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HedgeCo.net (West Palm Beach) – Man Investments’ seeding fund, RMF Global Emerging Managers, has completed its second incubation deal of the last two months, providing a cornerstone investment of $50 million for Hong Kong’s Minerva Macro Fund.
In July RMF GEM invested $50 million in the flagship product of 5:15 Capital Management, an unrelated fixed income arbitrage manager based in Connecticut.
Minerva is managed by Stanley Ku, who founded the Hong Kong office of hedge fund Fortress Investment Group and most recently managed $750 million for Fortress’ Drawbridge Global Macro Fund. Dorothy Lau, Minerva’s risk and business manager, formerly worked for JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs.
“Stanley Ku’s work at Fortress and Goldman Sachs has made him a very well respected money manager in Asia,” said Hans Hurschler, head of Man Investments’ hedge fund Ventures. “We believe that Minerva has the potential to generate solid, stable returns and that it may attract substantial assets.”
Minerva is a discretionary global macro fund, focused on Asia. It trades only highly liquid instruments such as interest rate or bond futures, foreign exchange forwards and equity index futures or sector ETFs. The entire portfolio is designed to be liquidated in 48 hours.
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New York (HedgeCo.Net) – Hedge funds gained 1.37 percent in March, according to data compiled by the Hennessee Group LLC. It was a successful month for the equity markets at well, with the S&P advancing 8.54 percent, the NASDAQ climbing 10.94 percent, and the Dow Jones advancing 7.73 percent.
"Hedge funds with a focus on the financial sector may potentially outperform in 2009," said Co-Founder of Hennessee Group Charles Gradante. "Not only did Citigroup and Bank of America announce a profitable January and February, but the borrowings at the Fed discount window have been steadily declining. It is possible that the banking crisis of confidence can unwind as quickly as it unfolded."
According to the data, the long/short equity index advanced 1.6 percent, thanks to programs launched by the U.S. government aimed at helping the banking sector. The arbitrage/event driven index gained 1.34 percent, with credit opportunities aplenty and many managers increasing stakes in bank debt, high yield and convertible bonds.
The global macro index saw a steady increase of .74 percent. The Hennessee Group pointed to the fact that many macro managers posted losses on their short-term Treasuries trade after the Fed announced they would buy $300 billion in U.S. Treasuries, which prompted buying and drove down yields.
This puts the YTD gain for hedge funds at just over 1 percent.
Julie Scuderi Senior Editor for HedgeCo.Net Email: julie@hedgeco.net
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New York (HedgeCo.Net) – Although hedge funds finished up 2008 with some of the worst numbers to date, they showed some signs of promise in December. According to the latest research by the Hennessee Group LLC, a New York-based advisor to hedge fund investors, hedge funds advanced .51 percent in December.
Hedge funds finished up the year down 19.15 percent according to the research. Although it was a dismal year for funds as a whole, they still outperformed the S & P, which was down 38.5 percent on the year, the Dow Jones, who dropped almost 34 percent, and the NASDAQ Composite Index, which posted a 40 percent drop on the year.
One challenge for hedge funds in 2008 was the record number of redemption requests brought on by clients. Large hedge funds such as Citadel, Harbinger and Cerberus, along with about 80 others, had to put some form of restrictions on client withdrawals.
“Year-end redemptions were significant, as the average fund returned 15% to 25% of investors’ assets. Combined with negative performance and complete liquidations, the entire hedge fund industry started 2009 at close to 50% of the capital it was at the beginning of 2008,” said Charles Gradante, Co-Founder of the Hennessee Group. “However, this should be a positive for funds as less capital will be chasing the same long/short trades, which should lead to better returns.”
The Hennessee Long/Short Equity Index saw a .31 percent advance in December, while the year to date was down over 18 percent. The Global/Macro Index rose .61 percent in December, although taking an almost 21 percent hit for the year. The Arbitrage/Event Driven Index, which was down 18.5 percent on the year, advanced 1 percent in December.
Julie Scuderi Senior Editor for HedgeCo.Net Email: julie@hedgeco.net
New York (HedgeCo.Net) – Although hedge funds finished up 2008 with some of the worst numbers to date, they showed some signs of promise in December. According to the latest research by the Hennessee Group LLC, a New York-based advisor to hedge fund investors, hedge funds advanced .51 percent in December.
They finished up the year down 19.15 percent. Although it was a dismal year for hedge funds as a whole, they still outperformed the S & P, which was down 38.5 percent on the year, the Dow Jones, who dropped almost 34 percent, and the NASDAQ Composite Index, which posted a 40 percent drop on the year.
One challenge for hedge funds in 2008 was the record number of redemption requests brought on by clients. Large hedge funds such as Citadel, Harbinger and Cerberus, along with about 80 others, had to put some form of restrictions on client withdrawals.
“Year-end redemptions were significant, as the average fund returned 15% to 25% of investors’ assets. Combined with negative performance and complete liquidations, the entire hedge fund industry started 2009 at close to 50% of the capital it was at the beginning of 2008,” said Charles Gradante, Co-Founder of the Hennessee Group. “However, this should be a positive for funds as less capital will be chasing the same long/short trades, which should lead to better returns.”
The Hennessee Long/Short Equity Index saw a .31 percent advance in December, while the year to date was down over 18 percent. The Global/Macro Index rose .61 percent in December, although taking an almost 21 percent hit for the year. The Arbitrage/Event Driven Index, which was down 18.5 percent on the year, advanced 1 percent in December.
Julie Scuderi Senior Editor for HedgeCo.Net Email: julie@hedgeco.net