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 – Hedge fund investors’ growing demands for separate accounts may be an overreaction to increasing redemptions and fraud, participants said at an industry conference in Hong Kong this week.
Investors are demanding accounts that allow them to tailor investments, see trades and get out when they want, instead of the traditional way of pooling their money in a fund, as managers try to curb redemptions and after U.S. financier Bernard Madoff’s conviction for running a Ponzi scheme.
A record $155 billion was pulled from hedge funds last year, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc., while capital outflow may accelerate to $168 billion this year, a Deutsche Bank AG survey in March showed.
Boston Globe – The leaders of Germany, Britain, France, and Italy yesterday said that the resources of the International Monetary Fund should be doubled, to $500 billion, to help head off new problems in countries already hit hard by the global economic and financial crisis.
The officials also said, in a statement clearly aimed at hedge funds and other big private pools of capital, that "all financing markets and participants" need to fall under regulation in the future. And they vowed to make a tough push against tax havens.
With one eye on a crisis that is rapidly spreading to Eastern Europe and even countries that use the euro, the leaders highlighted the crisis-prevention role of the IMF, an institution whose relevance to the current global economy seemed in doubt only a few years ago.
Hedge Fund Net – Alternative investment strategies around the world are trudging through a slowdown, but that is not scaring away the world’s organization, the United Nations, from investing in these areas. The United Nations Joint Staff Pension Fund (UNJSPF) is set to move forward with plans to put its money into hedge funds and private equity funds.
The UNJSPF was established by the United Nations General Assembly in 1949 to provide retirement, death, disability and related benefits for staff of the U.N. and the other organizations admitted to membership in the fund, according to the UNJSPF Web site. As of Dec. 31, 2004 the fund served 20 member organizations with more than 88,350 active participants and nearly 53,000 beneficiaries.