Each business day HedgeCo.Net keeps you informed with the top hedge fund industry news, opinion and insight from around the globe. From the latest hedge fund launches, to the impact of regulation, competition, and investor activism - we track the topics and people that make a difference to you.
Bloomberg – Brazilian hedge funds lured about 8.2 billion reais ($4.52 billion) in July, the biggest monthly inflow this year, as a rebounding economy and record low interest rates increased demand for stocks and other higher- yielding assets.
The investment helped the funds recoup their 2009 losses, according to data through July 30 released by the National Association of Investment Banks. Hedge funds, known as multimercados, received 3.5 billion reais this year through July 30 as the industry began to lure back some of the record 54.6 billion reais of redemptions in 2008, according to the agency.
Forbes – Man Group PLC, the world’s largest publicly traded hedge fund, said Thursday that funds under management declined in the first half despite a recent growth in private investor sales.
The group said it had $43.3 billion in funds under management on June 30, down from $44 billion at the end of May and $46.8 billion on March 31.
Private investor sales in the three months ending June 30, the company’s first quarter, were $3.4 billion, producing a net inflow of $1.9 billion. However, institutional sales amounted to just $300 million, with a net outflow of $3.3 billion.
Bloomberg – Australian hedge funds will attract a net inflow of cash in 2009 after record redemptions by overseas investors led to the closure of at least 10 funds in the fourth quarter, the local arm of the Alternative Investment Management Association said.
Funds that survived will see some of that money invested in March once December quarter redemptions are returned to investors, AIMA Australia Chairman Kim Ivey said in an interview.
“Getting through this period is the defining time for managers because new money in March and April may keep them afloat,” said Sydney-based Ivey, who is also managing director of private hedge fund Vertex Capital Management. “Those that came out of 2008 and showed that they could still add value are in a very good position in 2009.”
Reuters – Asian stocks plummeted, led by an 11 percent drop on Japan’s Nikkei, and oil prices dropped to a one-year low on Thursday as fears grew of a more protracted and sharp global slowdown than initially expected.
Major European stock markets were expected to open down as much as 5.9 percent, according to financial bookmakers, as investors anticipated poor corporate results in such an uncertain economic environment, while the dollar gained in a flight from risk.
Optimism about the stabilisation in money markets has been swept aside and widespread selling of global equities has resumed in earnest as the quarterly results season gets underway and reports trickle in about sharp losses at hedge funds.
"I think today there is just a combination of uncertainty and deleveraging in the market," said Amar Gill, head of thematic research at CLSA in Singapore.
The Independent – The financial fall-out in the vast, opaque credit default swaps market caused by the collapse of Lehman Brothers could be smaller than originally feared, analysts say.
Optimism was rising yesterday that the unwinding of insurance contracts on Lehman debt might involve the transfer of barely $6bn, and that the settlement next week can be completed without a major player failing to pay.
The concern had been that banks and hedge funds who promised to compensate trading partners for losses on Lehman bonds would not have the money to do so, triggering a chain reaction of losses through the financial system.
Although Lehman bonds were valued in a closely-watched auction last Friday at just 8.625 cents on the dollar, and sellers of credit default swaps will have to pay out a higher-than-expected 91.375 cents on the dollar, the great majority of players are both buyers and sellers of credit default swaps – meaning they can net off their exposure.