Goldman Sachs Hedge Funds Report

Goldman Sachs Hedge Fund Report

Goldman Sachs Report on the Hedge Fund Industry

Goldman Sachs has released a new report on the hedge funds industry, Hedge Fund Monitor. The report looked at 687 funds with $498 billion of long equity positions and $346 billion of short positions. Hedge funds covered shorts in 2Q and added to long positions, which now represent 3.7% of the US equity market. Among the key findings:
  • Net long exposure has increased significantly to the highest since June 08 amidst improving economic data, stabilizing capital markets, and rising equity prices. Hedge funds net long is now 31%, a return to "pre-Lehman" levels.
  • An estimated 7% of hedge funds have closed since June 2008.
  • Hedge fund selling pressures have abated, and hedge funds are likely to put more cash into their top positions. Falling correlation suggests that single stock investment ideas will gain favor over a macro-driven market.
  • Hedge funds boosted ownership in financials by 55% on a quarter over quarter basis, to $70 billion.



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Boris Johnson Mayor of London

London Mayor Boris Johnson

London Mayor Johnson Fights for Hedge Funds

Hedge funds fighting regulation in the UK have found an advocate in London's Mayor Boris Johnson. Mayor Johnson has been a critic of what he sees as excessive regulation and Wednesday he will meet with top members of the European Parliament and the head of internal markets for the European Commission.

The draft European directive includes "radical" initiatives on raising capital and capital requirements. A large portion of the alternative investments is based in the UK and hedge funds have come under increasing regulatory pressure. Many hedge funds professionals are considering leaving the UK when a 51% tax takes effect next year, read more about that here. Mr. Johnson seeks to keep hedge funds from fleeing to Switzerland:

Mr Johnson's attack on potential regulation comes as the Swiss government is stepping up its campaign to entice hedge funds and other financial services companies to relocate to Switzerland.

The Economic Development Office of the Canton of Geneva, an arm of the Swiss government, has teamed up with Kinetic Partners, a London-based advisory group, to host a conference in London in September at which they will outline the advantages of moving to Switzerland. Kinetic claims this year to have helped 23 hedge funds managing an estimated $15bn (£9bn) move from London to Switzerland.

The conference invitation, seen by The Sunday Telegraph, says: "The predicted relocation of UK led hedge funds to Switzerland is today becoming a reality. Fuelled by increasingly harsh regulation and changes to tax, and attracted by stability and clarity, the big move from London to Switzerland has already been successful for many funds." source

Read about the UK tax reform here.

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Hedge Funds Strategy Performance

Hedge Funds Strategy Performance

Hedge Funds Strategies Performance This Year

Hedge funds use many different strategies to achieve returns and some hedge funds seem to be shifting strategies to capitalize on the opportunities in the current market. To learn more about these strategies see this article. Also, you can join Hedge Fund Premium for an exclusive video to be added this quarter highlighting each of these strategies and explaining how they are utilized by hedge fund managers. Here is a list of the most popular strategies and how they have performed in the seven months to end-July.

Strategy: Long-Short Equity
  • Well-known hedge funds using this strategy: Odey European, Toscafund
  • Performance year-to-date: 11.45 percent
  • Performance in 2008: -19.76 percent
Strategy: Managed Futures
  • Well-known hedge funds using this strategy: Man Group's AHL and Winton Futures Fund

  • Performance year-to-date: -7.82 percent

  • Performance in 2008: 18.33 percent

Strategy: Global Macro

  • Well-known hedge funds using the strategy: George Soros's Quantum fund, Julian Robertson's Tiger Management, Paul Tudor Jones's Tudor Investment Corp.
  • Performance year-to-date: 5.24 percent
  • Performance in 2008: -4.62 percent
Strategy: Event-Driven
  • Well-known hedge funds using this strategy: TCI or Atticus
  • Performance year-to-date: 9.11 percent
  • Performance in 2009: -17.74 percent

Strategy: Fixed Income Arbitrage
  • Performance year-to-date: 15.9 percent
  • Performance in 2009: -28.82 percent

Strategy: Convertible Arbitrage

  • Performance year-to-date: 31.14 percent
  • Performance in 2009: -31.59 percent
Strategy: Emerging Markets
  • Performance year-to-date: 17.54 percent
  • Performance in 2009: -30.41 percent

Strategy: Dedicated Short Bias
  • Performance year-to-date: -17.28 percent

  • Performance in 2009: 14.87 percent

Strategy: Funds of hedge funds
  • Performance year-to-date: 6.95 percent
  • Performance in 2008: -21.37
Source

Learn more about Hedge Fund Strategies here.

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Fund of Funds Madoff

Fund of Funds Madoff

Funds of Hedge Funds After Bernie Madoff

Funds of hedge funds are trying to remake their image after Bernard Madoff's massive ponzi scheme. Investors have lost confidence in the fund of hedge funds industry from factors including poor returns, a deep recession and high profile scandals like Madoff's. Another factor that may be turning investors away is the common extra level of fess fund of hedge funds charge but many of these funds are changing their methods to attract investors.

Investors withdrew at least $150 billion from fund of funds in 2008 and 2009 leaving these funds with an up-hill battle to reclaim that lost capital. To get investors back without having to drastically cut fees, fund of hedge funds are now replacing employees, heightening risk monitoring or giving investors greater liquidity.

This overhaul is particularly noticeable in the funds that invested with Madoff. Managers are replacing the people who should have foreseen the scheme and bolstering the existing risk management team. In cases when the decision to invest with Madoff was debated in the firm, the person(s) most responsible are being isolated as the sole reason that the fund of funds invested with Madoff.

This strategy of remaking their image and boosting investor confidence may be working. According to S&P, the fund of funds industry is having its first net inflows in over a year.

While the additional fees are not as high as those on the underlying funds, they nevertheless represent an extra cost, and the very need for funds of funds is now being questioned as some institutions consider cutting out the middle man. "Pension funds' hedge fund databases are getting sufficiently large that you can replicate a fund of funds by buying 50-to-60 funds," said Nick Bullman, managing partner at Bullman Investment Management.

Some firms have responded by developing a range of so-called managed accounts -- tailored and segregated portfolios for individual clients -- which allows them to sell when they want and which are hard for investors to reproduce.

London-based Permal, which runs around $19 billion in fund of funds assets, has expanded its range of managed accounts, including some tailored mandates, between which it can move money more quickly.

"Specialist groups and customized products could do quite well. If you focus solely on a customized or country specific product you can justify excess margins," said Bullman. "The idea of acting as a gatekeeper to ... funds doesn't work now." Source

Learn more about the Bernard Madoff Scandal and Hedge Funds here.

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Hedge Funds Hiring

Hedge Funds Hiring

Hedge Funds Starting to Hire Again

Hedge funds and other financial firms have slowed hiring during the recession, but hedge funds have started to take on new employees again. Hedge funds seem to be targeting the talented managers and traders who were pushed out in the economic downturn.

Amidst an apparent recovery in the hedge fund industry and new investment opportunities funds have started to hire again especially marketing executives, operations employees and fund managers with experience in popular trading strategies. Hedge funds who have recently hired include: Citadel, RBC Capital Markets, Artradis and Tribridge.

"Volume (of job placements) is up threefold from the first quarter ... The number one role is marketing," Olman said, noting activity had picked up in distressed debt and credit, equity long-short and global macro specialists.

"Surprisingly, U.S. equity statistical arbitrage and systematic trading are hiring," he added.

"Anecdotally it really feels like things have turned. There seem to be a lot more people looking for staff," said Odi Lahav, vice president at Moody's alternative investment group.

"For many funds, performance is up and more managers are looking towards growth again. So, after having cut a lot of staff around the end of last year, they're now looking to restaff in areas they think are worthwhile."

"A lot of highly talented people, who were dislocated by the downturn in the banks, have been picked up," Olman said. Read more...



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Do I Need a Prime Broker

Do I Need a Prime Broker

Answering: Do I Need a Prime Broker?


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UK Hedge Funds Tax

UK Hedge Funds Tax

Hedge Fund Managers Flee 51% Tax in U.K.

The UK government's announcement that by April it will begin taxing individuals earning more £150,000 (about $247,000) a year at a rate of 51% has led many hedge funds to leave the UK for more tax-friendly countries. Already hedge funds managing an estimated $15 billion have fled in response to the impending tax.

Lawyers in the UK have said that a large portion of their work is now devoted to counseling hedge fund managers on ways to leave the country. A partner at accounting firm, Ernst & Young, said that most hedge fund managers are debating the benefits of moving to Switzerland. Swiss cantons are preparing for the incoming business from hedge funds fleeing the UK and are offering low tax rates to businesses entering the country (the tax rate is still only 14% without a discount).
David Butler, founder of professional-services firm Kinetic Partners, said his company had advised 23 hedge funds on leaving the U.K. in the 15 months to April. An additional 15 are close to quitting the U.K., he said.

Hedge fund Amplitude Capital took its $735 million in assets under management to Switzerland at the start of this year. In May, Odey Asset Management threatened to move. All the hedge funds that have left the U.K. for Switzerland are concerned about tighter European Union regulations, as well as a new top rate of income tax announced by the U.K. government.

Recent research by accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers suggested that married bankers earning £250,000 a year in the U.K. would retain less of their income after 51% tax than their counterparts in Paris, Frankfurt, Singapore and Dubai. Source

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Hedge Fund of Funds Assets

Hedge Fund of Funds Assets

Hedge Fund of Funds Continue to Lose Assets

As individual hedge funds recover in the first half of 2009, hedge fund of funds are still suffering heavy redemptions. A recent study of the top 50 hedge funds of funds found all but two funds have not recovered from the drop in assets since September 2008.

Assets in hedge funds of funds fell from a spike of $825 billion to just $530 billion in June. This is a staggering loss for the hedge fund of fund industry which has increased at a rate of more than 20 percent annually from 2000-2008. Investment banks led the collapse with the largest reductions in assets coming from the alternative asset arms of banks like HSBC, UBS, Goldman Sachs. But even the specialist managers had huge losses: Permal Asset Management's lost 49% of its assets and Man Investments had a 46% drop from Sept. 2008 to June 2009.

The only two hedge fund of funds that saw inflows were Blackstone, which grew its operations 25pc, from $20bn to $25bn, and Grovesnor Capital Management, up 1pc from $20bn to $21bn. The hedge fund sector as a whole suffered last year as a combination of the market turmoil and high levels of gearing resulted in its worst performance for a decade. In addition, a sudden aversion to risk and a need for liquidity led to a scramble by investors to withdraw money, causing some funds to collapse.

Hedge fund of funds have been hit twice by redemptions both directly and in the funds they invest in. Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research (HFR) has reported that more than 200 funds of hedge funds liquidated in 2009, nearly twice the number of those that closed in the fourth quarter of 2008. However, in recent months some have reported a steady return of inflows, particularly in funds of funds that have restructured and reduced management fees. Source


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India Family Offices

India Family Offices

Family Offices Gain Popularity with India's HNIs

The number of high net worth individuals (HNIs) has grown impressively leading to a similar rise in Multi-Family Offices. India had the second-highest increase in high net worth individuals in 2006 and 2008. India now has an estimated 84,000 families with net assets of at least $1 million (roughly Rs 5 crore). Family offices have emerged as a helpful way to manage that wealth.

What makes MFOs popular is that they earn money on the fee clients pay and ability to work with other financial services companies. This is absent in wealth management companies that earn income from selling in-house products.

“Ultra-rich families are increasingly thinking that product-driven wealth management companies do not serve purpose,” said Richa Karpe, director, investments at Altamount Capital Management, a multi-family office firm.

"Family office is at the top of the pyramid in wealth management space. It is for people who have liquid financial assets over Rs 50 crore,” said Rajesh Saluja, CEO, ASK Wealth Advisors. For any amount below that, the cost of managing the assets will shoot up. Most of the companies agree with this. Client Associate is the only exception that takes families on board with investible surplus of Rs 10 crore.

Read more...

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Asia Hedge Fund Managers

Asia Hedge Fund Managers

Hedge Fund Managers Focused in Asia Do Well

Hedge funds in Asia made the biggest returns in nearly a decade in the second quarter of 2009, riding a recovery in the Asian markets. Here are some key trends in the last quarter for hedge funds in Asia:


  • Hedge fund managers trading in Asian markets (except Japan) spiked 18.86% in Q2, the strongest since 1999.
  • An index tracking China focused hedge funds jumped 19.82% in Q2, up 35.86% in the first half of 2009.
  • Asian Hedge fund Everest Capital, a $1.7 billion firm led by Marko Dimitrijevic, returned more than 13% last month, up 66% so far this year.
Hedge funds seem to be riding the recovery of the Asian stock markets. The markets have rebounded impressively in 2009 after taking heavy losses last year. China's government stimulus plan and a boom in lending by China's banks explain the new economic growth. Everest Capital's China Opportunity Fund (AUM $350 million) was up by more than 9% in July making its total gains 52% this year.

"The strong rebound of China's economy is supported by its fiscal spending and rapid credit expansion," Everest Capital said in a recent investor update.

After record redemptions from hedge funds last year, investors have begun returning to the industry in recent months, encouraged by a rebound in performance. Net flows of investor money into hedge funds resumed in May and June, according to HedgeFund dot net, which tracks assets and performance in the industry.

"Emerging markets have produced some of the best performance in 2009 and have also seen the highest rates of investor allocations," HedgeFund dot net said Tuesday. However, optimism about a China-led economic recovery in Asia was knocked Monday after the Shanghai Composite slumped almost 6%. Indeed, Everest said in the firm's recent investor update that it's closely monitoring whether and how the Chinese government continues to support fiscal spending and credit expansion. Source

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Hedge Fund Incubation

Hedge Fund Incubation

Answering: How Do I Incubate a Hedge Fund?



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Hedge Fund Film Financing

Hedge Fund Film Financing

Terminator Producers Sue Hedge Fund Over Loan

The producers of the sci-fi film, Terminator Salvation, have filed a lawsuit against its hedge fund financer and another against a single employee of the hedge fund. The two producers, Derek Anderson and Victor Kubicek, are struggling to repay the loan from Pacificor, a hedge fund in Santa Barbara.

Each lawsuit is for $30 million and comes after Pacificor filed a lien against a separate company owned by the producers. The lawsuit claims that the produces do not owe money on the loan after a settlement earlier this year and calls Pacificor's lien, "desperate and deliberate attempt to seize ownership and control of the Halcyon entities and of the ['Terminator'] franchise."

This is not the first time the duo has been in legal battles during their three year stint in Hollywood. The producers claim that they were pushed into financial ruin by Kurt Benjamin, former vice president of business development at Pacificor. If the producers do not prevail in court they're in for worse financial problems as it sounds like Benjamin will be counter-suing.
Benjamin commented, "The allegations in the Halcyon lawsuit are false and without merit. I intend to refute these claims through the legal process and will file suit against Halcyon, Dominion, Derek Anderson and Victor Kubicek."
The suit against Pacificor involves a dispute over a $5-million bridge loan that the hedge fund made to Halcyon in December 2007 after it had provided a $30-million loan in April of that year to buy the "Terminator" rights. This month, Pacificor filed a lien against a separate company owned by Anderson and Kubicek called Dominion Group, through which they were to be paid for their producing duties on "Salvation."

Pacificor's lien, the complaint states, has prevented the pair from borrowing against the money they are owed for their producing services on "Salvation," a payday estimated to be worth more than $7.5 million, according to the lawsuit against Kurt Benjamin, a former vice president of business development at Pacificor who helped facilitate the loans.

"We haven't seen the lawsuit. However, we do not believe we have done anything wrong," said Andrew Mitchell, chief executive of Pacificor. "We believe we have the right to put a lien on the Dominion assets." Source

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Developing a Hedge Fund USP (Unique Selling Proposition)

Developing a Hedge Fund USP

Below is a short video explanation of how a hedge fund can and should create a Unique Selling Proposition (USP) so they are not lost in the noise of the industry. This video was created after our team saw that most hedge fund marketing pitch books look very familiar and largely repeat the same goals and methods of investing. This video from HedgeFundPremium.com should help your team create more unique and effective positioning strategies and marketing materials.



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Hedge Funds and Administrators

Do I Need an Administrator

Do I Need a Hedge Fund Administrator?


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Hedge Fund Bankruptcies

Hedge Fund Bankruptcies

Corporate Lawyer on Hedge Fund Bankruptcies

Over the last year, many hedge funds have had to file for bankruptcy. The following video is an interview of Eric B. Fisher a partner at Butzel Long, an investment law firm. Fisher talks about how hedge fund creditors play a role in bankruptcy cases, specifically the Delphi Corporation. He notes that hedge funds have had their reputation tarnished in the recent bankruptcy disputes but they will become more "savvy" in how hedge funds present themselves in these cases.



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Public Hedge Fund Mangers

Public Hedge Fund Mangers

Public Hedge Fund Managers Vary in Reporting

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

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

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

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

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

To investors, it just might be.

Read more...


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Preferred Hedge Fund Terms

Preferred Hedge Fund Terms

Investors Gaining Preferred Hedge Fund Terms

Hedge funds suffered heavy losses and redemptions during the worst of recession and now, as the hedge fund industry is recovering, investors are finding managers more flexible. Institutional investors have succeeded in persuading major hedge fund managers to establish new funds, share classes or more reasonably-priced offerings. The consenting hedge fund managers include Renaissance Technologies Corp., Citadel Investment Group and Diamondback Capital Management.

Renaissance Technologies Corporation will create a hedge fund exclusively for institutional investors in the next 2-3 months, according to an executive with Renaissance's institutional subsidiary. Chicago-based Citadel Investment Group will create a family of single-strategy hedge funds with lower management fees than its flagship funds. Diamondback Capital Management, along with other hedge funds, recently agreed to lower fees by providing a share class that gives investors a smaller fee for a longer lockup period. All of these decisions are the result of a push back by institutional investor toward better terms and lower fees. Several hedge funds, desperate for capital during the last year, have agreed but it's possible that the status quo will return if hedge funds continue to perform well.

This is definitely a change from the hay day for hedge funds when investors were much less concerned about the terms of the agreement, rather many institutional investors were simply pleased to have access to exclusive hedge funds. Jane Buchan, CEO of hedge fund-of-funds manager sees this change, “Everybody is thinking about terms these days, where they definitely weren't before. We've found it much easier to negotiate lower fees, transparency and the type of investment vehicle.”

There is some disagreement about the value of different share classes. While instutional investors are often drawn to "institutional-only" funds, hedge funds often disregard the label and allow other investors in as well. Under the varying share classes, hedge funds are often able to negotiate better terms because of the exclusivity of the fund. Thus they can demand longer lock-up periods and larger minimum investments but may also add non-institutional investors. Yet this is a distinct change in manager-investor relations as hedge fund GP's are more willing to negotiate with limited partners.

“The difference now is that hedge fund managers are willing to sit down and talk about all of this, which wasn't the case a couple of years ago,” said a managing director at an equity hedge fund manager, who asked not to be identified.

Still, some believe the changes are largely cosmetic, repackaging existing share classes as “institutional” to make them more attractive to pension funds, endowments and foundations.

When it comes to comparing institutional vs. non-institutional hedge fund share classes “it's really about the sizzle vs. the steak,” said William Crerend, president and CEO of hedge funds-of-funds manager EACM Advisors LLC, Norwalk, Conn. “You need to get under the hood of these vehicles and see whether you really come out better given the terms of the investment,” Mr. Crerend said.

Mr. Crerend also said “there likely will be a spectrum of outcomes” when it comes to the ways that hedge funds satisfy institutional investor needs, ranging from separately managed accounts to single client funds, institutional feeder funds for flagship strategies and institutional share classes. Source


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Hedge Fund Performance August 2009 Update

Hedge Fund Performance Update


The markets are in recovering mode and here are some statistics about how the various hedge fund investment strategies have performed in the last few months. The recent galloping in the equity markets and better corporate earnings has certainly had positive impact on the hedge funds performance.

Long-only hedge fund strategies posted the best returns of the asset class in July as global stock markets continued their upward trend, according to data in a report published by Lipper Global on Tuesday. As the industry looks to repair itself following last year’s heavy losses and record redemptions, these new figures will give more ammunition to market watchers who claim that the industry is on the road to recovery.

The data from the Thomson Reuters company showed that long-only hedge funds posting a 4.75 percent return for the month, building on gains of 14.34 percent for the year-to-date.

According to the recent reports released ahead of Lipper’s monthly Hedge Fund Insight Report, which is due at the end of August, showed that all hedge fund strategies posted a positive performance last month, with long/short equity and multi strategies both giving returns of 0.81 percent. Short bias strategies made a 0.40 percent return, boosted by profitable short sale strategies in the first half of the month, Lipper data showed.

The market is already looking for the next macro catalyst to drive market direction; there are a still a number of risks of market correction. The other hedge fund strategies which performed well were, options arbitrage performed strongly in July, with returns of 0.88 percent. Event-driven was the worst-performer, posting a 0.19 percent return.

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Video Overview of HedgeFundPremium.com Tools

Video Overview of HedgeFundPremium.com

Below is a short video overview of Hedge Fund Premium.com, a membership program which provides hedge fund professionals with 14 exclusive tools found nowhere else. These tools prevent our members from losing money and time. These tools also help members raise capital and improve their careers.

These 14 tools provide capital raising advice videos, free to attend networking events, a hedge fund marketing best practices book, a career workbook, and a large collection of premium original video content. Membership costs just $1 the first month by using the coupon code 1F7 at this page of our website.


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International Institutional Investors

International Institutional Investors

Non-US Institutional Investors Return to Hedge Funds

Investor confidence is returning as hedge funds have performed well so far this year, bringing new and old institutional investors back to hedge funds. This includes many large non-U.S. institutional investors such as the $37 billion Universities Superannuation Scheme; the $25 billion Korea Investment Corp.; and the roughly $11 billion West Midlands Pension Fund.

Investors hope to make good returns from investment opportunities in the market volatility, and they anticipate paying less to invest as some hedge funds have lowered fees and agreed to more investor-friendly terms. Another factor drawing investors to hedge funds is the access to managers. Many institutional investors did not have access to the top tier hedge funds but with redemptions and a decline in limited partners many more investors are able to work with the top of the industry.

Consultants and investors also say improvements in fees and terms are making hedge funds more attractive. [Senior investment consultant] Mr. Loveday said some hedge funds' fees now align with liquidity. Examples include back-loading fees on a strategy with a two-year lockup instead of calculating them daily. They're also exchanging reduced liquidity for lower fees.

But performance could be the most important consideration.

“There has been a clear-out of players in the financial market with a reduction in both the number of hedge funds and banks investing proprietary capital. That inevitably means pricing anomalies and opportunities exist much longer and at wider levels than they did historically when competition was greater,” Watson Wyatt's Mr. Loveday said. “High-quality managers are in a much better position to take advantage of opportunities now that there are far fewer (proprietary trading) desks and hedge funds.”

Equity long/short managers that don't use a lot of leverage and multistrategy managers with skill across a number of areas are in the best position to thrive in the current environment, Mr. Loveday said. Source


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Hedge Funds Deliver the Goods

Hedge Funds Deliver the Goods

Here is a video interview with Rick Steele, CEO of TechInvest. Mr. Steele runs the Intercept Capital Fund a long/short market neutral hedge fund. Within this video Mr. Steele comments on hedge funds and fund of hedge fund performance. If you are reading our daily email newsletter please click here to watch the video now.


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Hedge Fund Legal Structure

Hedge Fund Legal Structure

What Type of Legal Structure Should a Fund Use?


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Cayman Islands Offshore Accounts

Cayman Islands Offshore Accounts

Cayman Islands Off "Gray" List for Tax Standards

In 2005, it was estimated that 80% of the world's hedge funds were located in the Cayman Islands. A high number of hedge funds are registered with the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority as well as institutional investors and high net worth individuals. Historically, the Cayman Islands has been criticized as a safe haven from taxes and government scrutiny. Today the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development removed the British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands from its "gray" list of nations that do not adhere to international standards for tax disclosure.
The OECD said that both islands have signed agreements to exchange tax information with New Zealand, bringing to 12 the number of such agreements for both jurisdictions.

As a result, both are now categorized as having "substantially implemented the internationally agreed tax standard."

The accords are the latest in a rush of such deals amid increased scrutiny of offshore banking centers from the Group of 20 industrial and developing economies, which earlier this year threatened sanctions against alleged tax havens. The U.K. and France have said alleged tax havens should face a March 2010 deadline to put their laws in order and sign tax accords.

The tax-havens issue is expected to be high on the agenda at the Pittsburgh, Pa., summit of G-20 leaders next month. The OECD said six countries have now moved off its gray list since April, when the G-20 made their threat to impose sanctions. Source

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Hedge Funds Buying

Hedge Funds Buying

Hedge Funds Taking Positions in Stocks Again

The recent surge in the stock markets has been a result of the of the ongoing positive sentiments in the global markets. The comments from Nobel laureate Paul Krugman and other experts saying that markets have touched the bottom and it cannot go down further seem to have triggered the markets. More importantly, hedge funds have started to take positions in stocks which they see would generate value in next few years. John Paulson's hedge fund purchased stock in Bank of America and Regions Financial, both banks' stock price rose after Paulson's firm announced the purchase.

Paulson's new positions

Bank of America surged 6.7 percent to $17, the biggest advance in the Dow. Paulson’s hedge fund bought 168 million shares of the company in the second quarter, a regulatory filing showed, becoming the lender’s fourth-largest shareholder.

Regions Financial Corp. rallied 7.9 percent to $5.20 after Paulson bought 35 million shares, becoming the second-largest stakeholder in Alabama’s biggest bank. Financial shares rallied 1.3 percent as a group.

Paulson’s interest in banks comes after his Credit Opportunities Fund soared almost six fold in 2007 on bets that subprime mortgages would plummet. Last year, his flagship fund returned 37 percent, compared with a loss of 19 percent for hedge funds on average.

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