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Seekingalpha.com - The Mad Hedge Fund Trader graduated from the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) with a degree in Biochemistry and a minor in Mathematics in 1974. He moved to Tokyo, Japan to join Dai Nana Securities as a research analyst of Japanese companies, becoming fluent in Japanese.
In 1976 he was appointed the Tokyo correspondent for The Economist magazine and the Financial Times. For the next seven years he published thousands of articles about the economies, companies, and leaders of every country in Asia. He was one of the first American correspondents to cover China during the cultural revolution. He reported on the American attempt to climb Mount Everest and guerilla wars throughout Southeast Asia. The major figures he interviewed included China’s Premier Deng Xiaoping, Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, the UK’s Margaret Thatcher, the PLO’s Yassir Arafat, and of course President Ronald Reagan.
Independent – The collapse of Lloyds’ share price on Friday afternoon was deeply upsetting – and not just for shareholders in the bank.
Two weeks ago, those annoying folk at Paulson & Co, the hedge fund that has made a fortune from the credit crunch, took a sizeable short position in the bank. It looked like a duff bet: having sold Lloyds short at about 65p, the fund watched as the bank’s share price climbed to about 125p. And then the HBOS loss was disclosed and Lloyds plunged to 61p on Friday. That calamitous drop will have earned Paulson tens of millions of pounds. Darn it.
Bankers at the Japanese investment bank Nomura are cock-a-hoop at having earned fat fees advising Chinalco on its £200bn investment in the mining giant Rio Tinto. For various cultural and historical reasons, it is pretty unusual for Japanese companies to win work from China, so this was a breakthrough deal for Nomura. It was secured by the mining team that Nomura acquired when it bought bits of Lehman last year. In every cloud there’s a silver lining.
Bloomberg- J-Power shareholders defeated a proposal by U.K. hedge fund TCI for the company to double its dividend, ending a monthlong proxy battle and sending the stock to its biggest decline since February.
Shareholders of Electric Power Development Co., the official name of Japan’s largest power wholesaler, rejected all five proposals by the investment company including limiting cross- shareholdings and doubling the yearly dividend at the utility’s annual general meeting in Tokyo today. The investors approved the board’s proposal to raise the payout by 10 yen to 70 yen.
Today’s vote marks the end of a public spat between the utility and The Children’s Investment Fund Management (UK) LLP, as the utility’s largest shareholder is officially known. The verdict undermines efforts by an increasing number of foreign investors pushing Japanese companies to improve shareholder returns that are less than half of those in the U.S.
CNN Money- A listed fund of hedge funds operated by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) has lifted its assets by about 25% by raising an additional $ 221.3 million on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday.
Goldman Sachs Dynamic Opportunities Ltd. (GSDO.LN), which invests in 20 hedge funds run by managers including New York’s Och-Ziff Capital Management Group LLC and London’s The Children’s Investment Fund Management (UK) LLP, now manages about $840.2 million, making it the second-largest fund of hedge funds trading in London.
Investors have been scooping up shares in listed funds of hedge funds as a way to diversify from traditional stocks and try to preserve capital in turbulent markets. Funds of hedge funds have historically posted flat returns in years when stock markets suffered sharp declines.