Hedge Fund History
The year was 1949, WWII just ended, and the world was in a unified celebration.
Alfred Winslow Jones, a sociologist, was working on assignment for Fortune
magazine investigating fundamental and technical research on forecasting
the stock market. The article reported on a new class of stock market
timers, in addition to unorthodox methods of investing, all to achieve
positive returns and call the market. Jones was very intrigued by these
trading methods and became absolutely consumed with his own concept of
an investment fund.
Prior to the release of his Fortune article, Jones setup an investment
fund with himself as general partner. The fund was designed as a market-neutral
strategy, whereby the long positions in undervalued equities would be
offset by short positions in others. This “hedged” position
would allow capital to be leveraged, while also enabling large wagers
to be made with limited resources. Another genius feature was having an
incentive fee amounting to 20% of any realized profits or gains with no
fixed fees.
However, Jones’ greatest notoriety stems from his innovation that
specific limited partnerships, if structured correctly, are exempt from
regulatory control under the Investment Company Act of 1940. This exemption
allows managers to utilize techniques, such as leverage and short-selling
which typically binds other mutual funds and investment companies. Consequently,
many copy -cats mimicked the fee structure, but not the “hedge”
mentality and philosophy that Jones inspired. It was not until another
Fortune magazine article, in 1966, which branded the market-neutral strategy
that Jones’ designed as a “hedge fund”.
Related Reading:
What
is a Hedge Fund?
Hedge
Fund definition
Domestic
Hedge Funds or Offshore Hedge Funds
Fund
of Funds
|