Hedge Funds Rose 3.2% in October on Stock, Debt Bets

Bloomberg – Hedge funds returned an average of 3.2 percent in October, the biggest gain in almost two years, as rising stocks and bets against mortgage-backed securities helped firms including PequotCapital Management Inc. and Passport Management LLC.

Pequot’s $1 billion Core Global stock funds rose 3.4 percent last month and 37 percent for the year, according to an investor letter from the Westport, Connecticut-based firm. San Francisco-based Passport’s Global Master Fund, with about $2.2 billion, has almost tripled this year after increasing 34 percent in October on profits from subprime mortgages and mining companies.

The average return year-to-date is 12.3 percent, according to a report today from Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. Managers who bet on rising and falling stock prices climbed 3.5 percent. They benefited when the Federal Reserve cut the federal funds rate by a greater-than-expected amount in September.

“Everything from emerging markets to stock funds are doing well,” said George Lucaci, managing director at New York-based Channel Capital Group Inc., whose HedgeFund.net database tracks returns. “That’s because there’s a belief the Federal Reserve is your savior — if things get bad, they will lower rates.”

Read Complete Article

About the HedgeCo News Team

The Hedge Fund News Team stays on top of breaking news in the Hedge Fund industry on an hourly basis. Signup to HedgeCo.Net to recieve Daily or Weekly news updates from our team.
This entry was posted in Syndicated. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.