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Greenwich Time – With a new regulatory regime hanging over the industry’s head and a field of shellshocked investors looking for safety, it may seem that hedge fund managers are poised to make a rush into the mutual fund arena.
But there’s a disagreement over how many hedge fund managers will follow AQR Capital Management LLC of Greenwich and others into mutual funds.
Ben Alpert, a hedge fund analyst at Morningstar Inc., said he expects the move will be significant. But David Kabiller, founding principal and head of client strategies for AQR Capital Management, said he wouldn’t bet it will be very big.
Greenwich Time – Fairfield Sentry Ltd., seeking to recover more than $919 million in fees related to investments involving Bernard Madoff, sued the Fairfield Greenwich Group hedge fund that lost $7 billion in Madoff’s fraud.
Fairfield Sentry, based in the British Virgin Islands, said in a complaint filed May 29 in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan that it is the largest victim of the fraud perpetrated by Bernard Madoff.
The fund seeks to recover more than $919 million in investment management and performance fees that it paid to Fairfield Greenwich based on inflated net asset value reports of its investments with Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC.
Fairfield Greenwich, led by Greenwich resident Walter Noel, claimed it had $16 billion of assets under management, $7.3 billion of which was purportedly in Fairfield Sentry Ltd., according to the complaint.
Greenwich Time – The Greenwich-based Viking hedge fund group run by Andreas Halvorsen started a new fund to focus on buying stocks after selling them short became more risky.
Viking Long Fund LP began trading last month after initially raising about $80 million, the firm said in a Jan. 15 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Halvorsen, a former protege of hedge-fund manager Julian Robertson at Tiger Management LLC — making him a so-called "Tiger cub" — oversees about $9.5 billion at Viking Global Investors LP in Greenwich.
The new fund avoids selling stocks short, which is a departure from Viking’s long-short strategy of trying to make money regardless of the market’s direction. In an October letter to investors, Halvorsen said the scope for expansion is much greater for buying stocks than for selling them with the expectation of further drops.
Greenwich Time – Some hedge funds in the region are looking to sublease their office space as they downsize or shut down in the lagging economy.
John Goodkind, managing principal of Greenwich-based commercial real estate firm Newmark Knight Frank, said about 20 percent of Greenwich hedge funds are considering subleasing all or some of their office space to cut their expenses. He said he expected about half of them to do so in the next six to nine months.
"It’s the immediate wave of the future because the Greenwich hedge fund market is not immune from a meltdown," Goodkind said, adding that space is being offered at 20 percent to 30 percent less than the original lease. "Fairfield County, with Greenwich being the nexus, is in for a very difficult period of time for tenants that are subleasing space."