State area hedge fund of fund specializing in global investments is seeking an Operational Due Diligence Analyst to assess operational risks and identify potential control weaknesses of hedge funds and private equity funds that the firm intends to invest in. The position requires a good understanding of hedge fund and private equity fund structures, operational processes, controls and service providers.

  • Job Description: Research, analyze, and document the operational process and controls of investment advisors. Coordinate, prepare, and conduct due diligence site visits/calls with potential and existing investment advisors to evaluate their processes, policies, procedures and controls. Coordinate problem resolution with colleagues in related functional disciplines including Legal, Compliance and Product Management. Continuously benchmark and upgrade our processes to adjust for industry developments and improvements in best-practices
  • Required Skills: 3-5 years of Alternative Investment audit experience from BIG 4 or current due diligence experience from a FOF or Hedge Fund
  • Compensation: Base $90K-$110K before bonus

Apply: If you meet the required experience and skills for this position and would like to apply please send your resume and relevant background details to Ross Weil at RWeil@BOCStaffing.com

Finance Accounting Job Analyst & Due Diligence PositionsOpen Position #2: Senior Retail Analyst – The Senior Retail Analyst will be working with the senior team to design and build our research product in retail and restaurants.

This is a unique opportunity to help craft a sector and its associated offerings. We have access to and are currently vetting several proprietary databases and information sources that have proven extremely valuable in providing transparency into the fundamental drivers for many companies in the sector. Our highly differentiated approach, which triangulates across multiple proprietary data sets and other information, will allow our Retail team to provide insight that no other firm can match.

  • Responsibilities: Working with research and development and business development teams to craft a world-class product offering. Building out a research team for the retail sector, including hiring associates. Aggressively marketing the research product, including traveling regularly with Sales for client and prospect visits, talking intermittently to printed press and TV, and overseeing periodic industry expert dinners with clients. Working with the Director of Business Development to identify new unique proprietary sources of data in the Technology space that will allow us to triangulate our research and expand our coverage
  • Requirements: Minimum of 3 years covering retail and/or restaurant names on either the buy-side or the sell-side. Comfort with and passion for data. Outstanding verbal and communication skills. Sales-oriented mentality. Bachelor’s degree (MBA/CFA and/or advanced engineering degree preferable). Outstanding academic record from top institution(s). Minimum 4 years’ experience either on the buy-side or the sell-side or possibly from the industry for a particularly outstanding candidate.

Apply: If you meet the required experience and skills for this position and would like to apply please send your resume and relevant background details to Eric Krause at ersusgroup@comcast.net

Please email Richard@HedgeFundGroup.org to add your open position here now.

Not interested in these positions but interested in looking at other open hedge fund jobs? Please see HedgeFundBlogger.com’s Hedge Fund Job Listings page.

- Richard

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Top 10 Most Influential Hedge Fund Leaders in 2008

admin | Wednesday, February 27th, 2008 | No Comments »

Top 10 Hedge Fund Leaders

Who are the most powerful hedge fund professionals in the industry?

Top 10 Most Influential Hedge Fund ProfessionalsI am currently my 1st annual poll to come up with a list of the top 10 most influential professionals within the hedge fund industry.

These could be hedge fund managers, regulatory professionals, consultants, fund of hedge fund leaders, etc. Please send me your suggestions on who you think should be on this top 10 list and I’ll re-publish this post next quarter with the results of votes I receive through this hedge fund blog, my hedge fund forum (HedgeFundMessageBoard.com) and the Hedge Fund Group (HFG).

To nominate or vote for your top 10 selections please send an email to Richard@RichardCWilson.com with your list of names and 1 sentence on why you think they deserve to be included within the list. (and yes it is poor form to nominate yourself)

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- Richard

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Institutional Investors Affected by Microsofts Bid for Yahoo

admin | Tuesday, February 19th, 2008 | No Comments »

MSFT > YHOO

Institutional Investors Affected by Microsofts Bid for Yahoo

Institutional Investors Affected by Microsofts Bid for YahooI did an interview today with an editor from the E-Commerce Times, who was writing up a piece on how some institutional investors including hedge funds could be hurt by an ongoing battle by Microsoft to take over Yahoo.

I never like to talk about individual securities within my hedge fund blog but this case the conversation related more to the realities of some arbitrage investment strategies than anything else. Before you build large positions within two leaders within an industry it is routine to consider any inter-firm or sector risk created by your choice of securities.

“Microsoft may have confidence that some number of institutional shareholders with a stake in Yahoo want the bid to succeed but not at a higher price,” Greg Sterling, founder of Sterling Market Intelligence, told the E-Commerce Times.

“Losing money on both sides was the risk they took while building meaningful positions within both of those securities,” he told the E-Commerce Times. “Rumors of Google or Microsoft buying Yahoo have been around for years and, if those were missed, most people in the industry sense how competitive it is and how quickly both Google and Microsoft are dishing out cash for more intellectual property and market share on the Web.”

Read the full story here.

- Richard

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Top 10 Hedge Fund Trades of 2007

admin | Wednesday, January 9th, 2008 | No Comments »


Top 10 Hedge Fund Trades

Hedge Fund Trades Top 10 Hedge Fund Trades of 2007
The top 10 Hedge Fund Trades of 2007 as written up by Dow Jones.

Hedge Fund Trade #1: Freeport McMoran Copper & Gold
Hedge Fund Manager: Atticus ManagementProfit: $800 million

The New York-based hedge fund hit the mother lode for the second year in the row, scoring paper gains of at least $800 million through its holding in the mining giant.

Hedge Fund Trade #2: MBIA Inc., Ambac Financial
Hedge Fund Manager: Pershing Square Capital ManagementProfit: $500+ million

William Ackman’s longtime gamble that bond insurance companies would run into trouble finally paid off this year as mortgage loans to high-risk borrowers started going bad and credit markets stumbled.

Hedge Fund Trade #3: Foster Wheeler
Hedge Fund Manager: Tontine PartnersProfit: $426 million

Sage investments in engineering and construction companies helped cushion the Greenwich, Conn.-based firm’s losses in finance and housing.

Hedge Fund Trade #4: Union Pacific, Other U.S. Railroads

Hedge Fund Manager: Atticus ManagementProfit: $387 million

A counterintuitive bet in a sector that typically slows down as aneconomic cycle peaks paid off handsomely for Timothy Barakett’s shop. On top of paper and actual gains, Atticus made more than $20 million in dividend earnings on its railroad holdings.
Hedge Fund Trade#5: First Solar
Hedge Fund Manager: Maverick CapitalProfit: $350+ million
After a stormy 2006, Maverick rebounded in 2007 thanks to its investments in solar and alternative energy. First Solar was one of the sector’s hottest performers.

Hedge Fund Trade #6: Crown Castle International, American Tower
Hedge Fund Manager: Glenview Capital ManagementProfit: $319 million
Larry Robbins’ New York-based hedge fund got all the right signals when it targeted the wireless towers sector. The trades crowned a successful year that saw the firm up 24%.

Hedge Fund Trade #7: CF Industries
Hedge Fund Manager: Dawson-Herman Capital ManagementProfit: $160 million
Ethanol companies suffered this year, but taking a long view of the biofuels sector helped the New York-based firm cultivate a neat return from the fertilizer company.

Hedge Fund Trade #8: Onyx Pharmaceuticals
Hedge Fund Manager: Meditor Capital ManagementProfit: $155 million
Having booked some profits in Onyx at the beginning of the year, the UK-based firm held on to the company’s shares to benefit from a further jump when its cancer drug beat analysts’ estimates.

Hedge Fund Trade #9: Chipotle Mexican Grill
Hedge Fund Manager: Tremblant Capital GroupProfit: $95 million
When other firms were asking for the check, Brett Barakett went back for seconds in this fast-food chain that promises healthy fare and delivered a healthy profit for the $4 billion-plus firm.

Hedge Fund Trade #10: United Therapeutics Corp.
Hedge Fund Manager: Shunway Capital PartnersProfit: $73 million

The New York-based firm gradually increased its stake in United Therapuetics during the year, gaining big-time on good news about the company’s pulmonary hypertension drug.
Read more articles like this within the Hedge Fund Performance Category of this hedge fund blog.

- Richard

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Hedge Fund Straight Talk – Why Are They Called Hedge Funds?

admin | Tuesday, September 5th, 2006 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Straight Talk

Hedge Fund Straight Talk Question

 Hedge Fund Straight Talk   Why Are They Called Hedge Funds?Many people are starting to ask why hedge funds are still called hedge funds if they sometimes appear to be banks, private trading groups or private equity firms. I think the name will stick around but here’s an article arguing that it should be done away with:

It is time to lay hedge funds to rest. Not the vehicles themselves, that is, but the name.

Hedge funds get blamed for all manner of ills, including the current crisis in financial markets. They are a convenient scapegoat – partly through their own determination to cloak their activities in secrecy and operate in a kind of nether world that few people outside select financial circles are privy to or understand.

They may have contributed to the crisis, although they undoubtedly did not cause it. And they were definitely playing the leverage game that has been a big part of the problem, making use of cheap credit to gear returns. But the real point is that the way hedge funds seek to make money is fast becoming the preferred investment approach for mainstream investors.

There has been talk of convergence between the hedge fund industry and traditional asset management for some time. Many traditional managers now run their own hedge funds or have loosened the constraints on mutual fund managers so they can use some of the same tools as hedge funds. Hedge fund managers, meanwhile, have made inroads into the institutional investor landscape and widened their range too.

But some industry practitioners argue there is still a fundamental difference of approach in terms of investment philosophy and risk management. Hedge fund managers are active managers of risk, while the traditional industry manages risk relative to a benchmark, leaving it fully exposed to boom and bust cycles. That is largely the difference between absolute return and relative return investment approaches. Read more…

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Tags: Hedge Fund Straight Talk, Hedge Fund Names, Hedge Fund Industry Names, asset management, hedge fund managers, hedge fund trends, hedge fund questions


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