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Bloomberg – Abax Global Capital Ltd., a Hong Kong-based asset manager part-owned by Morgan Stanley, plans to open a hedge fund backed by Tudor Investment Corp. to outside investors for the first time.
The Abax Dymon Asia Macro Fund, which started with $113 million in August 2008, seeks to profit from regional economic trends. The fund will have a “clawback” arrangement under which half of the 20 percent performance fee earned is repaid to investors if the fund loses money in the next year.
Seeking Alpha – If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. This cliché is the root of folly on Wall Street and in the hedge fund industry in general. Perfect example: The Ospraie Fund’s Dwight Anderson is set to start two new hedge funds in July. Okay, new hedge funds, what’s the big deal? Well, the problem here is that Dwight Anderson lost 39% in his Ospraie Fund in 2008 and had to liquidate the fund. At its peak, Ospraie managed $3.8 billion in commodities. But if at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. And, that’s exactly what Anderson is set to do.
Anderson will open two new hedge funds in July of 2009, the first of which will focus on stocks of commodity and basic materials companies (The Ospraie Equity Fund). He will also open a fund focused on commodities and derivatives (The Ospraie Commodity Fund). Anderson said that he is starting these funds because he sees significant opportunities in this market, as significant as he has ever seen in his 15 years of investing. These funds will have reduced fees where investors will pay half as much as the typical hedge fund. His new funds will charge a 1% management fee and a 10% performance fee.
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – Alternative investment consultant and director, Bob Torkelund has announced the launch of a Cayman regulated fund, the Arkanar Global Macro SP. The fund is being monitored and the due diligence work done by the Cayman regulator before the launch took place.
The initial offering period runs throughout February 2009, with a minimum investment of $10.000.
Torkelund said, “The fund is easy dealing and settlement: we have organised electronic clearing via Clearstream/Euroclear ‘payment against delivery’ which makes the fund available to most European and international banks in line with other international securities.”
The fund has a 20% high water mark performance fee and 0.5% per quarter as management fee and an expected annual return of 15–20%.
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Seekingalpha.com – The tide has gone out for hedge funds. Many have indicated that they "feel" X% of the hedge fund industry will go under. Perhaps a little data and a crude stab at a model will improve a rather dire debating point.
The term hedge fund basically means anyone who believes they can manage money and get away with justifying a 1-2% management fee and 15-44% performance fee, it has become more compensation class than asset class and has been for years for many.
Seekingalpha.com – Since inception, its funds have returned on average 40% annually, which explains how they can charge a 50% performance fee to investors, compared to the normal 20% that most hedge funds charge. They are very active traders and at any given time can account for up to 3% of the volume on the New York Stock Exchange and up to 1% on the Nasdaq. And, if you’re curious, you can see a picture of Cohen’s house here.
Before beginning, we do want to stress that since SAC actively trades positions quite frequently, tracking it via its13F is not necessarily beneficial and we advise that those reading take this with a grain of salt. We are simply covering the fund since it’s a prominent fund and many of our readers were curious about what it was up to these days.