Posts Tagged ‘holdings’

Secondary Hedge Fund Market

admin | Monday, September 28th, 2009 | No Comments »

Secondary Hedge Fund Market

Secondary Hedge Fund Market Activity Increases

SuperStock 1560R 2052075 Secondary Hedge Fund Market

The secondary hedge fund market has grown while other areas of the hedge fund industry have contracted during the financial crisis.   The secondary hedge fund market gives investors the opportunity to sell stakes in funds with long lockup periods or limits for redemptions as well as providing access to funds not currently accepting new investors.  The increase in secondary market activity is a result of managers trying to keep investors with long lock up periods and limiting redemptions.  Investors responded by turning to the secondary market to sell their stakes, usually at a heavy loss.

Hedgebay, a leading secondary market player that’s been in the business for a decade, helped investors buy and sell stakes representing roughly $1 billion in assets under management last year. The firm has completed more deals so far in 2009 than in all of last year.

Citco, a large banking and custody firm, has offered similar services for many years, while Swiss bank Credit Suisse (CS) and NYPPEX are also active in the market. But a slew of new rivals have entered this year, including CogentMarkets, SecondMarket, 2n20.com and the largest interdealer brokers ICAP and Tullett Prebon PLC (TLPR.LN).

So many firms have got into the nascent business that there may not be enough action for everyone to survive.  “A lot of players will show up when there’s money to be made,” said Bradley Alford, head of Atlanta-based Alpha Capital Management LLC. “There are all kinds of secondary hedge fund players now and not enough supply out there.”  Source

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Hedge Funds Terms and Fees

admin | Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009 | No Comments »

Hedge Funds Terms and Fees

Hedge Funds Resist Push to Change Terms and Fees

tug of war Hedge Funds Terms and Fees

Hedge funds were expected to cave on demands by investors to lower fees and make it easier for investors to redeem their investment, but it seems that hedge funds have resisted the push.  As hedge funds have performed very well so far in 2009 managers feel less pressure than they once did to keep investors.

Research from Olympia Capital Management found that only a small portion of 2,659 funds reduced the time between redemption dates or reduced the lock-up period on investors’ capital.  Also, hedge fund fees have not changed significantly, despite predictions of lowered fees.  Performance has been far better than last year and the hedge funds that survived 2008 are larger and were able to perform well even in the financial crisis so they have greater leverage in negotiating terms.

Funds may also be holding back on offering features that can become a double-edged sword in a crisis. Investors like buying funds that give them the option to redeem at frequent intervals. But it can also make them the first port of call for investors that can’t get their money out elsewhere, even when a fund is posting strong returns.

Dozens, if not hundreds, of hedge funds slammed down “gates” last year to prevent investors from pulling money. On top of liquidity terms that can range from one month to three years, hedge funds nearly always have a right in their contracts with investors to put a gate down on part or all of their capital to avoid being forced to sell assets at inopportune times.

Long periods between redemption dealing dates can make sense for funds that invest in illiquid assets such as distressed debt, corporate loans, private equity or penny stocks. But even funds purportedly investing only in widely-traded stocks regularly lock up investors’ money for a year or more and then only offer to return it on a quarterly basis.   Source

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Martin Curie Hedge Funds

admin | Thursday, September 17th, 2009 | No Comments »

Martin Curie Hedge Funds

Martin Curie: Hedge Fund Inflows at Pre-Crisis Levels

Martin Currie Martin Curie Hedge FundsGood news at Martin Currie, the firm says its clients are investing their money in its hedge funds at levels not seen since before the financial crisis of the past 2 years. Martin Currie, which manages $1.2 billlion, had seen massive outflows totaling $300 billion from October to June; but impressive returns by many hedge funds in 2009 have brought back investors.

Martin Currie’s Japan hedge fund rose 0.8 percent last year and has gained 15 percent so far this year, according to documents obtained by Reuters.

Its Global Resources fund fell 10.2 percent last year and has risen 8.6 percent this year, while its China fund fell 14.4 percent last year and is up 18.6 percent so far this year.

Sowerby said Martin Currie saw net flows turn positive in February and said investors who had pulled out assets last year were returning to hedge funds.

The firm is also winning new business from institutions looking for more control and visibility from portfolios via so-called managed accounts — separate accounts where investors own the assets rather than units in a fund and can sell assets when they wish.

Sowerby said around 50 percent of Martin Currie’s hedge fund assets were held via managed accounts, and he expects this proportion to grow. Source

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13 F Analysis Of DE Shaw & Co

admin | Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 | No Comments »

DE SHAW & CO

de shaw 13 F Analysis Of DE Shaw & Co
Below please find a 13F analysis report for DE Shaw & Co for Q1 2009. 13F analyses are reports that fund managers with over $100M are required to submit to the SEC, they are publicly available and these reports provide us with some insights on what some hedge fund managers have been investing in.

Founded in 1988, the D. E. Shaw group is a global investment and technology development firm with approximately $35 billion in aggregate investment capital and offices in North America, Europe, and Asia.

• (ABC) Amerisourcebergen Corp
• (ABII) Abraxis Bioscience
• (APC) Anadarco Petroleum Group
• (APOL) Apollo Group
• (BIIB) Biogen Idec
• (DGX) Quest Diagonistics
• (ENDP) Endo Pharmacueticals holdings
• (FCX) Freeport MCmoran Copper & Gold
• (INTC) Intel Corp
• (MYL) Mylan Laboratories
• (OC) Owens Corning
• (ORCL) Oracle Corp
• (PFE) Pfizer
• (VRTX) Vertex Pharmacueticals
• (WCRX) Warner Chilcott Ltd

 13 F Analysis Of DE Shaw & CoUsing the TickerSpy portfolio analysis tool the graph to the left was created showing the approximate equity performance for DE Shaw & Co over the previous six months. According to this analysis DE Shaw & Co ‘s equity picks have been underperforming against the S & P 500 recently.

performancelegend 13 F Analysis Of DE Shaw & Co

The top 5 highest performing equities which for DE Shaw & Co held as of this 13F filing include (OC), (ORCL), (DGX), (VRTX) and (WCRX)

Untitled24 13 F Analysis Of DE Shaw & CoAccording to AlpaClone data on for DE Shaw & Co 20% of their equity portfolio is invested within the Services sector and 20% in Health Care. The total equity value of for DE Shaw & Co is 16B+, their total number of reported holdings is 2351, and over 13.1% of the market value of this portfolio is represented within the top 10 holdings.

For more information on for DE Shaw & Co please see the HedgeFundBlogger.com. Hedge Fund Tracker Profile on for DE Shaw & Co by clicking here.

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Top Hedge Fund Holdings | What are They Buying?

admin | Monday, September 29th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Holdings

Top Hedge Fund Holdings Research

Top Hedge Fund HoldingsAs of July 1st 2008, it appears that hedge funds poured money into the technology and service sectors. According to TickerSpy.com, the 20 most tracked hedge funds on the site had 27.9% of all holdings within those two sectors. The quarter-over-quarter results presented by TickerSpy.com showed holdings and changes in holdings as of July 1st 2008, as compared to the quarter earlier. These holdings are based on TickerSpy’s data, which shows the top 15 holdings of each hedge fund quarter-over-quarter.

Total equity holdings of the 20 most tracked hedge funds amassed to $91.4 billion dollars, up from the previous quarter by $9.76 billion or 12%. New positions in equities totaled $9.54 billion, while existing positions saw a net inflow of just $219 million (net inflow: all money flowing into existing positions less all money flowing out of existing positions).

Companies or indices that saw the largest net inflows were Yahoo! and Philip Morris, with the SPY (SPDR tracking index for the S&P 500) and Google seeing the largest net outflows. The top eight in each category were (in millions):

Hedge Fund Holdings 1 Top Hedge Fund Holdings | What are They Buying?
Of the over 200 top holdings of hedge funds, nearly $25.5 billion or 27.9% were in either the technology or services sector. Which stocks? Below is a chart detailing the top 25 holdings by dollar amount that were seen in the portfolios, as well as a pie chart showing the top twelve stocks that made up over one-third of total fund holdings.

Hedge Fund Holdings 2 Top Hedge Fund Holdings | What are They Buying?
Hedge Fund Holdings 3 Top Hedge Fund Holdings | What are They Buying?However, some companies such as Icahn Enterprise are held by only one fund (Icahn Associates) and the large dollar amount slightly skews the accuracy of the holding data. So I also compiled the 14 most widely held securities, determined by the number of funds that held them, as well as the dollar amount of the holdings.

Hedge Fund Holdings 4 Top Hedge Fund Holdings | What are They Buying?
To review our Hedge Fund Tracker research please click here. To review our 13F Hedge Fund Securities Analysis work please click here.

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Securities discussed above include: Icahn Enterprise (IEP), ABB Ltd (ABB), AK Steel Holding (AKS), Alpha Natural Resources (ANR), Apple Inc (AAPL), AT&T (T), Bank of America (BAC), Calpine Corporation (CPN), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF), Conoco Philips (COP), Exxon Mobil (XOM), Fairchild Semiconductor International (FCS), General Electric (GE), Google (GOOG), Hess Corp (HES), iShares Russell 2000 (IWM), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), MasterCard (MA), Microsoft (MSFT), Motorola (MOT), Occidental Petroleum (OXY), Peabody Energy (BTU), Pfizer (PFE), Potash (POT), Qualcomm (QCOM), Research in Motion (RIMM), SPDR Trust (SPY), Target Corporation (TGT), Wal-Mart Stores (WMT), Weatherford International (WFT), Yahoo! (YHOO)

Hedge Fund 13F Analysis Tool

admin | Monday, September 22nd, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund 13F Analysis Tool

Investment SecuritiesThis Hedge Fund Holdings Tool is being developed to provide insight which investment securities hedge funds are holding. This is done using publicly available 13F and other filings. All of this information is looking back in time and what hedge funds have disclosed as holding, by nature it is a historical look at holdings and these are not in any way a recommendation for or claim of support for any individual security, hedge fund manager or investing strategy.

Please check here next week for some further analysis on specific holdings of leading hedge funds.

Q1 2009



Q2 & Q3 2008

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Blue Ridge Capital Hedge Fund | John A. Griffin Holdings Analysis | New York

admin | Monday, September 22nd, 2008 | No Comments »

Blue Ridge Capital

Blue Ridge Capital | John A. Griffin Holdings Analysis

Blue Ridge Capital Hedge Fund | John A. GriffinThis post is being written as part of my Investment Securities Tool which analyzes the holdings of hedge fund managers.

Blue Ridge Capital is ran by John A. Griffin. Griffin is similar to Steve Mandel at Lone Pine Capital and Lee Ainslie at Maverick Capital in that they all are ‘Tiger Cubs’ (a.k.a. pupils of Julian Robertson while at Tiger Management). Griffin though, is more well known because he was Julian Robertson’s right hand man. So, needless to say, the dude knows his stuff. Blue Ridge seeks absolute returns by investing in companies who dominate their industries and shorting the companies who have fundamental problems. And, right off the bat that presents us with a bit of a problem in terms of analyzing 13F’s. 13F’s don’t show short positions, they show long positions (unless the firm is short through puts, which we *can* see). So, the inherent problem with analyzing Blue Ridge (or any fund for that matter) is that we can’t see the other side of their portfolio. But, this is increasingly important for Blue Ridge simply due to Griffin’s investment strategy and the fact that his long positions could in essence only represent half of the portfolio. Now, I use that loosely because there’s no way for me to know exactly how much of his portfolio is short. But, I do know that both Griffin at Blue Ridge and Lee Ainslie over at Maverick Capital (research on him coming later this week) like to effectively hedge with a balance of both long and short positions (like a TRUE hedge fund… not like some of these crazy funds these days with no true hedging). Here’s the thing: they don’t do pairs trades, so don’t classify it as that. In the past, I remember specifically being told by representatives at Maverick that they don’t pairs trade, even though a respective long and short could be in the same sector or sub-sector. So, make that distinction clear. But, we’ll work with what we’ve got (and believe me, it’s still a lot of solid info).

Before beginning, I would like to give a special shoutout to Alex Prywes for helping me with the daunting task of analyzing 13F filings. Alex has helped gather and sort through the data of numerous hedge funds (including the one below). Thanks to Alex’s help, we can now cover even more funds. And, on that note…. onto the 13F!

The following are Blue Ridge Capital’s current holdings as of June 30th 2008, as released in their most recent 13F filing with the SEC. The positions in this most recent 13F were compared to last quarter’s 13F and here are the changes made to their portfolio:

New Positions:
Anadarko Petroleum (APC): 2,335,000 shares. This position is 4.29% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Visa Inc (V): 1,720,000 shares. 3.43% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Vulcan materials: 1,500,000 shares. 2.20% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Rowan Cos (RDC): 1,800,000 shares. 2.06% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Amazon (AMZN): 940,000 shares. 1.69% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Goodrich Petroleum (GDP): 650,000 shares. 1.32% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Countrywide Financial: 1,433,000 shares. 0.15% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Bare Escentuals (BARE): 281,500 shares. 0.13% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.
Nutrisystem (NTRI): 233,000 shares. 0.08% of Blue Ridge’s portfolio.

Added to:
Federal National Mortgage (FNM): Increased position by 1104%. Position is now 2.77% of their portfolio.
Greenlight Capital Re Ltd (GLRE): Increased position by 76.5%. Position is now 0.20% of their portfolio.
Wyeth (WYE): Increased position by 62.86%. Position is now 6.71% of their portfolio.
Apple (AAPL): Increased position by 15.65%. Position is now 5.46% of their portfolio.
Grupo Televisa (TV): Increased position by 11.83%. Position is now 4.46% of their portfolio.
Echostar (SATS): Increased position by 9.97%. Position is now 1.61% of their portfolio.
Google (GOOG): Increased position by 6.09%. Position is now 6.75% of their portfolio.
Broadrige Financial (BR): Increased position by 0.84%. Position is now 3.71% of their portfolio.


Reduced Positions:
American Express (AXP): Reduced position by 23.98%. Position is now 6.05% of their portfolio.
Netflix (NFLX): Reduced position by 28.6%. Position is now 0.93% of their portfolio.
Walmart (WMT): Reduced position by 35.75%. Position is now 2.54% of their portfolio.
First Marblehead (FMD): Reduced position by 36.64%. Position is now 0.05% of their portfolio.
Elong Inc (LONG): Reduced position by 51.82%. Position is now 0.02% of their portfolio.
Grupo Aeroportuario Del Pacifico (PAC): Reduced position by 54.83%. Position is now 1.16% of their portfolio.
Crocs (CROX): Reduced position by 66.06%. Position is now 0.14% of their portfolio.


Removed Positions (Positions Blue Ridge sold out of completely):
America Movil (AMX)
Burlington Northern (BNI)
Coach (COH)
Corus Bankshares (CORS)
Fidelity National Information (FIS)
First American Corp California (FAF)
Formfactor (FORM)
Office Depot (ODP)
SLM Corp (SLM)
Smurfit Stone Container (SSCC)
St Joe Co (JOE)
Starbucks (SBUX)
WebMD Health (WBMD)


Positions with no change:
Covanta (CVA). Position is 5.27% of their portfolio.
Millipore (MIL). Position is 4.49% of their portfolio.
Charles Schwab (SCHW). Position is 4.32% of their portfolio.
Discovery Holding Co (DISCA). Position is 3.89% of their portfolio.
Martin Marietta Materials (MLM). Position is 3.41% of their portfolio.
Target (TGT). Position is 3.11% of their portfolio.
Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO). Position is 2.90% of their portfolio.
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A). Position is 2.49% of their portfolio.
Fomento Economico Mexicano (FMX). Position is 2.31% of their portfolio.
Packaging Corp of America (PKG). Position is 2.18% of their portfolio.
Compton Petroleum Corp (CMZ). Position is 2.08% of their portfolio.
Research in Motion (RIMM). Position is 1.86% of their portfolio.
Eagle Materials (EXP). Position is 1.22% of their portfolio.
Fairfax Financial Holdings (FFH). Position is 1.18% of their portfolio.
American Express (AXP) Calls. Position is 0.64% of their portfolio.
MBIA (MBI). Position is 0.27% of their portfolio.
Federal Home Loan Mortgage (FRE). Position is 0.20% of their portfolio.
Evergreen Energy (EEE). Position is 0.12% of their portfolio.
Gold Reserve Inc (GRZ). Position is 0.10% of their portfolio.
Washington Mutual (WM) Puts. Position is 0.02% of their portfolio.
Perfect World Co (PWRD). Position is 0.01% of their portfolio.
Indymac Bancorp (IDMC). Position is 0.01% of their portfolio.


Top 10 holdings by % of portfolio:
1. Google (GOOG). 6.75% of the portfolio
2. Wyeth (WYE). 6.71% of the portfolio
3. American Express (AXP). 6.05% of the portfolio
4. Apple (AAPL). 5.46% of the portfolio
5. Covanta (CVA). 5.27% of the portfolio
6. Millipore (MIL). 4.49% of the portfolio
7. Grupo Televisa (TV). 4.46% of the portfolio
8. Charles Schwab (SCHW). 4.32% of the portfolio
9. Anadarko Petroleum (APC). 4.29% of the portfolio
10. Discovery Holding Co (DISCA). 3.89% of the portfolio

————————————–

Breakdown: First thing I noticed was Blue Ridge’s addition of Anadarko Petroleum (APC). They added it in mass, bringing it up to the fund’s 9th largest holding. Although I’ve seen many hedge funds adding this name over the past 2 quarters, do keep in mind that this filing was as of June 30th, 2008. Since then, natural gas prices, oil prices, and pretty much any stock in those sectors have all plummeted. But, it is worth noting that I have seen this name pop up on 13F filings much more frequently recently. And, Blue Ridge did make quite a hefty purchase. We’ll have to wait until next quarter to see whether it was a trade or an investment. In the past, when Griffin has brought a position up to a top 10 holding in one quarter, he has held onto the position. So, time to play the waiting game on that one. Also, he added quite a large new position in Visa (V), bringing it up to 3.43% of the portfolio after not even holding a position last go-round (leaving it just shy of being a top 10 holding).

Next, I noticed he was adding more shares of Wyeth (WYE). This name was already a large fund holding, and he added to his position by 62%, bringing it up to the fund’s 2nd largest holding. Recently, there has definitiely been a rotation into any and all stocks relating to healthcare. This is no exception. Also worth noting is Griffin’s addition to his already large Apple (AAPL) position. He continues to add to this name and appears to be assembling a solid core position over time.

Even though Griffin made some purchases, he was definitely busier on the selling side of things. And, that makes me even more curious than usual as to what short positions he holds. But, because hedge funds are not required to disclose short positions in their 13F filings (except for Put positions), we are left in the dark on that one. But, anyways, onto the sales. Griffin was selling some consumer names in Netflix (NFLX) and Walmart (WMT). He only sold 20-30% of his positions there so it could just be some profit taking or position size reducing… nothing too major going on. We’ll keep an eye on it next quarter and see if he continues to sell those names. Two quarters ago, as I detailed in my Blue Ridge analysis, we saw that Griffin was starting to sell Coach (COH), Formfactor (FORM), and Smurfit Stone (SSCC). This past quarter, he continued that trend, selling off all the remaining shares in those companies. Additionally, he sold off 66% of his Crocs (CROX) position, which I’m sure was a source of pain for him, given how those shares have plummeted in value over time. Next quarter, it will be interesting to see whether or not he sells off the ‘cheap consumer’ plays such as Walmart (WMT) and Target (TGT).

Griffin also completely removed America Movil (AMX) from Blue Ridge’s portfolio. This is interesting, as this is the 2nd hedge fund so far we’ve seen completely sell out of this name. (Remember that AMX used to be one of the most common holdings amongst the various hedge funds I track). The stock has been in a downward spiral for numerous months and it appears that numerous hedge funds were the ones responsible for the exodus. In the coming week, we’ll see what Griffin’s ‘Tiger Cub’ buddies were up to with their respective AMX positions as well.

Also worth pointing out is that Griffin quickly sold out of Burlington Northern (BNI) completely. In the last 13F filing, we found out he had just added BNI as a new position. And, this time around, we find out that he has quickly sold out. This struck me as somewhat odd, just because practically all hedge funds I track have some sort of exposure to the rails. Maybe Griffin was just locking in some quick profits, or maybe there was something that turned him away from the name. Interesting move, nonetheless. Griffin also had a short stay in Office Depot (ODP). He sold completely out of his position this past quarter, having only added it as a new position in the last 13F filing.

Lastly, I just wanted to point out some of the larger positions that Blue Ridge continues to hold in their portfolio: Millipore (MIL), Covanta (CVA), Grupo Televisa (TV), and Charles Schwab (SCHW). These positions have been top 10 holdings for Blue Ridge for numerous quarters now and are definitely worth a look as they appear to be longer term plays for Griffin.

Blue Ridge Capital’s most interesting/peculiar move(s)?
Increasing their stake in Fannie Mae (FNM) by over 1100%, bringing it up to 2.77% of the portfolio. (Keep in mind that these positions were as of June 30th, 2008). I only bring this up due to the recent developments in FNM and FRE. Whether it be for a trade or for an investment, John Griffin was definitely up to something here and we can only speculate as to what he’s been doing with this position in the past month and a half.

You can view Blue Ridge Capital’s most recent 13F as filed with the SEC here.

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American Capital | Private Equity

admin | Tuesday, August 28th, 2007 | No Comments »

American Capital

American Capital | Private Equity Profile

The following piece on American Capital is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry. American Capital (ACAS) is a publicly-listed private equity firm managing $11 billion in capital resources.

Resource #1: Another addition to the graveyard of busted mergers: business development company American Capital Strategies (ACAS) has terminated its agreement to buy Merisel (MSEL.PK) under the “material adverse change” clause that has become a standard excuse for buyer’s remorse. After the exchange of multiple letters between the two firms, Merisel stock reacted predictably with a steep drop and now has a market capitalization below its net cash, despite generating positive earnings and cash flow in 2007.

Merisel started as a hardware retailer and sold its last IT-related business among controversy in 2004. It entered the visual communications business in 2005 and has since rolled-up various specialty print, graphics and imaging firms. Its sudden urge to merge is triggered by the upcoming liquidation of its principal shareholder, private equity fund Stonington Partners, L.P., owner of 60% of Merisel’s shares. (The current edition of Barron’s claims incorrectly that ACAS owns 60%. Rather, ACAS had to report control over 60% in its 13D because Stonington agreed to vote its shares in favor of the ACAS merger.) Source

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Terra Firma Capital Partners

admin | Tuesday, August 28th, 2007 | No Comments »

Terra Firma Capital Partners

Terra Firma Capital Partners | Private Equity Profile

terra firma capital markets Terra Firma Capital PartnersThe following piece on Terra Firma Capital Partners is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry. Terra Firma Capital Partners is a European private equity firm led and founded by Guy Hands. Since its creation in 2002 to 2007, Terra Firma has invested an estimated €11 billion (almost $16 million) including a high-profile 40% stake in EMI Warner Music Group and a smaller share of Time Warner.

Resource #1: Terra Firma Capital Partners Completes First U.S. Deal
(8.28.09)Hands’ buyout firm, Terra Firma Capital Partners, has just cut its first U.S. deal. The firm, perhaps best-known for buying music publisher EMI, has agreed to a 350 million acquisition of Everpower Wind Holdings, a New York developer of wind farms.

The deal is a bold move, as Terra Firma has no U.S. office, although a number of its investors are based in the U.S., people close to the private-equity firm said. But Terra didn’t come to these shores empty handed.

EverPower, and its venture-capital banker Good Energies, is advised by Barclays Capital, the investment-banking arm of the U.K.’s Barclays Bank. BarCap has known Terra Firma in Europe for years, and the U.K. bank’s presence in the U.S. has taken off since it acquired assets from bankrupt rival Lehman Brothers last year. (Terra Firma was advised by Morgan Stanley and sector specialist Climate Change Capital.) Source

Resource #2: Terra Firma Injects 28 Million Pounds into EMI

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Talos Partners

admin | Tuesday, August 28th, 2007 | No Comments »

Talos Partners

Talos Partners | Private Equity Profile

The following piece on New York-based Talos Partners is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry.

Resource #1: Talos Partners Buys 4.5% Stake in Spanish Media Company

On top of the ten million shares that Talos has purchased, it has also acquired a warrant for up to one million more shares at €6 each. PRISA operates in the fields of education, information and entertainment through via various media formats.

Robert Brazell, Talos’ chairman who has been openly critical of traditional media companies in books and articles, said, “PRISA is the first intelligent, diversified, customer-centric, device agnostic, media group I have seen in ten years. PRISA has successfully transitioned in the new media model and will continue to dominate the modern Spanish-speaking media for the next 20 years.

“This PRISA partnership has moved all over our firm during the past few months,” added Brazell. “It began as a strategic partnership, then migrated to our structured lending people, and finally ended up with our capital group. When our team presented the in-store media partnership, we became more interested in PRISA’s core business. The more we drilled down past vision into technology and asset integration, the more we wanted to own part of this business.” Source

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InterMedia Partners

admin | Sunday, August 26th, 2007 | No Comments »

InterMedia Partners

InterMedia Partners | Private Equity Profile

The following piece on Brookstone Partners is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry.

Resource #1: Vibe Media Group, publisher of hip-hop magazine Vibe, shut down in June, as the poor economy led to declining advertising revenue. Vibe has since been acquired for an undisclosed price by InterMedia Partners, a private equity firm.

InterMedia said it plans to resume publication of Vibe in November as a quarterly magazine. The operations of Vibe are to be integrated with those of Uptown, another urban lifestyle magazine InterMedia owns. Publishing veteran Jermaine Hall has been named as the new editor-in-chief of Vibe, and the new business will be known as the Vibe Lifestyle Network. Source

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Morgan Stanley Private Equity

admin | Sunday, August 26th, 2007 | No Comments »

Morgan Stanley Private Equity

Morgan Stanley Private Equity | Private Equity Profile

The following piece on Morgan Stanley Private Equity is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry.

Resource #1: Morgan Stanley Private Equity Asia Bids to De-List Sihuan

Morgan Stanley Private Equity Asia has made an offer to de-list Sihuan Pharmaceutical through MSPE Asia’s investment firm China Pharma, according to reports.

The takeover bid would be for S$0.975 per share, a deal valuing Sihuan at S$458m ($318m). MSPE Asia is valuing the cardiocerebral vascular drug maker at a premium versus its current market cap of around S$360m ($250m).

China Pharma is an investment holding company backed by MSPE Asia and controlling shareholders of Sihuan, including the company’s CEO Che Fengsheng. Source

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Tags: Morgan Stanley Private Equity, Asia, holdings, investments, investors, limited partners, morgan stanley private equity investment, morgan stanley buyout, morgan stanley capital

Icon Private Equity

admin | Sunday, August 26th, 2007 | No Comments »

Icon Private Equity

Icon Private Equity | Private Equity Profile

The following piece on Icon Private Equity is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry.

Resource #1: Icon Private Equity Teams With ZTE Corp. to Build Network

ZTE Corporation (“ZTE” – H share stock code: 00763.HK / A share stock code: 000063.SZ), a leading global provider of telecommunications equipment and network solutions, today announced that it has collaborated with Icon Private Equity to build a 3.5 GHz WiMAX network for Icon PE’s portfolio company, Ukraine High Technologies (UHT) in Ukraine. Upon the network completion by the 4th quarter 2009, the WiMAX system will bring UHT subscribers unparalleled experience to access high-speed wireless broadband services.

Under this phase one exclusive contract agreement with UHT, ZTE is providing technical expertise and solutions to help construct a WiMAX network that covers Ukraine’s capital city Kiev and the surrounding areas. At the same time, ZTE will also supply a wide range of advanced WiMAX solutions including more than 250 WiMAX base stations, 6,000 WiMAX terminal products and core network equipment to support the network. Source

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Warburg Pincus LLC

admin | Saturday, August 25th, 2007 | No Comments »

Warburg Pincus

Warburg Pincus LLC | Private Equity Profile

homeHdr logo Warburg Pincus LLCThe following piece on Warburg Pincus is being published as part of our Private Equity Tracker Tool, our daily effort to track private equity firms in the industry.

Resource #1: Warburg Pincus is completely exiting its three year old investment in Dainik Bhaskar group flagship DB Corp.

The PE firm will sell out its 7% stake in the company as a part of the initial public offer of DB Corp. DB Corp is coming with an issue of 24.78 million shares of which 12 million shares are on offer for sale from Cliffrose, an investment arm of Warburg.

According to VCCircle estimates the cost of investment for Warburg is around Rs 125/share after taking into account changes in capital structure including bonus issue. Source

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Millennium Partners Hedge Fund | Fund Notes

admin | Wednesday, May 9th, 2007 | No Comments »

Millennium Partners Hedge Fund

Millennium Partners & Israel Englander

Millennium Partners Hedge FundThe following piece on Millennium Partners 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.

__________________________

Resource #1 (6.22.09) Millennium Management veteran Peter Lupoff has founded his own hedge fund firm and plans to launch its maiden offering in August with $100 million.

Lupoff has left Millennium to set up San Francisco-based Tiburon Capital Management, Bloomberg News reports. The new firm will focus on Lupoff’s speciality, distressed debt, investing in companies in or near default, as well as those involved in legal battle, spinoffs or exchange offers. source

Resource #2: (4.1.09) Millennium Management LLC, the hedge fund manager founded by Israel Englander, has hired more than 15 people in Asia since early December, expanding as banks and funds slash jobs, said a person briefed by the company.

Recent hires by the New York-based firm include Singapore- based portfolio managers James Sullivan, David Bijaoui and Thierry Choffel, the person said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. Tripp Kyle, a New York-based external spokesman, declined to comment on behalf of Millennium.

Millennium, which oversees $11.5 billion of assets, is expanding its team as rivals such as Citadel Investment Group LLC, Concordia Advisors LLC, Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC, Ramius LLC and Cheyne Capital Management (UK) LLP reduced jobs or closed offices in Asia to control costs and focus on their largest markets.

“Many firms that hired lots of staff last year with bullish expectations have seen assets under management decline and are having to let staff go,” said Mark Williams, a senior analyst at fund of funds manager Alphatraxx (H.K.) Ltd. “It’s a good time for managers with stable or growing assets under management to pick up talent.” source

Resource #3: (2.2.09) New York-based Logik Asset Management recently launched a multi-strategy hedge fund to invest in event driven, merger arbitrage and special purpose acquisition corporations (SPACs).

The Logik Event Fund began trading in September and returned 4% in its first quarter and over 5% in January.

The fund is the brainchild of Douglas Schultz and Daniel Hess, formerly of Soros Fund Management and Millennium Partners, respectively. In early 2007, the pair partnered with Coast Asset Management to manage a portion of an in-house multi-strategy fund. They also managed a dedicated event driven fund for the firm. Last year the two spun off from Coast—with the firm’s blessing, and its backing—to launch their own hedge fund. source

Resource #4: (11.25.08) Millennium Partners LP, the $13.5 billion hedge-fund firm run by Israel Englander, plans to return $1 billion to investors who asked for their cash back by year-end, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The redemptions, equal to 7.4 percent of client assets, would have been higher except the New York-based firm limits redemptions in any quarter, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. A spokeswoman for Millennium declined to comment.

Millennium lost about 3 percent this year through October, the people said, compared with hedge funds’ average decline of 16 percent, according to data compiled by Hedge Fund Research Inc. Two percentage points of Millennium’s loss were caused by assets frozen in the September bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., one of the people said.

“We’re seeing the result of hedge funds’ being subject to the whims of those in asset allocation,” said Adam Sussman, director of research at Tabb Group LLC, a New York-based adviser to financial-services companies. “No fund is immune.” Source

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Kynikos Associates | James Chanos | Hedge Fund Notes

admin | Saturday, October 14th, 2006 | No Comments »

Kynikos Associates

Kynikos Associates | Hedge Fund Notes

Below is our Hedge Fund Tracker Profile for Kynikos Associates and James Chanos.

Resource #1: (2.2.09) Famed short-seller James Chanos told Reuters on Thursday his hedge fund firm, Kynikos Associates, performed well in 2008, but clients still withdrew about 20 percent of his funds’ assets.

Chanos, who profits by betting against companies he expects will fall in value, thrived in a year when a broad range of financial markets tanked. He declined to reveal his fund’s annual performance, but said the firm “had a good year.”

The average hedge fund specializing in short selling returned 25 percent last year, according to data from hedge fund tracking firm Hennessee Group. source

Resource #2: Goldman Sachs MD Marc Spilker wanted to widen his path to the beach at his house in the Hamptons. Unfortunately, his neighbor, Kynikos founder Jim Chanos had a problem with this, since his row of hedges would have to be taken out in order for Spilker’s family to be able to “maximize their beach enjoyment.” Spilker cited a deed that said he could have 15 feet, Chanos produced one that said otherwise. Then this week they went to court to negotiate; Spilker claimed to only want a few feet (i.e. 6-7), Chanos gave it to him and asked for it to be put in writing.
Source

Resource #3: His hedge fund, Kynikos Associates, had put a large slice of its $3bn in assets on a bold punt that shares in the internet gambling sector were about to go into free-fall.
And on October 2, shares in the companies did precisely that as about $5bn was wiped off their value in just a few hours of trading in response to a US Senate decision to introduce tough new laws cracking down on gambling on the web.

It took the industry and the markets, in fact almost everyone except Mr Chanos and his team of traders, by surprise. The consensus view had been that the sector was about to ride higher on a wave of consolidation.
Source

Resource #4: Good afternoon. My name is James Chanos. I would like to take this opportunity to thank the House Committee on Energy and Commerce for allowing me to offer my perspective on the tragic Enron story.

I am the President of Kynikos Associates, a New York private investment management company that I founded in 1985. Kynikos Associates specializes in short-selling, an investment technique that profits in finding fundamentally overvalued securities that are poised to fall in price. Kynikos Associates employs seven investment professionals and is considered the largest organization of its type in the world, managing over $1 billion for its clients.
Source

Resource #5: Kynikos Associates announced today that Jeffrey R. Perry has joined the firm as a Managing Director. Perry will also co-manage the new Kynikos Opportunity Fund along with Kynikos President, James Chanos. Chanos said, “We are very excited to have Jeff join us. Besides augmenting our research capabilities within the existing Kynikos funds, Jeff’s presence, and many years of high level hedge fund experience, will allow us to launch the Kynikos Opportunity Fund, which he and I will co-manage.” The Kynikos Opportunity Fund will have a broad mandate to invest in long and short equities, risk arbitrage, capital selective arbitrage, activist positions, as well as other investment disciplines where the firm believes it has a significant research advantage.
Source

Resource #6: Jim Chanos of New York’s Kynikos Associates was bearish on internet gambling sights long before Senate majority leader Bill Frist “ambushed” the industry with a bill making most internet gambling illegal. Contrary to claims detailed on a website [= Midas Oracle] yesterday, it didn’t take an elaborate scheme of inside information about the Senate’s legislative schedule to tip Chanos off on the dangers to internet gambling. For Chanos, the writing was on the wall, in the online gaming companies’ prospectuses and already built into various state laws.
Source

Resource #7: People keep pointing to the fact that capital spending is great. But they pointed to the same thing in 2000, when the market was tanking even as telecom was booming. We pointed out then that the telecommunications build-out was almost over–and was increasingly focused on projects that didn’t make any sense. Today, whether it’s the 48th planned community in Dubai or the marginal factory in rural China, you’re going to find out that the capital projects in the works don’t make a whole lot of sense either. But there’s a huge lag effect on that. Financial firms are the canaries in the mineshaft, and the laggards are the capital-goods companies.
Source

Resource #8: A deluxious story on Jim Chanos, the short-seller who originally told Bethany McLean to look at Enron (resulting in the Fortune article, “Is Enron Overpriced?” and later the travesty, The Smartest Guys In The Room). It seems he knows the hooker that brought down Eliot Spitzer. While stopping short of accusing Chanos of using Ms. Dupre’s services, the article makes it clear they knew each other.
Source

Resource #9: Jim Chanos, the world’s biggest short-seller, today made an appearance in the enemy camp. Chanos, the president of Kynikos Associates, which has $6 billion invested in bearish bets on the stock market, gave a talk this morning at the Stanford Directors’ College, an annual symposium at Stanford Law School for the directors of public companies.

Chanos provided some insights on what he does, areas of the market where he sees opportunity to short stocks, and how directors ought to react when the find short interest in their stocks rising. Here are a few bullet points from the talk…
Source

Resource #10: Jim Chanos – a top short-selling hedge fund manager and the big man at Kynikos Associates – has been speaking of the evil ones. He told me, ‘There is a great evil in the financial markets. Some of the firms that have failed did not tell the truth about the risks they were facing. They misled everyone. Why did they do it? Oh, they had darkness in their hearts! Evil-doers do evil things. We all know this. We all know that the serpent is waiting for us. We’ve seen the rune stones. Things can only get worse. There will come a time when fire will fill the sky, and Satan’s dark angels, diabolical demons, will rise from the bowels of the earth and devour us! O people, repent! It’s not too late. I will change as well. I won’t short any more. O Jesus, please believe me. Have mercy on me. I SHALL SHORT NO MORE!!!’
Source

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Gordon Asset Management | Hedge Fund Tracker Notes

admin | Monday, November 15th, 2004 | No Comments »

Gordon Asset Management

Gordon Asset Management | Notes

Our team is still building this specific set of Hedge Fund Tracker Notes.

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Carnegie WorldWide Long/Short | Hedge Fund Tracker Notes

admin | Monday, November 15th, 2004 | No Comments »

Carnegie WorldWide

Carnegie WorldWide | Notes

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Eagle Market Makers | Hedge Fund Tracker Tools

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Eagle Market Makers

Eagle Market Makers | Hedge Fund Notes

Our team is still building this specific set of Hedge Fund Tracker Notes, for completed manager profiles please see our Hedge Fund Tracker Tool.

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S & P IFC Emerging Markets Indexes | Index Holdings

admin | Monday, October 11th, 2004 | No Comments »

S & P IFC Emerging Markets Indexes

S & P IFC Emerging Markets Indexes | Index

Standard and Poor’s, using data acquired from International Finance Corporation, produces a number of capitalization weighted indexes to measure the emerging securities market, including:

S&P/IFCG Indexes

The Global (G) Index series is intended to represent the performance of the most active stocks in their respective markets and to be the broadest possible indicator of market movements. The current aggregate market capitalization of S&P/IFCG index constituents exceeds 75% of the total capitalization of all domestic listed shares on the local stock exchange. Industry or regional representation is not considered as a basis for building the S&P/IFCG Index Series. For index calculation purposes, Standard & Poor’s uses a holding coefficient designed to adjust market capitalization by removing all cross holdings between constituent companies, all government holdings and significant strategic holdings that exceed 20%. The S&P/IFCG Composite Index currently includes 33 markets.

S&P/IFCI Indexes

The Investable (I) Index series is designed to measure the type of returns foreign portfolio investors might receive from investing in emerging market stocks that are legally and practically available to them. Constituents for the S&P/IFCI series are drawn from the S&P/IFCG stock universe based on size, liquidity, and their legal and practical availability to foreign institutional investors. Some markets included in the S&P/IFCG Composite Index are not included in the S&P/IFCI Composite Index due to limits on foreign investment or a lack of stocks that meet the more stringent S&P/IFCI size and liquidity screens. The S&P/IFCI Composite Index currently includes 22 markets.

For over 1,000 additional terms and definitions please see our Investment Glossary Guide.

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Producer Price Index | Producers Price Index Commodities

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Producer Price Index

Producer Price Index Commodities

Producer Price Index. A family of indexes, prepared by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), that measures the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers of goods and services. PPI measures price change from the perspective of the seller in contrast to other measures, such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI), that measure price change from the purchaser’s perspective. Sellers’ and purchasers’ prices may differ due to government subsidies, sales and excise taxes, and distribution costs.

BLS releases over 10,000 PPIs for individual products and groups of products each month. Producer Price Indexes are available for the products of virtually every industry in the mining and manufacturing sectors of the US economy. New PPIs are gradually being introduced for the products of industries in the transportation, utilities, trade, finance, and services sectors of the US economy.

Producer Price Index data are widely used by business and government for three major purposes:

(a) Economic indicators — PPIs capture price movements prior to the retail level. Therefore, they may foreshadow subsequent price changes for businesses and consumers. The President, Congress, and the Federal Reserve employ these data in formulating fiscal and monetary policies.

(b) Deflator of other economic series — PPIs are used to adjust other economic time series for price changes and to translate those series into inflation-free dollars. For example, constant-dollar gross domestic product data are estimated using deflators based on PPI data.

(c) Basis for contract escalation — PPI data are commonly used in escalating purchase and sales contracts. These contracts typically specify dollar amounts to be paid at some point in the future. It is often desirable to include an escalation clause that accounts for increases in input prices. For example, a long-term contract for bread may be escalated for changes in wheat prices by applying the percent change in the PPI for wheat to the contracted price for bread.

Note: In 1978 BLS changed the name of this price measure from Wholesale Price Index (WPI) to the current term. However, no change was made to the basic index methodology, and the continuity of the price index data was unaffected.

For more information, see: BLS Web Site

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MSCI All Country World Index Composite Holdings | Performance

admin | Monday, October 11th, 2004 | No Comments »

MSCI All Country World Index

MSCI All Country World Index Composite

Morgan Stanley Capital International’s market capitalization weighted index composed of companies representative of the market structure of 47 Developed and Emerging Market countries in the Americas, Europe/Middle East, and Asia/Pacific Regions. The index is calculated without dividends or with gross dividends reinvested, in both US Dollars and Local. Countries include:


Argentina

Hungary

Philippines

Australia

India

Poland

Austria

Indonesia

Portugal

Belgium

Ireland

Singapore

Brazil

Israel

South Africa

Canada

Italy

Spain

Chile

Japan

Sri Lanka

China (Free)

Jordan

Sweden

Colombia

Korea

Switzerland

Czech Republic

Malaysia

Taiwan

Denmark

Mexico

Thailand

Finland

Netherlands

Turkey

France

New Zealand

United Kingdom

Germany

Norway

United States

Greece

Pakistan

Venezuela

Hong Kong

Peru

For over 1,000 additional terms and definitions please see our Investment Glossary Guide.

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