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    Posts Tagged ‘collett’

    Resource rout claims hedge fund

    Thursday, September 4, 2008 : Permalink

    Globe and Mail - A year ago, Dwight Anderson was being hailed as the "king of commodities," a precocious 40-year-old hedge fund manager who made a prescient - and highly profitable - bet that global food prices would spike in unprecedented fashion.

    Now he is merely another in a long line of hard-luck speculators, his crown handed to him by a fickle commodities market that has proven itself capable of ruining fortunes as quickly as it created them.

    In a letter to investors yesterday, Mr. Anderson announced he was shutting down the largest fund of Ospraie Management LLC, the firm he built into one of the largest commodities-themed hedge funds in the world. The Ospraie Fund, which focuses on natural gas, oil, metals and other resources, boasted assets of almost $4-billion (U.S.) at its peak last year, but so far in 2008 it is down 39 per cent - including a gut-wrenching 27-per-cent slide in August.

    "I am extremely disappointed with this result and the fund’s sudden reversal in performance," Mr. Anderson wrote. "The losses were primarily caused by a substantial selloff in a number of our energy, mining and resource equity holdings during a six-week period characterized by some of the sharpest declines in these sectors in the past 10 to 20 years."

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    Breaking even becomes hedge funds’ mantra

    Monday, August 25, 2008 : Permalink

    Globe and Mail - Joe E. Lewis, the late American nightclub comic and inveterate horse player, once quipped: "I hope I break even. I need the money." That could very well become a mantra in the hedge fund world, where even the best and brightest of managers with impressive track records have been suffering through some of their worst results in years.

    In the first three months of this year alone, 170 funds in the United States went out of business, and that was before things got really bad. Globally, hedge funds ended the first half with their most dismal performance in a decade. And then came the selloff in resource stocks, which brought misery to commodity funds, one of the few bright spots earlier in the year. July ended up being the worst month for futures in more than five years.

    Scotia Capital’s Canadian hedge fund index, a useful measure of performance, was off 8.6 per cent on an asset-weighted basis last month, bested by both the gloom-laden TSX composite and S&P 500 indexes.

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    In the first three months of this year alone, 170 funds in the United States went out of business, and that was before things got really bad. Globally, hedge funds ended the first half with their most dismal performance in a decade. And then came the selloff in resource stocks, which brought misery to commodity funds, one of the few bright spots earlier in the year. July ended up being the worst month for futures in more than five years.

    Scotia Capital’s Canadian hedge fund index, a useful measure of performance, was off 8.6 per cent on an asset-weighted basis last month, bested by both the gloom-laden TSX composite and S&P 500 indexes.

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    Investments in Asia hedge funds halved

    Monday, August 4, 2008 : Permalink

    Reuters Singapore - Investors almost halved the money they put into Asia-focused hedge funds in the second quarter compared to the first three months of the year as a selloff in stocks hurt appetite for risky assets, data showed.

    Asia-focused hedge funds received a net $530 million (268 million pounds) from investors in the April-June quarter, down from $1 billion in the first quarter, Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research said in a statement released late on Thursday.

    Asian hedge funds grew by approximately $200 million to $100.48 billion, up just 0.25 percent from the first quarter, as inflows were mostly offset by a decline of nearly $320 million due to poor performance.


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    High Flying Falcone Has His Wings Clipped

    Monday, August 4, 2008 : Permalink

    New York Post - After months of falling financial stocks and rising oil prices, July’s sudden turnaround was a welcome relief to average investors.

    Not so for hedge funds - including subprime-mortgage superstar Phil Falcone.

    That’s because a number of smart-money investors, including Falcone’s Harbinger Capital Partners, got slammed when oil took an unexpected dive, and Wall Street stocks suddenly popped in mid-July.

    It was the exact reversal of otherwise long-winning bets that energy prices would continue to climb and financial firms would keep getting pummeled.

    "July will be bad in aggregate for the hedge fund industry," said Veryan Allen, who advises large investors on hedge funds. "The short squeeze in financial stocks and the oil selloff has hurt quite a few," he said.

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    Investments in Asia hedge funds halved in Q2

    Friday, August 1, 2008 : Permalink

    Reuters - Investors almost halved the money they put into Asia-focused hedge funds in the second quarter compared to the first three months of the year as a selloff in stocks hurt appetite for risky assets, data showed.

    Asia-focused hedge funds received a net $530 million from investors in the April-June quarter, down from $1 billion in the first quarter, Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research said in a statement released late on Thursday.

    Asian hedge funds grew by approximately $200 million to $100.48 billion, up just 0.25 percent from the first quarter, as inflows were mostly offset by a decline of nearly $320 million due to poor performance.

    "Asian hedge fund investors reacted to continuing market volatility by adjusting allocations opportunistically to those regional markets that had posted sharp year-to-date losses," said Kenneth Heinz, president of Hedge Fund Research.

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