Posts Tagged ‘Invest’

Sustainable Investing

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

Sustainable Investing

Sustainable Investing & Hedge Funds

Sustainable Investing Sustainable InvestingSocially responsible investing or SRI as it is sometimes called is set to be much more than a blip on the radar screen of high net worth and institutional investors alike. Just earlier this week there was a new green hedge fund launched.

Another article on this appeared in the FT this week. Here’s a quick excerpt:
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Wealthy people increasingly want to invest their money without harming the environment, possibly heralding the mainstream take-up of such investment principles.

“Even those who aren’t actually doing it are talking about it,” said Matt Christensen, executive director of the European Social Investment Forum, which has surveyed both rich individuals and the wealth managers who look after their money about the topic of sustainability.

Nearly three-quarters of respondents have seen an increase in interest in sustainable investing in the last 12 months, according to the Eurosif survey, which also forecasts more than €1,000bn (£805bn, $1,473bn) of rich people’s money will be in sustainable investments by 2012. This represents a near doubling of the absolute levels in 2007, and a proportionate increase from 8 per cent to 12 per cent of rich people’s wealth.

New money, either from people who have recently become wealthy, or new flows from established investors, is driving the flows into sustainable investment strategies or instruments.

“Successful entrepreneurs of today are not the industrialists of yesterday,” said one survey respondent. “They are younger and more interested in sustainable investments.”

Historically, rich people have led the way in investment trends, taking up hedge funds and private equity before these asset classes became generally popular. Read more…

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Asset Management Finance Corp

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

Asset Management Finance

Asset Management Finance (AMF) Corporation

Asset Management Finance CorpThe following piece on Asset Management Finance Corp 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.

This story is about how Credit Suisse purchasing Asset Management Finance Corp. which provides funding to early stage hedge funds in exchange for revenue sharing on future fund earnings. It will be interesting to see if Credit Suisse significantly alters AMF’s due diligence process while looking at funds, or presses them to fund Credit Suisse associated groups…
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Credit Suisse Group AG, Switzerland’s second-biggest bank, bought New York-based Asset Management Finance Corp. for $384 million to provide financing to investment firms.

Credit Suisse paid stock for more than 80 percent of the firm, founded by former Putnam Investments chief Norton Reamer in 2003, from a unit of National Bank of Canada. Reamer, 72, who also ran Boston-based United Asset Management Corp., will stay on, the bank said today in a statement.

AMF, which provides capital to money managers including hedge funds in exchange for a slice of revenue, will benefit from Credit Suisse’s global reach, said Brian Finn, chairman of the Zurich-based company’s alternative-asset business. The unit, which manages $167 billion, holds a minority stake in hedge-fund firm Ospraie Mangement LLC and has started joint investing ventures with Abu Dhabi and General Electric Co.

AMF “is a platform with a leadership team and an investment approach in which we see enormous growth opportunities,” Finn said in an interview. Read more…

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Halcyon Asset Management | Hedge Fund Tracker Profile

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

Halcyon Asset Management

Halcyon Asset Management – Hedge Fund Press Bio

Halcyon Asset ManagementThe following piece on Halcyon Asset 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.
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Resource #1: Look who’s sitting atop one sector of the hedge-fund world.

Joe Wolnick, 53, the head of Halcyon Asset Management’s $850 million Asset Backed Securities hedge fund, is up 3 percent through Sept. 30, making him one of the only ABS funds with a positive return through the first three quarters of 2008.

The top-of-the-heap position is especially sweet for Wolnick – who started running his first hedge fund just three years ago after a career spent working as a credit risk executive in the distressed consumer and corporate debt business – because he relishes using his street smarts and gut instincts to beat his Ivy League rivals at other firms.

Wolnick, who proudly trumpets his 1977 graduation from Central Connecticut State University on Halcyon’s Web site, held back from buying senior subprime mortgage-backed securities earlier this year despite their high yield. The trader, people familiar with his thinking say, expected the bonds to fall from their lofty prices in the high-60-percent and low-70-percent range.

While others were buying, Wolnick was out soliciting investor cash, waiting for prices to drop and his chance to pounce. This summer, Wolnick beat out 70 other funds to manage a piece of California’s San Bernadino pension fund.

At that point, the market started to notice Wolnick.

By September, prices indeed came down below 50 and Wolnick started buying. Although just a portion of his portfolio, the index of senior tranche of subprime MBS closed the month at 52.08, helped him achieve his 3 percent gain and his prized place atop the heap.

In contrast, two of the most successful hedge-fund traders of recent years, Michael Novogratz and his protegeAdam Levinson, who run Fortress Investment Group’s $9 billion Drawbridge Global Macro fund, which also invests in asset-backed securities, find themselves in an unusual spot – down 13.76 percent through Sept. 30. Read More…

Resource #2: The vice chairman and chief investment officer of hedge fund Halcyon Asset Management has been forced out. The move reportedly follows major redemptions from institutional investors. According to an investor letter dated Tuesday and obtained by The New York Post, Steve Mandis has left the firm, “effective immediately.”

While the letter gave no reason for his departure, FINalternatives has learned that the subsidiary of the $12 billion hedge fund run by Mandis has been performing poorly and that some of the fund’s largest investors are pulling their money.

One source told FINalternatives that it was an “unceremonious” departure. “They are being hit with large redemptions,” said the source. Halcyon declined to comment on the matter.

The subsidiary, Halcyon Structured Asset Management, was co-founded by Mandis in 2004. Mandis also served on the boards and risk management committees of Halcyon and all of its affiliates, except for Halcyon Real Estate Investors.

Prior to joining Halcyon, Mandis worked at Goldman Sachs, where he served as a portfolio manager in the firm’s Special Situations Investing Group, a multi-billion dollar proprietary investing area within Goldman Sachs’ Fixed Income Division. Read more…

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Hedge Funds in India

admin | Sunday, August 31st, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Funds in India

The Benefits of Offering Hedge Funds in India

Hedge Funds in IndiaHere’s a short article on how the Committee of Financial Sector Reforms in India might introduce hedge funds and why this would be a positive move for the Indian markets and fund industry as a whole.
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The Draft Report of the Committee on Financial Sector Reforms headed by Professor Raghuram Rajan was issued for comment in April 2008. Among the proposals that the high-level committee made was the introduction of domestic hedge funds. The committee feels that, “The presence of hedge funds would induce greater competitive pressure for other regulated fund management channels such as mutual funds.”

This week’s article discusses the benefits of introducing hedge funds in the Indian market. It shows how hedge funds could improve asset price efficiency. Besides, such funds, by virtue of their diverse investment styles, could provide investors an opportunity to enhance their risk-adjusted portfolio returns.

Of different genre

Suppose a long-only (mutual fund) manager and a hedge fund manager both have a negative view on SBI, a positive view on HDFC Bank and a neutral view on ITC.

Long-only active managers will buy ITC in the same weight as their benchmark index, may overweight HDFC Bank and may not take any exposure in SBI. There is a reason for such a strategy. Active managers strive to beat their benchmark index. But they do not take too many active bets, lest their bets go wrong. Often, active funds tail the benchmark index with few active bets. Importantly, such managers cannot short-sell to take advantage of their negative view on a stock.

Hedge fund managers’ do not suffer from such constraint. In the above example, the hedge fund manager may overweight HDFC Bank, short-sell SBI and not take any exposure in ITC.

Better still, to neutralise any market risk, the hedge fund manager may buy HDFC Bank and short-sell SBI in such a way that the market risk in HDFC Bank is offset by short-selling SBI. Often, neutralising market risk on a portfolio would mean short-selling Nifty futures.

Exploiting price inefficiency

Hedge funds identify mispriced assets and exploit any price inefficiency. One way to do this is to employ statistical arbitrage.

Suppose a hedge fund manager finds that combination of one share of HDFC Bank and two short shares of SBI (1HDFC – 2SBI) has a stable statistical distribution. If the “spread” wanders far away from its mean, a hedge fund manager would set-up this strategy with a view that the “spread” will tighten. Such relative-value strategies can help arbitrate away asset price inefficiencies in a “normal” market. Read more…

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Pharos Fund Russian Hedge Fund Tracker Notes

admin | Sunday, August 31st, 2008 | No Comments »

Pharos Fund

Pharos Financial Group – Hedge Funds

Pharos FundThe following piece on Pharos Fund 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.

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Resource #1: (11.18.08) oscow-based hedge fund Pharos Financial Group is opening an office in sunnier climes. The Russia-focused hedge fund manager has been licensed to operate in Dubai and is opening an office at the Arab Emirate’s Dubai International Financial Centre.

The US$130 million firm, which was seeded by Soros Fund Management in 1997, is the first Russia-focused hedge fund manager to win approval from the Dubai Financial Services Authority. Founder Peter Halloran pointed to a growing appetite for Russia-focused funds among Persian Gulf Coast investors as a motivation for the new office.

“Our move to DIFC was an easy strategic decision given our expectation that the need for quality asset management in the GCC will grow substantially over the next decade,” he said in a statement. “Pharos intends to fill the niche as the market leader in emerging markets fund management. Already we have seen tremendous appetite from GCC investors for our Russian-focused investment opportunities.” Source

Additional Resources

The following is a list of resources and information that is publicly available about Pharas Fund.

  • Pharos fund portfolio.
  • Whitepaper on Pharos Fund. The White paper explains how the pharos fund manager makes decisions.
  • Every letter to all investors for 2008, from the Pharos Fund and Gas Fund.
  • Excel spreadsheet of every Pharos funds performance. So far, 2008 has a negative return on every fund.
  • Excel spreadsheet breakdown of Sector allocations for the pharos fund.
  • Excel spreadsheet breakdown of Sector allocations for the Gas fund. Pretty self-explanatory, the fund invests in options and futures in oil and natural gas.
  • Article about how there will be an increasing demand for natural gas.
  • Excel spreadsheet of Pharos small cap fund. The small cap fund uses Russia’s building economy and uses illiquid shares to make a profit.
  • Daily market comment and performance of all three funds. The Political Environment is fragile, which will create volatility in the market overall, which is good for each hedge fund.
  • Article about how all Pharos funds are down. The MSCI Russia Index is down 32.4% due to “a reversal of fortune from the market’s earlier outperformance.”
  • The Georgia conflict severely hurt the Russian economy because investors pulled out more than $7 billion. Russian may not be allowed to host the next Olympics and the U.S. is restricting Visas for Russians.
  • Pharos said that the Russian economy is stable, but foreign investors insecurity will create short term-volatility.
  • Name of this article pretty much sums it up- “Pharos, TPG to acquire American Beacon Advisors for $480m.”
  • Interview with Peter Halloran. Eastern European (Russian affiliated) countries are rapidly growing faster than other developing nations.
  • Article about the government planning to increase domestic gas prices by 25-40 per cent, over the next three years.
  • A blog post that has a about positive outlook for every Pharos fund, for the month of June.
  • Article about how hurricane Gustav may increase gas to $5 a gallon. This may effect pharos gas fund.

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REO Properties Listings

admin | Saturday, August 30th, 2008 | No Comments »

REO Properties

Real Estate Owned (REO) Properties and Listings

REO Properties and REO ListingsMany of you in the hedge fund industry who read my blog also frequently visit Hedge Fund Message Board.com or other online forums. You may remember 9-12 months ago a large set of REO brokers and sales agents practically taking over a few online forum in the online hedge fund community trying to connect with hedge fund managers looking for REOs. They were quickly banned and considered spam but I do get emails from many of them – usually 2-3/week.

Upfront, I want to be clear that I do not want to get into the business of brokering or helping as a sales agent for banks or REO firms. I would like to identify a reputable broker who does work with hedge funds or private investment groups in this area simply because at this point I’m just having to delete emails from these REO agents as I have no way to help them. I’ve never worked with REO related investments so hopefully I’ll connect with a reputable related group this blog.

Here’s an example of a recent email I received on this topic:

Hello and good day Mr. Wilson. I was doing some research on the topic and I came across your blog. I have several potential customers who are looking to buy Bulk REO and / or Notes portfolios , from $10M and up and up. The thing is, it is difficult for me to find any true portfolio providers who can actually perform and do what they say they can do, especially without a lot of hassle and headache. I’m continuously running into a middleman parade, which always kills the deal. It is my understanding that the majority of Bulk REO and / or Notes portfolios are controlled by either asset managers at banks, or hedge funds. I see that you are the founder of Hedge Fund Group (HFG), so i say let me contact you to see if you could help me out. I have what seems like a new potential customer coming my way daily asking me if can fill their Bulk REO and / or Note orders. If you could help me out or point me in the right direction as to who to talk to, i would most gladly appreciate it. Thank you for your time Mr. Wilson, looking to speak to you soon. Enjoy your weekend.

Anyone have any great resources? websites? white papers? or networking groups I could be referring these people to? Thanks in advance for the help, much appreciated.

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Dalton Strategic Partnership

admin | Friday, August 29th, 2008 | No Comments »

Dalton Strategic Partnership

Dalton Strategic Partnership – Japan

Dalton Strategic PartnershipThe following piece on Dalton Strategic Partnership 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.
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Resource #1: (5.10.09) Hedge fund manager Steven Persky plans to start betting on companies’ bad fortunes again.

Persky, who runs $1 billion hedge fund firm Dalton Investments, said on Wednesday he will re-launch his distressed debt strategy three years after liquidating two similar portfolios when the strong economy made such investing difficult.

Now that times have changed dramatically, Persky is among a handful of fund managers who expect to make money for their wealthy clients in the distressed area. source

Resource #2: (4.22.09) Another foreign hedge fund has entered the—so far fruitless—effort to improve corporate governance and transparency at Japanese companies.

Los Angeles-based Dalton Investments says it is going to try a less confrontational approach to those used by The Children’s Investment Fund and Steel Partners, who were rebuffed in activist battles in Japan. The firm, which has $818 million in assets, 70% of it invested in Japan, plans to ask nicely, sending the 70 Japanese companies it invests with letters urging them to appoint independent directors and increase share buybacks. source

Resource #3 (12.15.08) Dalton Investments LLC, the Los Angeles-based hedge fund with 70 percent of its assets in Japan, is starting a 50 billion yen ($550 million) fund that will invest in U.S. distressed assets, taking advantage of low prices.

The fund has raised about 10 billion yen from U.S. investors and will begin marketing in Japan by the end of March, said Junichiro Sano, chief executive officer of Dalton’s local unit. It will invest in bonds sold by U.S. companies that once had AAA ratings and have since been downgraded below investment grade, aiming to profit from the high yields on the debt.

Dalton, co-founded by James Rosenwald and Steven D. Persky in 1998, aims to raise its assets under management after they fell 23 percent to about 100 billion yen this year amid the biggest financial market losses since the Great Depression. Global financial institutions have posted about $989 billion in writedowns and credit losses linked to the U.S. mortgage market collapse, pushing corporate bond yields higher.

“There is quite a big interest among Japanese institutional investors in distressed asset investments,” Sano, 53, said in an interview in Tokyo on Dec. 12. “The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away.” source

Resource #4: Dalton Strategic Partnership has liquidated its Melchior Japan Hedge Fund following a long period of underperformance.

Launched in 2003 and managed by FuNNeX, the same Tokyo group responsible for the troubled Melchior Japan Investment trust, the fund has hemorrhaged investors recently. Assets had fallen to around £20 million from a high of above £500 million in 2006, and the fund had lost 39.05% over the year to date versus a benchmark loss of just 4.7%, and following several years of double-digit losses.

Investors have been given the option of moving into DSP’s Melchior Japan 002 hedge fund, but many had lost their appetite for Japanese hedge fund investment after several years of underperformance, said DSP head of sales Richard Jones. Read more…

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Aggressive Portfolio

admin | Friday, August 29th, 2008 | No Comments »

Aggressive Portfolio

Aggressive Portfolio – Definition

An aggressive portfolio contains high growth investments that will hopefully appreciate in value. This strategy attempts to achieve high long-term growth by investing in often risky but profitable, short-term stocks.

Read dozens of additional articles like this within the guide to Hedge Fund Definitions and Terms.

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Hedge Funds vs. Banks

admin | Friday, August 29th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Funds vs. Banks

Hedge Funds Serving Corporations

hedge funds and banksOne long-term trend I’ve seen in the hedge fund industry is that hedge funds are now competing with banks within several dozen areas of business. Here is a short list of why some corporations are turning to hedge funds instead of Banks.

  • Some commercial banks may not have enough money to lend because of timing or relationships in place with the corporation
  • Some companies launching hostile takeovers need large amounts of cash quickly and hedge funds can sometimes provide the quickest solution at a competitive rate
  • A company may need to borrow money overnight or for several days to make payroll until more of their receivables come in
  • Some corporations use hedge funds to fund risky projects that wouldn’t fly with many banks
  • Lately corporations have turned to hedge funds or sovereign wealth groups in times of desperation, when they need large infusions of cash to stay afloat

Yesterday I sent a note out about Hedge Fund Conference Email Alerts. The email-based subscribers to my blog could not see the email opt-in form though. If you would like to sign-up for free for these alerts please see this page: Hedge Fund Conference & Event Alert Email List

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Emerging Markets Research

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

Emerging Markets Research

Interview – Emerging Markets Research

Emerging Markets ResearchI sometimes get email from hedge fund managers and portfolio managers looking for certain types of equity or industry research for their fund. Most hedge funds currently use and are in constant need of high end unbiased qualitative and quantitative research to identify and evaluate opportunities in the global markets.

Many of these opportunities are now being found in both emerging markets of MENA, China and SE Asia as well as emerging alternative asset classes. There are few quality research options for hedge funds investing within these spaces. Last week I met a few members of the Hedge Fund Group (HFG) who are partners of a research firm which has experience in researching and analyzing opportunities in these markets. They specialize in providing investment research on areas where information is usually hard to find and validate and language barriers exist. Their firm is called SG Analytics (www.sganalytics.com) and they are based in Pune, India.

Structured to serve money managers with unbiased investment research on both strategic and quantitative fronts, SG Analytics (referred to also as SGA) has clients amongst the top money managers, hedge funds, investment banks and private equity funds. SGA already counts 3 of the top 10 investment banks as its client currently. Most of SGA’s hedge fund clients come from the Long/Short equity, global macro and distressed debt space and SGA supports them in making long term judgments based on fundamental research. Many money managers we have talked to, use SGA to cover small to mid caps or emerging market securities.

I would like to introduce this firm to the readers of my hedge fund blog because their team of 100 professionals offers a unique set of industry research services that many hedge funds could probably benefit from. SGA is not a plain vanilla outsourcing firm but a provider of end to end research and analysis that can stand on its own. Contrary to other conventional outsourcing service providers, the SGA team consists of experienced qualitative and quantitative research analysts from the local talent pool as well as from the developed financial markets of Europe and US. This blend of experience is unique and powerful as it leverages the well developed research practices of the developed western countries with talent which understands the emerging markets well. The management of the company also brings 50+ years of global work experience in the financial markets and is passionate in its commitment to deliver high quality relevant investment research to its clients. Here is my short interview with the CEO of SGA.

Richard: What are the top 2 challenges for hedge fund managers investing in China and India? There seems to be a slew of language, regulatory, culture, news, on the ground research challenges that I know many small and mid-sized hedge funds are struggling with right now.

Sushant (SGA CEO): One of the main issues which still remain for Hedge fund mangers investing in India and China is the evolving regulatory environment which limits their options both in terms of strategies (e.g. limited use of shorting) and liquidity (e.g. limited choice beyond the large caps). The other challenge of course, is to penetrate the perception and find reality which is often difficult given the fact that on-the ground and fundamental unbiased research is still an evolving culture and business here.

Richard: What trends are you seeing in hedge funds using research services such as yours to invest in emerging markets? Are more hedge fund managers using your services while looking for in-depth coverage of certain stocks and sectors to test the waters for future products or are most hedge funds looking to bulk up research for already existing products?

Sushant: We see a great response for services such as ours where we can provide Hedge funds with an extension to their research team rather than ‘outsourcing solutions’. Companies who have the capability to connect with the Hedge funds managers at their level of understanding are bound to do well, while the ones who are limited to being outsourced number crunchers will be of limited use for Hedge funds. One key requirement from Hedge funds is fast response which one can only do with deep domain understanding. With the days of heady returns behind us, we expect further emphasis on fundamental research to uncover investment opportunities in the years to come.

Richard: Thank you for your time today Sushant. Where can readers of my blog learn more about your firm or contact you directly?

Sushant Gupta, CEO
SG Analytics Pvt Ltd
sushant@sganalytics.com
www.sganalytics.com
Tele : +91 20 25665306/25661897

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Investment Marketing

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

Investment Marketing

Investment Marketing Hurdles for Hedge Funds

investment marketingI just read an interesting article on AllAboutAlpha discussing the challenges today in marketing hedge funds to new potential investors. Within the piece AAA discusses how the US has one of the most restrictive regulatory regimes in the world when it comes to the hedge fund industry. The countries of Australia, Canada, Japan and China are all less restrictive.

Here’s a short excerpt from the article:

An article in this month’s Journal of Financial Transformation illustrates why this is. The piece, titled “Hedge fund marketing in an era of regulatory uncertainty” covers many of the issues faced by those trying to raise money in the US. It’s a great update on the ebb and flow of SEC edicts over the past year and was co-authored by hedge fund personality James Hedges. Here’s some of what Hedges suggests:

  • Avoid speaking to the media about your funds – even if you’re not actively selling, but just “conditioning the market”.
  • Avoid “print, radio and television advertisements or solicitations regarding funding or investment matters”.
  • When giving presentations, “address the risks associated with hedge funds in general as well as the specific risks associated with the hedge fund being offered.”
  • When your fund has a great year, make sure you “disclose the reasons for extraordinary performance…”
  • No “mass mailings” except to “individual investors, or a discrete group of accredited investors”.

Click here to read the full article.

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Investment Training

admin | Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | No Comments »

Investment Training

Investment Training Q & A

Investment TrainingQuick Link: Certified Hedge Fund Professional (CHP)


Question
: Where can I find information an investment training programs available for recent graduates? I have 3 years of experience working in the investment industry but I’m looking for designations or programs to help improve my career. Would you suggest earning the CPA designation?

Answer: While the CPA is a highly rated designation if you would like to be an accountant there are other designations and programs which may be more directly applicable base on what type of investment training, or what path of an investment career you are taking. Here are links to three of these programs:

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Hedge Fund Conference

admin | Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Conference

Networking Event & Conference Email Alerts

Hedge Fund Conference, Hedge Fund Conferences, Hedge Fund Events, Hedge Fund Event, Hedge Fund Seminars, Hedge Fund Seminar
To keep updated via a monthly email on industry networking events held by leading conference organizers and the Hedge Fund Group (HFG) please complete the form below. After submitting the form we will send you a confirmation email which you must then open and click on a link to confirm your interest.


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Andor Capital Management Daniel Benton

admin | Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | No Comments »

Andor Capital Management


Andor Capital Management & Daniel Benton

Andor Capital ManagementThe following piece on Andor 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.

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Andor Capital Management, a US hedge fund managing about $2bn in assets, is to close down and return money to investors. Daniel Benton, co-founder of Andor, is retiring from managing outside capital after 24 years in the investment business, he told investors on Wednesday in a letter seen by the Financial Times. Andor was spun off from Art Samberg’s Pequot Capital Management in 2001. He built a reputation as a leading technology investor at Pequot, following years as a star technology analyst at Goldman Sachs.

“My desire to devote more time to my family and other interests runs counter to the obligations of a hedge fund manager who must be immersed in the markets in order to meet client expectations,” Mr Benton said. People with knowledge of Andor’s performance said its stock fund has lost some money this year amid the market turbulence that has caused troubles for many hedge funds, but was by no means among the worst performers.

Investors in Andor will receive money back starting in October, according to the letter. The fund will continue investing until the end of September after which final payments will be made following the completion of an outside audit for the period ending September 30 2008.
Mr Benton had a well-publicized split with his co-founder at Andor, Christopher James, in 2004.
A spokesman for Andor did not return calls seeking comment. Read the full story here.

- Richard

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Fortress Investment Group LLC | Performance & Profile

admin | Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | No Comments »

Fortress Investment Group LLC

Fortress Investment Group LLC – Hedge Fund

Fortress Investment Group LLCThe following piece on Fortress 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: (3.18.09) The Fortress Investment Group, the beleaguered private investment firm, said Monday that it lost $258 million in its fourth quarter, amid investment losses and withdrawals from investors. Its assets under management dropped 10 percent, to $29.5 billion.

Fortress said that it had reserved $299 million for potential write-downs and the clawback of obligations. It also said that it had amended its financing agreements with lenders and paid down some of its debt to leave $604 million outstanding. source

Resource #2: (2.5.09) The five hotshots who took Fortress Investment Group public were worth billions at first. Today they look like arrogant showboats, and their story helps explain why hedge funds are imploding by the thousands—and why there’s still a truckload of money to be made.

It used to be that to become a billionaire, rather than a mere millionaire, you had to inherit money, or build an empire that would last for a long, long time. But in the era that has just ended, you could become a billionaire just by managing other people’s money. You didn’t have to do so for very long—and, maybe, you didn’t even have to do so very well. source

Resource #3: (12.8.08) If there’s one alternative investments firm that doesn’t need its name dragged through the mud right now, it’s Fortress Investment Group. But the New York firm, already facing huge redemption requests and a collapsing stock price, finds itself at the middle of the bizarre tale of the New York lawyer arrested in Toronto for allegedly impersonating another lawyer.

Marc Dreier was arrested last week, accused of pretending to be Michael Padfield, a lawyer for the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan. The alleged thespian turn by Dreier took place during a meeting between the OTPP and Fortress at the pension’s Toronto headquarters. source

Resource #4 (12.5.08)
Tough luck, Fortress Investment Group basically said to investors seeking to pull their money from the company.

Directors of Fortress Investment Group (FIG) voted to temporarily suspend pending redemptions after investors asked to pull out roughly $3.5 billion by year’s end from its Drawbridge funds, nearly as much as the vehicles have in assets.

In other words, Fortress’s hedge-fund shareholders won’t be getting their money back for a while, and investors in the company didn’t take the news well. source

Resource #5: (11.16.08) The hedge fund of billionaire investor George Soros increased its stake in Brazilian state-run oil company Petroleo Brasileiro ( Petrobras) to 21.1 million American Depositary Receipts as of Sept. 30 from 11.5 million at June 30.

Soros Fund Management LLC made the move as the ADRs tumbled during the quarter to about $44 from about $71 each. Although the fund added nearly 10 million ADRs to its Petrobras stake, the value of the holding only rose to $930.7 million from $811.5 million.

Since the end of the quarter, Petrobras ADRs have fallen further, closing on Friday at $21.45.

The Petrobras stake was by far the largest in the Soros fund’s reported holdings, which totaled $3.8 billion at Sept. 30, up from $3.7 billion at June 30. source


Resource #6:
Fortress Investment Group LLC, a New York-based manager of private-equity and hedge funds, won’t pay a third-quarter dividend to shareholders, saying the money can be better spent by investing in financial companies.

“Given the significant dislocations in the world’s financial markets, we see tremendous opportunities for the firm to invest capital,” Fortress Chief Executive Officer Wesley Edens said in a statement today. “We are focused on potential investments in banks, insurance companies and other asset- management businesses.”

Fortress has risen 38 percent in the past two weeks in New York trading as investors anticipate private-equity and hedge- fund firms will profit from financial turmoil by snapping up companies and assets at distressed prices. Fortress rose 51 cents, or 3.9 percent, to $13.50 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading today.

Private-equity firms are shifting from the large leveraged buyouts that dominated Wall Street during 2006 and 2007, raising funds to snap up distressed debt and mortgage securities. Fortress oversees about $35 billion. Fortress had paid a dividend of 22.5 cents a share for the past five quarters. The payout for the second quarter was $91.5 million. Fortress Investment Group LLC, the manager of $18 billion in hedge funds, will open a fund to invest in the Middle East and North Africa as countries in the region seek to reduce their dependence on the oil industry. Source


Resource #7: The Fortress MENA Fund LP will be managed by Philippe Peress and is set to begin trading by the end of September, according to marketing documents, which didn’t say how much money the company is seeking to raise. Peress, based in Geneva, has been a managing director and partner of the company’s Drawbridge Global Macro funds since 2003.

“Historically MENA was characterized by low investment rates relative to Asian peers,” New York-based Fortress said in the documents, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg News. “This is beginning to change as governments use petro-dollars to diversify the economies away from oil.”

Middle East economies, benefiting from oil prices that tripled in the past five years, will expand 9.2 percent in 2008 as revenue spurs spending on infrastructure such as airports and power plants, New York-based Morgan Stanley has forecast. That’s more than double the International Monetary Fund’s 4.8 percent global growth projection. Read more…

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Hedge Fund Best Practices

admin | Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | No Comments »

Best Practices for Hedge Funds

Link – Best Practices for Hedge Funds

Hedge Fund Best Practices, Hedge Funds Best Practices, Best Practices for Hedge Funds, Fund of Hedge Fund Best PracticesThe Managed Funds Association has recently put out a new version of their Best Practices Guide. Here is an excerpt from their website on what these are and how to download them:
_______________________________________________________________

The objectives of Sound Practices are to:

* Strengthen business practices of the hedge fund industry through a strong framework of internal policies and practices
* Encourage individualized assessment and application of recommendations
* Enhance market discipline in the global financial marketplace

Sound Practices, which was originally published in 2000 and is now in its fourth edition, provides peer-to-peer recommendations for establishing standards of excellence in virtually every aspect of business. The recommendations included in Sound Practices are divided among the seven topics listed below:

* Management, Trading, and Information Technology Controls
* Responsibilities to Investors
* Determination of Net Asset Value
* Risk Management
* Regulatory Controls
* Trading Relationship Management, Monitoring, and Disclosure
* Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery, and Crisis Management

MFA has revised Sound Practices in cooperation with international organizations that share the PWG and MFA’s goal of providing market participants with a framework for establishing uniform principles and guidance for the global hedge fund industry.

Click here for a copy of Sound Practices (please note this is a large pdf file that requires Adobe Acrobat Reader and might take time to download).

- Richard

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Hedge Fund Tracker Tool – Exclusive Guides & Research

admin | Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 | No Comments »

Hedge Fund Tracker

Hedge Fund Tracker Tool

Hedge Fund Tracker Tool, Hedge Fund Press Release, Hedge Fund Press Releases, Hedge Fund Tools, Hedge Fund NewsThe Hedge Fund Tracker tool allows you to view recent publicly available details and events affecting many of the top 1,000 largest hedge funds and fund of hedge funds within the industry.

Hedge Fund Manager Tracker Profiles:

Fund of Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles

Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles Coming Soon

Hedge Fund Professional Tracking

Quick Link: Geographical Hedge Fund Guides

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Art Investment

admin | Monday, August 25th, 2008 | No Comments »

Art Investment

Art Investment Funds

Art Investment, Art Investment Fund, Art Investing, Art Investment Funds, Art as Investment, Invest in ArtI have always been curious to see more closely how art hedge funds operate and make their money. I’ve recently completed some research on this topic and the results are below.

Interview with fine art hedge fund manager Justin Williams.
He is unconventional short-term art trader (maximum holding of three yrs, Avg. holding only three and a half months), and he believes art market has enough depth and liquidity to enable him to use that strategy. For quick sell back, he focuses on living young, upcoming artists’ works. He mentions art market withstood the global credit crisis, but major geo-political risk (which affecting global economy) is biggest threat to the art funds.

Great resource on the different motivations to invest in art. This article describes who individuals or hedge funds often invest art because of a wide range of reasons which can include diversification, capital appreciation, economic slowdown, speculation, taxation, philanthropy, and social status. View this resource by clicking here.

Article says speculating on art (indirectly betting on art price through art fund) is dangerous idea. Because “The problem with art is that it is essentially counter-culture and difficult to predict”

Hedge fund turmoil tars hot art market
Article explains about how some hedge fund managers are borrowing against their massive art collection as collateral to resolve cash problems.(also, selling their possession) “300 managers with a median net worth of more than $60 million, found the average respondent spent nearly $4 million on fine art in 2005.” So, article questions if art market price will hold up during this time of hedge fund turmoil.

Article -Hedge-Fund Experts Put Art in the Deal
Hedge fund managers are applying their trading instinct into buying and selling art items. Some managers intentionally buy and invest in certain artist to bring up their value of the work, thus creating bubble in art

Hedge fund managers turn their attention to new asset class- vintage guitars.
“a London investment firm, is expected to launch the Guitar Fund. Set up as a hedge fund, the Guitar Fund will seek investment returns by buying rare and vintage electric and acoustic guitars (steel-string and classical), plus mandolins, banjos and amps.” Strategy to increase value – lending it to famous artist in tours etc. “The basis for the fund’s idea is Vintage Guitar magazine’s 42 Guitar Index . . . an average annual return of over 31% without experiencing a single down year.”

Additional article: “We’ve applied a model that has worked in a lot of other asset classes and we’ve applied it to art.” “Over the past 10 years, returns in the art market have outpaced gains made by the S&P 500, according to the Mei Moses art index.” “Using this index, art returned 18.27% last year, while the S&P 500 gained 15.79%. Five-year returns also favour art investors, but go back 25 years and the S&P 500 comes out on top.”

Informational art fund related website.
Brief summary of what art hedge fund is, and how they operate.
Followings are covered subjects.
• introduction
• managers and investors
• an industry?
• strategies
• personnel
• costs
• primers

Paint by Numbers: Art as an Asset Class-July 2007
Art is an asset class with very few past price points
“Over a five-year period, an investor has about a one in six chance of seeing an art investment decline; for the S&P 500 Index, it’s one in 10.”
Also, buyer and seller pays premium around 20% to auction process.
Draw backs- low transparency, investing in individual art work reduces diversification; index does not reflect transaction cost or art work fail to auction off.

Andy Warhol-based fund says art boom to go on. “A hedge fund that invests in prints by Andy Warhol, the pop artist known for his brightly colored paintings of Campbell soup cans, is betting the boom in the art market will continue because of increasing global wealth” Interviewer here emphasizes the fact art market was unaffected by subprime crisis.

“Investing in Fine Art as an Alternative Asset Class” – Article
Well established artist’s works are more stable even during financial turmoil.
Since, are is not reproducible increasing income level will drive demand up and supply staying or declining, thus providing solid long-term performance.
Three risks:
1. Opaque, illiquid and unregulated market – research covers only deals done in auctions
2. Subjectivity of intrinsic value – difficulties in valuation
3. High transaction costs – storage, auctions and dealer fees

Guest post produced by Sean Kim.

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Hedge Fund Marketing in Switzerland

admin | Sunday, August 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Marketing in Switzerland

Hedge Fund Marketing in Switzerland

Marketing in Switzerland Hedge Fund Marketing in SwitzerlandI recently came across a short whitepaper on hedge fund marketing in Switzerland. Here is a short excerpt from this article and a link to the full copy.

In the last few years, alternative investments and hedge funds in particular have become part of the standard asset allocation process in the Swiss private banking business as well as for many Swiss institutional investors. This is the case even though, given legal and regulatory constraints, hedge funds may only be distributed in Switzerland by way of private placement, without any public offering. In addition, Swiss law and the practice of the supervisory authority, the Federal Banking Commission, allow for the setting up and the public distribution of collective investment schemes which take different forms and which invest into hedge funds (e.g. investment companies, investment foundations, and funds of hedge funds). These structures have also contributed to the success of alternative investments in Switzerland. For the rest, the on-going revision of the Swiss mutual fund legislation is expected to create additional flexibility in regards to the offering of this type of investments to the Swiss market.

The Swiss market
Switzerland is an important player in the alternative investment
arena, especially for hedge funds. Although reliable statistics on this topic are difficult to come by, it is generally considered that, after the U.S., Switzerland is the second-largest market for hedge funds in the world. A number of factors have contributed to this situation. Firstly, Swiss private banking and its sophisticated clientele have been among the first to invest in hedge funds, and to do so massively. With the years, a number of Swiss banks and financial advisors have thus developed an expertise in alternative investments. In parallel, Swiss institutional investors (e.g. pension funds) have been quick to include alternative investments in their asset allocation model. Recent changes in the applicable regulatory framework have further expanded the ability of these Swiss investors to invest in hedge funds, or funds of hedge funds.

Read the full whitepaper here.

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Switzerland Hedge Fund Guide

admin | Sunday, August 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Switzerland Hedge Funds

Guide to Hedge Funds in Switzerland

Hedge Fund Switzerland, Switzerland Hedge Funds, Hedge Funds in Switzerland, Swiss Hedge Funds, Swiss Hedge FundHere is a short collection of articles on the hedge fund industry in Switzerland. I am always looking for more valuable online tools and resources to add to these geographical hedge fund guides to the hedge fund industry. If you have a white paper or PowerPoint that I can include here please send me an email and I will post it for everyone’s benefit.

Swiss Hedge Fund Resources:

  • This KPMG Article discusses the process of how to set up a hedge fund in Switzerland. Some of the topics been touched on are: Authorization requirement and process, Regulatory capital requirement, Restrictions on marketing issues, and fund’s operational structures.
  • Marketing of Hedge Funds in Switzerland. Given legal and regulatory constraints, hedge funds in Switzerland may only be distributed by way of private placement, without any public offering. Therefore, this article will provide readers a overview of Swiss collective investment structure, its legal and regulatory frameworks, and address the on-going revision of the Swiss mutual fund legislation that is expected to create additional flexibility in offering this type of investment opportunity to the Swiss market.
  • Switzerland is slowly becoming a player in the hedge fund market, but it can do more to attract investors, says René Bösch. In comparison with other countries, until recently Switzerland did not play a significant role in the hedge fund industry, except that the Swiss banks manage a huge asset basis that also seeks investments in hedge funds.
  • Hedge funds the Swiss way: The elusive Swiss private bank UBP is one of the few financial institutions to have emerged unscathed from the global credit crunch. “Globes” talked to the bank’s Israel representative Elchanan Harel.
  • Asset managers are said to be attracted to the Alps by tax advantages, but the picture is obscured by fudge and indecision. The creation of a Geneva-based hedge fund business by private bank Lombard Oldier Darier Hentsch has rekindled the idea of hedge funds moving to Switzerland from London en masse
  • Geneva’s cantonal finance minister, David Hiler, tells local business leaders for the first time that he wants to attract foreign-based hedge funds to the region. The move is part of wider thinking about ways of keeping multinational companies based in Switzerland following pressure from the European Union for changes to company taxation.
  • Hedge funds are `crucial` in Switzerland’s financial market says Harcourt`s MP, country in 3rd European position but could move up to 2nd, Opalesque Exclusive: Less taxes for hedge fund managers would be beneficial for Switzerland, but it won`t happen just yet, Hedge funds add complexity to existing restructuring laws in Spain, SocGen A.M. posts 7.3 bln euros net outflows in Q1
  • This article suggests that you could say that this summer’s credit crunch was a chance to see the hedge fund emperors without their clothes. As banks around the world tightened access to money, on concern that borrowers’ collateral was impaired by exposure to subprime loans, some of the highest-profile upsets were reported in the $1.7 trillion hedge fund industry.
  • Switzerland is the world’s second largest market for funds of hedge funds, after the US, with most assets invested in offshore hedge funds.There are nearly 256 registered and supervised hedge funds in Switzerland approved for public distribution (up from 39 in 2001), with total assets of around US$9.4 billion in 2005 (compared with US$273.8 billion invested in all registered Swiss funds). Almost all these funds are structured as funds of hedge funds.
  • Brevan Howard, one of London’s biggest and most successful hedge funds, is considering moving its headquarters abroad, handing fresh impetus to sceptics of Britain’s claim to be the world’s leading global financial centre. The Pall Mall-based investment house, which manages $22bn of hedge fund assets and employs 250 people in London, has told the Financial Services Authority that uncertainty over taxation as well as the Government’s attack on non-doms has caused enough concern among the partners to consider moving abroad.
  • London’s Hedge Fund Managers Flee to Switzerland Over Tax Challenges. Dozens of London-based hedge fund managers are reportedly relocating to Switzerland to escape new tax rules affecting non-domiciled individuals residing in the UK. Many hedge fund managers have expressed alarm at the new tax rules and prepared to move their entire operation to Switzerland, with its favorable tax climate for wealthy investors, has emerged as the natural alternative for some managers.
  • Switzerland hopes tax changes will win hedge funds from city. Private investors residing in Switzerland can earn tax-free gains from their hedge fund and private equity investments but the managers of those funds are stung if their own stakes, known as “carried interest”, are treated as income. Therefore, the way to attract more asset managers to Switzerland is to get the tax authorities to treat the carried interest as private capital.
  • Zurich’s tax lure for hedge funds. Switzerland is mulling over plans for a special 10pc tax rate for hedge fund managers in a radical move to lure the booming industry away from London. The Swiss banking federation has proposed a 10pc tax on the elite managers, effectively cutting their marginal rate by 35 percentage point
  • HSBC has enhanced its fund of hedge funds product range available in Switzerland, with the approval for distribution of the HSBC AdvantEdge range. The fund range, which provides investors with the option to build focused exposure to specific hedge fund strategies or geographic regions.
  • Cayman Islands: Switzerland’s Cayman Connection. Switzerland is a particularly interesting jurisdiction when it comes to the alternative investments industry. Its legal and regulatory constraints largely prevent Swiss-based sponsors of FOHFs from setting up the fund within Switzerland. They therefore typically turn to the Cayman Islands as the jurisdiction to establish the fund vehicle, which will generally be a Cayman Islands company. Therefore, this article will explore the interaction between the two jurisdictions when it comes to funds of hedge funds.
  • This article provides a brief overview of some regulations and constraints in conducting investment management services in Switzerland. It also give readers a overview of Switzerland’s banking and investment fund sectors.
  • Swiss Banks call for relaxed immigration. Banker and fund managers in Switzerland are calling its government to relax its immigration laws enough to allow more skilled laborers from non-European Union countries to work in the banking industry. he banking industry today accounts for 6% of the country’s jobs, 12% of GDP , and 16% of Swiss tax revenue.
  • Swiss Financiers seek to tempt hedge funds. The Swiss finance sector has decided to increase pressure on the authorities to enact reforms that would help attract more hedge fund managers to Switzerland. The main focus of reform would be its tax and regulatory systems.
  • This is an excellent comprehensive resource for anyone who is interested in exploring the business environment in Switzerland and its various laws and regulation.
  • This article provides quantitative investigations into the potential for tax evasion by individuals in Switzerland’s offshore financial sectors. This article divides the huge Swiss financial sector into five parts: (1) on-balance-sheet bank business; (2) bank fiduciary deposits; (3) securities held in bank custody accounts; (4) insurance; and (5) investment funds (including mutual and hedge funds). It attempts to identify which of these assets are likely to be linked to tax evasion.
  • Switzerland: Financial Sector Assessment Program – Factual Update – IOSCO Objectives and Principles of Securities Regulation. It presents a factual update of regulatory developments in the area of securities regulation and supervision in Switzerland and introduces some of regulations of its hedge fund industry.
  • Switzerland: Searching an Edge On Hedge Funds. This article gives a brief overview of Switzerland’s hedge fund industry and its relevant laws and regulations. It also analyzes the future direction of the industry and how it stands against other financial powerhouses around the world, such as Britain and U.S.

Job Opportunities

  • List a Switzerland based hedge fund job here by emailing Richard@HedgeFundGroup.org. Please see our current Job Listings for hedge funds looking to hire professionals right now.

Seminars & Conferences

  • Please email Richard@HedgeFundGroup.org to promote a local conference within this region.

- Richard

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Joe Biden and Hedge Funds

admin | Sunday, August 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Joe Biden

Joe Biden’s Hedge Fund Ties

Joe Biden, Joseph Biden, Senator Joe Biden, sen Joe Biden, Joe Biden Campaign, Joe Biden Bio, Joe Biden BrothersIn an effort to cover the top 2-3 hedge fund centric news stories each day related to hedge funds here’s a piece on Joe Biden’s family and their ongoing legal battle regarding a hedge fund business.

A son and a brother of Sen. Joe Biden Jr. (D-Del.) are accused in two lawsuits of defrauding a former business partner and an investor of millions of dollars in a hedge fund deal that went sour, court records show.

The Democratic vice presidential candidate’s son Hunter, 38, and brother James, 59, assert instead that their former partner defrauded them by misrepresenting his experience in the hedge fund industry and recommending that they hire a attorney with felony convictions.

The legal actions have been playing out in New York State Supreme Court since 2007, and they focus on Hunter and James Biden’s involvement in Paradigm Companies LLC, a hedge fund group. Hunter Biden, a Washington lobbyist, briefly served as president of the firm.

A lawsuit filed by their former partner Anthony Lotito Jr. asserts in court papers that the deal was crafted to get Hunter Biden out of lobbying because his father was concerned about the impact it would have on his bid for the White House. Biden was running for the Democratic nomination at the time the suit was filed.

Hunter Biden was made president with an annual salary of $1.2 million, despite his inexperience in the hedge fund industry, the lawsuit said. Before that, he had been part of the Washington law firm Oldaker, Biden & Belair, which earned $1.76 million in lobbying revenue in the first half of 2006, according to Congressional Quarterly’s CQ MoneyLine. One of its biggest clients is the National Association of Shareholder and Consumer Attorneys, a District-based group representing law firms specializing in investment and corporate law….Read the rest of this article here.
__________________

Update: Here is another article excerpt on Joe Biden:

According to Joseph Biden, the hedge fund industry and private equity deserve the blame for the global credit crisis.

The Delaware senator and running mate of Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama made that assertion in a primary debate last year when he was himself running for president. Obama, a senator from Illinois, is running for president against Arizona Sen. John McCain.

During that debate Biden, named vice president on the Obama ticket over the weekend, characterized the hedge fund industry and private equity as “no transparency, no accountability.” Read the full article here.

- Richard

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Family Wealth Management

admin | Sunday, August 24th, 2008 | No Comments »

Family Wealth Management

Private Wealth Management for HNW Families

Family Wealth Management, Family Wealth Managers, Family Offices Wealth Management, Family Wealth Management ServicesHere is a short excerpt from a Malaysian based-newspaper’s recent article on single and multi-family offices:

The multi-client family office in the United States is a multi-disciplinary wealth management firm that offers family office services for a number of clients. This is an option that offers the best of both worlds — services that are tailored to the needs of high net worth individuals while taking advantage of economies of scale and the opportunity to delegate to professionals.

A multi-client family office makes sense for many individuals and family groups who want a provider that is intimately familiar with the needs of the client and capable of delivering a comprehensive service menu for a competitive price.

Families and individuals sometimes decide not to set up their own family office because they do not want to be responsible for managing a financial services business. They prefer the continuity offered by an established institution which they can rely on to evaluate and manage the various financial service professionals.

There are many differences between the multi-client family office and the traditional single family office:

l The single family office normally services one family and the multi-client family office services multiple families. Families who use a multi-client family office find that they realize most of the advantages of a dedicated office without the overheads and responsibility of managing a newly-formed financial business.

Despite the fact that a multi-client family office services more than one family, each family client still enjoys the full benefits of a single family office. These include:

  • Integrated wealth management services under a boutique structure;
  • Access to a high level of client service from an experienced staff of professionals who serve a limited client base;
  • More direct family control over financial matters;
  • The satisfaction of affiliating with an organisation whose goals are aligned with those of their family;
  • Comprehensive assessment of financial goals;
  • Customised solutions / strategies for each household;
  • Proactive management of client affairs;
  • Ongoing education about the responsibilities of ownership;
  • Focus on the continuity of the family across generations and branches; and
  • The assurance of confidentiality in the management of financial and personal affairs.

Read the full article here

- Richard
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Citadel Investment Group LLC Kenneth Griffin

admin | Sunday, August 24th, 2008 | 1 Comment »


Citadel Investment Group LLC

Citadel Investment Group LLC, Kenneth Griffin

Citadel Investment Group LLCThe following piece on Citadel Investment Group LLC 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: (7.16.09) Citadel Rises 9.5% as Industry Stalls

Citadel Investment Group LLC’s main funds gained 9.5 percent in June as corporate bonds rose, beating an industry indicator that was little changed.

The Wellington and Kensington funds returned 31 percent in the first six months of the year, said a person familiar with the results who asked not to be named because the information is private. Chicago-based Citadel, founded by Ken Griffin, manages $12 billion.

Hedge funds grew an average of less than 1 percent in June, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc., which compiles indexes to track industry performance. Its Weighted Composite Index rose 9.4 percent for the first six months of the year. Source

Resource #2: (4.13.09) Citadel Investment Group’s two flagship hedge funds continued their slow climb back last month, recouping another 3% after last year’s disastrous losses.

Both the Kensington Global Strategies Fund and Wellington Fund, which manage a combined $7.7 billion, were up approximately 11% in the first quarter, Dow Jones Newswires reports. The funds returned 2.6% in February and 4.75% in January, the first time in seven months the funds had posted positive returns. source

Resource #3: (3.18.09) Chicago-based hedge fund Citadel Investment Group turned up on American International Group Inc.’s list of firms it paid using proceeds from the federal government.

AIG, which has received $173 billion in aid from Washington, disclosed recipients of $52 billion it received from September to the end of 2008. Citadel received $200 million from AIG’s securities lending program. source

Resource #4: (2.5.09) Citadel Investment Group’s flagship hedge funds continued their rebound last month, bringing their returns for the first two months of the year to almost 8%.

The Kensington and Wellington funds returned 2.6% in February, the New York Post reports. The funds rose 5% in January, getting Citadel off on the right foot as it tries to recoup the massive losses suffered by the funds last year. Kensington and Wellington dropped by more than half amidst the economic crisis. source

Resource #5 (12.15.08) Ken Griffin’s Citadel Investment Group, a Chicago-based hedge fund firm that manages roughly $18 billion in assets and is considered one of the most powerful hedge funds firms in the world, has barred investors from withdrawing any money from its flagship funds, Kensington and Wellington.

Both funds have shed $10 billion year-to-date, nearly half their value. After insisting for months that the firm’s liquidity position remains strong and denying rumors that Citadel approached the Treasury Dept. for an injection of cash, Griffin, faced with the possibility of a further drop in the value of leveraged loans, is refusing to allow its clients to withdraw their remaining funds until at least the end of March. source

Resource #6 (12.8.08): Hedge fund giant Citadel Investment Group has had better weeks. And years, for that matter.

Citadel’s two largest funds have lost almost half their value this year. The Kensington and Wellington funds, which manage a total of $10 billion, lost 13% in November, bringing their year-to-date losses to some 47%.

The firm has received redemption requests for about $1 billion from the funds. Chicago-based Citadel, which at the start of the year managed some $20 billion, will be left with just $12 billion by the end of the year, according to estimates.

Citadel has also cut about 40 jobs in response to its shrinking business and dismal returns. The job cuts are linked to the firm’s decision to shutter CIG Reinsurance, it’s Bermudan reinsurer, Crain’s Chicago Business reports. A dozen of the lost jobs are at the firm’s headquarters in Chicago. The Wall Street Journal reports that the firm has laid off 20 employees in recent weeks, including some in London, as it cuts back its trading, back-office and human-resources operations. source

Resource #7: (11.8.08) Citadel’s largest hedge fund, known as Kensington/Wellington, fell 35% this year, through Oct. 17, Chief Operating Officer Gerald Beeson told holders of the firm’s medium-term notes during a conference call.

Beeson said most of the losses happened in the month after Lehman Brothers (LEHMQ) collapsed, triggering what he called “the near-collapse of the world’s banking system.”
He blamed most of the fund’s losses on huge dislocations between cash securities like corporate bonds and related derivatives that Citadel and other firms use to hedge those positions.

That hit Wellington/Kensington’s convertible bond portfolio, its fundamental credit portfolio and the fund’s holdings of investment-grade corporate bonds, according to Beeson.
Long positions the fund held in convertible bonds, junk bonds, bank loans and investment-grade bonds were hedged mainly using credit-default swaps, a type of derivative that protects investors against defaults, he continued.

“The removal of liquidity and deleveraging that’s taken place around the world has caused tremendous dislocation in the price of those cash assets relative to the value of the underlying derivative hedges,” Beeson said. Source

Resource #8 (11.8.08) Citadel Investment Group, one of the world’s biggest hedge funds, is shuttering a Bermuda reinsurer it formed in 2004, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Citadel, which manages roughly $18 billion, thought it had a winning business plan with CIG Re because it was fully collateralized, giving the insured certainty their claims would be paid if catastrophe struck.

It is unwinding the reinsurer, according to this person, because the company’s cost of capital is too high. The reinsurer, which does not have a financial strength rating, has also had a hard time competing with rivals who do.

The Chicago-based firm formed the property-catastrophe reinsurer, CIG Reinsurance Ltd, four years ago because it saw reinsurance as uncorrelated with its other investment strategies.

The $1.9 trillion hedge fund industry has been having a rough time of late. On average, funds have lost roughly 19 percent this year, and analysts expect there will be collapses.

Recently, questions over Citadel’s fate have dogged it, prompting Chief Executive Ken Griffin to hold a call with investors last month, when he firmly brushed aside talk that the firm he founded 18 years ago might fail. Source

Resource #9 (10.29.08) Now that it’s working with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Citadel Investment Group is trying to make nice.

The Chicago hedge fund giant is scaling back its role in the ELX Electronic Liquidity Exchange, which aims to challenge the CME Group’s dominance in U.S. Treasury bonds and other futures. The move comes after the two Chicago firms joined forces to found a clearinghouse for credit default swaps. That venture is scheduled to debut next month. Read More…

Resource #10 (10.29.08) Citadel Investment Group is shuttering a $1 billion fund of hedge funds.

The fund, Fusion, is run by Citadel Alternative Asset Management, set up by the Chicago hedge fund giant last year. The fund will return external money—which accounts for just about 5% of its assets—to investors, and will move the rest of the money, which is internal, to CAAM’s two seeding and incubation funds, Pensions & Investments reports. Read More…

Resource #11: (10.26.08) Citadel Investment Group LLC, addressing investor concerns that its hedge funds may be forced to liquidate, said it has $8 billion in untapped bank credit, 30 percent of its assets in cash and “modest” client redemptions.

The firm had no material losses from trading partners as its main Wellington and Kensington funds fell about 35 percent this year through Oct. 17, Chief Operating Officer Gerald Beeson said on a conference call today with bondholders. Year-end redemptions will be a “few percent” of assets.

“The dislocations that we have experienced in the market also create tremendous future opportunities within our portfolio,” the Chicago-based firm’s founder, Kenneth Griffin, said on the call.

Speculation about hedge-fund closings has swirled as global stocks lost $30 trillion in market value in the past year. U.S. managers may lose 15 percent of assets to withdrawals while their European rivals shed as much as 25 percent, Huw van Steenis, a Morgan Stanley analyst in London, wrote today in a report to clients.

Combined with investment losses, industry assets may shrink to $1.3 trillion, a 32 percent drop from the peak in June, van Steenis said.

Griffin, 40, who started Citadel in 1990, has posted the biggest losses of his career in 2008 after increasing wagers on loans and bonds before the markets plunged. Source

Resource #12: Kenneth Griffin, who manages the massive Citadel Investment Group Inc. hedge fund, has produced a sterling record over the past 20 years. Actually, he’s one of the world’s top money managers. But, in “Black September,” Griffin’s tracked record got trashed. Apparently, his flagship fund is down as much as 22% for 2008.

Interestingly enough, Wall Street has been abuzz with rumors that Citadel is dumping lots of shares – putting further pressure on the markets (and may have accounted for some of yesterday’s losses on the Dow and S&P). But Citadel is not alone. Other hedge fund operators have also suffered major losses.

One key issue has been the erratic regulatory response to short selling (essentially, the ban made it illegal for hedge funds to make profits). Of course, investors have also been requesting redemptions. Source.

Resource # 13: Citadel Investment Group LLC, the Chicago-based asset-management firm founded by Kenneth Griffin, is seeking about $1 billion for a new global macro hedge fund, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

The fund is set to be managed in London by Kaveh Alamouti, 54, whom Citadel hired this year from New York-based Moore Capital Management LLC, according to the person, who asked not to be identified because the plans are private. Citadel oversees $20 billion. Read more…

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Tontine Associates | Partners Jeffrey Gendell – Exclusive Notes & Resources

admin | Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 | No Comments »

Tontine Associates

Tontine Partners & Jeffrey Gendell

Tontine Associates FundQuick Link: Tontine Capital Partners – 13F Hedge Fund Holdings

The following piece on Tontine Associates 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.
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Resource #1: (11.12.08) Tontine Associates, an $11 billion hedge fund firm run by billionaire manager Jeffrey Gendell, will close two funds, sources close to the situation told FOX Business on Tuesday.

The Greenwich, Conn.-based firm will close the Tontine Partners and Tontine Capital funds after both funds got clobbered by an ugly economy and turmoil in the financial markets.

Sources said Gendell is closing both funds because of their performance — each is down more than 50% year to date — rather than because of investor redemption.

Gendell, through a spokesman, declined to comment.

But sources said Tontine plans to wind down the two funds in an orderly manner in order to maximize shareholder return.

Gendell’s Tontine 25 and Tontine Financial funds will remain open.

Problems with Gendell’s funds became public in early October after a letter signed by Gendell was leaked to the public. In the letter, Gendell told investors that all of his funds have taken huge hits this year, citing the example of U.S. Steel (X: 28.87, -3.51, -10.84%).Tontine owns a 2.62% stake in the steel company, which has seen its shares fall from $200 in July to just over $30 a share.

Gendell wrote that because of the “rapid declines in our steel stocks and engineering and construction stocks, we were forced to scale down our positions.” Source

Resource #2: In a Reglatory filing with the SEC, multibillion-dollar hedge fund, Tontine Associates, has bought 5% of trucking giant YRC, equaling 2.97 million shares of YRC common stock, for more than $48 million.

Jeffrey Gendell, founder of Tontine Associates, has made big investments recently in other struggling companies in the region. Earlier this year, he spent more than $11 million to acquire an 8.6 percent stake in Thermadyne Holdings Corp., a struggling producer of metal-cutting and welding equipment based in Chesterfield, Mo.

Gendell also bought more than 400,000 shares of TierOne Corp., a Lincoln, Neb., bank that has lost nearly $100 million in the past four quarters. Stockpickr.com reports “Gendell’s specialty is picking a macro-styled theme, buying very large positions in companies that benefit from that theme, and then working with or pressuring management to improve shareholder returns”.
Gendell, among other things, is a donor to Duke University and a part-owner of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team. Read more here…

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Who Can Invest in Hedge Funds?

admin | Friday, August 22nd, 2008 | No Comments »

Who Invests in Hedge Funds?


Q & A: Who Can Invest in Hedge Funds?


Who Can Invest in Hedge Funds? Who can legally invest in hedge funds? Who are hedge fund investors? What investors use hedge fund investments?Who can Invest in hedge funds?

“Sophisticated investors” invest in hedge funds. These investors do not need the protection that comes with the regulations on mutual funds. These wealthy individuals must pass either an accredited investor test or a qualified purchaser test.

An Accredited Investor is an individual who either:
a.) has a net worth greater than $1 million.
b.) has an income in the past two years that exceeds $200,000/year, and expects to continue this way.
or c.) holds assets greater than $5 million.

A Qualified Purchaser is either:
a.) an individual that owns at least $5 million in investments.
b.) a family-held business that owns at least $5 million in investments.
c.) a business that has discretion of at least $25 million in investments.
d.) a trust that is sponsored by qualified purchasers.

- Richard

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