Massive Hedge Fund Failures

The failure of a small hedge fund doesn't come as a particular surprise to anyone in the financial services industry, but the meltdown of a multi-billion fund certainly attracts most people's attention. When such a fund loses a staggering amount of money, say 20% or more in a matter of months, and sometimes weeks, the event is viewed as a disaster. Sure, the investors may have recovered 80% of their investments, but the issue at hand is simple: Most hedge funds are designed and sold on the premise that they will make a profit regardless of market conditions. Losses aren't even a consideration - they are simply not supposed to happen. Losses that are of such magnitude that they trigger a flood of investor redemptions that force the fund to close are truly headline-grabbing anomalies. Here we take a closer look at some high-profile hedge fund meltdowns to help you become a well-informed investor.

Background
Hedge funds always have had a significant failure rate. Some strategies, such as managed futures, had an attrition rate as high as 14.4% per year between 1994 and 2003, according to a study recently released by the European Central Bank titled, "Hedge Funds And Their Implications For Financial Stability" (August 2005). It cannot be denied that failure is an accepted and understandable part of the process with the launch of speculative investments, but when large, popular funds are forced to close, there is a lesson for investors somewhere in the debacle.

While the following brief summaries won't capture all of the nuances of hedge fund trading strategies, they will give you a simplified overview of the events leading to these spectacular failures and losses. Most of the hedge fund fatalities discussed here occurred in 2005 and were related to a strategy that involves the use of leverage and derivatives to trade securities that the trader does not actually own.

Options, futures, margin and other financial instruments can be used to create leverage. Let's say you have $1,000 to invest. You could use the money to purchase 10 shares of a stock that trades at $100 per share. Or you could increase leverage by investing the $1,000 in five options contracts that would enable you to control, but not own, 500 shares of stock. If the stock's price moves in the direction that you anticipated, leverage serves to multiply your gains. If the stock moves against you, the losses can be staggering.

Bailey Coates Cromwell Fund
In 2004, this event-driven, multistrategy fund based in London was honored by Eurohedge as Best New Equity Fund. In 2005, the fund was laid low by a series of bad bets on the movements of U.S. stocks, supposedly involving the shares of Morgan Stanley, Cablevision Systems, Gateway computers and LaBranche (a trader on the New York Stock Exchange). Poor decision making involving leveraged trades chopped 20% off of a $1.3-billion portfolio in a matter of months. Investors bolted for the doors and on June 20, 2005, the fund disolved.

Marin Capital
This high-flying California-based hedge fund attracted $1.7 billion in capital and put it to work using credit arbitrage and convertible arbitrage to make a large bet on General Motors. Credit arbitrage managers invest in debt. When a company is concerned that one of its customers may not be able to repay a loan, the company can protect itself against loss by transferring the credit risk to another party. In many cases, the other party is a hedge fund.

With convertible arbitrage, the fund manager purchases convertible bonds, which can be redeemed for shares of common stock, and shorts the underlying stock in the hope of making a profit on the price difference between the securities. Since the two securities normally trade at similar prices, convertible arbitrage is generally considered a relatively low-risk strategy. The exception occurs when the share price goes down substantially, which is exactly what happened at Marin Capital. When General Motors' bonds were downgraded to junk status, the fund was crushed. On June 16, 2005, the fund's management sent a letter to shareholders informing them that the fund would close due to a "lack of suitable investment opportunities".

Aman Capital
Aman Capital was set up in 2003 by top derivatives traders at UBS, the largest bank in Europe. It was intended to become Singapore's "flagship" in the hedge fund business, but leveraged trades in credit derivatives resulted in an estimated loss of hundreds of millions of dollars. The fund had only $242 million in assets remaining by March 2005. Investors continued to redeem assets, and the fund closed its doors in June 2005, issuing a statement published by London's Financial Times that "the fund is no longer trading". It also stated that whatever capital was left would be distributed to investors.

Tiger Funds
In 2000, Julian Robertson's Tiger Management failed despite raising $6 billion in assets. A value investor, Robertson placed big bets on stocks through a strategy that involved buying what he believed to be the most promising stocks in the markets and short selling what he viewed as the worst stocks.

This strategy hit a brick wall during the bull market in technology. While Robertson shorted overpriced tech stocks that offered nothing but inflated price to earnings ratios and no sign of profits on the horizon, the greater fool theory prevailed and tech stocks continued to soar. Tiger Management suffered massive losses and a man once viewed as hedge fund royalty was unceremoniously dethroned.

Long-Term Capital Management
The most famous hedge fund collapse involved Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM). The fund was founded in 1994 by John Meriwether (of Salomon Brothers fame) and its principal players included two Nobel Memorial Prize-winning economists and a bevy of renowned financial services wizards. LTCM began trading with more than $1 billion of investor capital, attracting investors with the promise of an arbitrage strategy that could take advantage of temporary changes in market behavior and, theoretically, reduce the risk level to zero.

The strategy was quite successful from 1994 to 1998, but when the Russian financial markets entered a period of turmoil, LTCM made a big bet that the situation would quickly revert back to normal. LTCM was so sure this would happen that it used derivatives to take large, unhedged positions in the market, betting with money that it didn't actually have available if the markets moved against it.

When Russia defaulted on its debt in August 1998, LTCM was holding a significant position in Russian government bonds (known by the acronym GKO). Despite the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars per day, LTCM's computer models recommended that it hold its positions. When the losses approached $4 billion, the federal government of the United States feared that the imminent collapse of LTCM would precipitate a larger financial crisis and orchestrated a bailout to calm the markets. A $3.65-billion loan fund was created, which enabled LTCM to survive the market volatility and liquidate in an orderly manner in early 2000.

Conclusion

Despite these well-publicized failures, global hedge fund assets were still growing at a rate of 20% at the end of 2005, according to the International Monetary Fund. These funds continue to lure investors with the prospect of steady returns, even in bear markets. Some of them deliver as promised. Others at least provide diversification by offering an investment that doesn't move in lockstep with the traditional financial markets. And, of course, there are some hedge funds that fail.

Hedge funds may have a unique allure and offer a variety of strategies, but wise investors treat hedge funds the same way they treat any other investment - they look before they leap. Careful investors don't put all of their money into a single investment, and they pay attention to risk. If you are considering a hedge fund for your portfolio, conduct some research before you write a check, and don't invest in something you don't understand. Most of all, be wary of the hype: when an investment promises to deliver something that sounds too good to be true, let common sense prevail and avoid it. If the opportunity looks good and sounds reasonable, don't let greed get the best of you. And finally, never put more into a speculative investment than you can comfortably afford to lose.

by Jim McWhinney,
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HEDGE FUND INVESTMENT STRATEGIES

Hedge funds invest in CDOs with three different strategies:
1. Carry trade;
2. Long/short structured credit;
3. Correlation trade.

These strategies enable hedge fund managers to express certain views on credit markets efficiently.

Carry Trade
This is the easiest and riskiest CDO strategy and consists of buying the equity tranche of CDOs. The return generated by the equity tranche depends on the leverage, the maturity and the composition of the basket of credit forming the CDO. Purchasing CDO equity tranches is equal to selling credit protection.

In June 2003, a hedge fund bought Fixed Income Senior Notes for a par value of $5.5 million (hereafter called simply “Notes”) totaling $148 million. These Notes were part of the CDO tranche with the higher claim collateralized by a private placement of high-yield bonds carried out in 1998. The issuance also included another tranche of Senior Notes, characterized by a floating rate for a par value of $34 million.

The Notes subscribed by the hedge fund were due on August 2010 and paid a fixed 6.71% yearly coupon. Technically the issue had defaulted, and the rating of the tranche subscribed by the hedge fund had deteriorated, going from AA3 in 1998 to Baa3 in 2002, turning into a “container” receiving all the capital and interest payments, which were used to pay Senior Notes first, both at a fixed and floating rate, and Subordinated Notes next.

At the time of purchase in June 2003, the par value of the Notes was $4.26 million and the hedge fund bought them for $3.63 million. The Notes were then bought for a price of 85.27 cents, at a substantial discount on the liquidation value of 94.73 cents.

At the time of purchase, the hedge fund had made a conservative assumption according to which 30% of the high-yield bonds would default and the recovery rate would be of 28 %. As a result, the internal rate of return had been fixed at 13.64 %. The investment was expected to be paid back in 3.5–4 years.

At the time of purchase, the underlying portfolio comprised 117 high-yield bonds characterized by an average price of 74.97 cents, including defaulted securities. The initial analysis conducted by the hedge fund also included the expectation that over the short term the default rate of the collateral high-yield bonds would rise, only to decrease again during the residual life of the securities.

Two months after the Notes had been purchased by the hedge fund, $949 786 had been paid out in terms of capital redemptions for the underlying high-yield notes (accounting for more than 25% of the initial original cost incurred by the hedge fund), against an initial estimate of $500 000. Over the same period, $142 808 worth of interest were also paid out. Moreover, the price of the Notes grew significantly with respect to the initial cost incurred by the hedge fund.

The improved performance of the collateral and the higher than expected capital redemptions generated a return on investment of 15.88 %, well above the estimated 13.64 %.

Long/short Structured Credit
This strategy’s objective is to generate absolute returns, regardless of economic and market conditions such as credit spread moves and the general direction of interest rates. The strategy is naturally long credit and benefits from spread tightening. The effect of market spread widening on long positions can be offset by the manager’s ability to short credits that widen more than the general market in a deteriorating environment. The fund employs fundamental credit analysis to determine long and short relative-value positions in different corporate credits. The fund expresses long views through the purchase of CDO equity tranches, and short views through the purchase of single-name Credit Default Swaps.

The long position in CDO equity tranches locks in positive carry. Furthermore, the ability of the hedge fund manager in performing the credit analysis on the companies underlying the CDO generates the trading ideas: a CDO is a basket of credits and the manager can choose inside this basket the credits he wants to be long or short. So the manager can take advantage of opportunities ranging from sector allocation, allocation to single companies and relative-value trading. Finally, the manager can limit the downside from spread widening through the long positions in credit default swaps.

The ideal portfolio built with long positions in CDO equity tranches and with long positions in CDS can have a convexity return profile: an instantaneous equal proportional shift in all spreads, assuming correlation remains constant, should have positive returns irrespective of spread moves. The most difficult challenge for a hedge fund manager implementing this strategy is the
ability to manage the correlation risk among the CDO tranches.

Correlation Trade
CDOs are a recent innovation that enable investors to buy (or sell) limited protection on credit portfolios. The protection attaches (and detaches) once the portfolio realizes certain default losses. The proper compensation for bearing this specialized risk depends not only on the individual portfolio credits, but also on their prospective dynamics, including their prospective interplay. People use the term “correlation” to discuss this interplay, and the term “correlation trading” to capture involvement in these tranched portfolio protection products.

In a correlation trade, credit protection is sold via the purchasing of CDO equity tranches delta-hedged with credit default swaps (CDS). The correlation trade consists of assuming a long position in the equity tranche of a certain CDO and a simultaneous short position in the mezzanine tranche (or a more senior tranche) of the same CDO, in the attempt to take advantage of the spreads among the different tranches of the CDO. This way the hedge fund is long the implied correlation among the CDO tranches.

Note that the implied correlation is primarily a market-based factor, driven by the demand and supply of protection for each individual CDO tranche. This trade has a positive carry, and returns can be generated if the credit spreads in the underlying portfolio move in a parallel way, that is, widen or shrink simultaneously. The correlation trade is exposed to the risk of an unexpected default in the underlying CDO portfolio but, given that in 2005 the prevailing default rate is at historically low levels, many hedge fund managers are comfortable with assuming that risk.
Some investors are reluctant to embrace correlation trading as a model-driven arbitrage strategy.

On 4th May 2005, Tracinda Corp., a company that already owned about 4% of General Motors, offered $870 million to acquire 4.95% of General Motors, and GM shares at the end of the day jumped by 18.1 %. On 5th May 2005, Standard & Poor’s had downgraded the GM bonds (from BBB– to BB) to the status of “junk bond”, maintaining a negative outlook.

This was a surprising capital structure movement, where the riskiest part of the capital, equities, jumped at a time when the less risky part of the capital, bonds, dropped. Many hedge funds were positioned in a correlation trade: they had short positions (buy protection) in CDO senior tranches and long positions (sell protection) in CDO equity tranches, delta-hedging with single-name CDS or iBoxx index. This correlation trade expected implied correlation to increase and had positive carry.

Because of the downgrade of GM, the equity tranche of many CDOs declined sharply while the mezzanine tranche soared because of a “fly to quality” movement. This means that the spreads moved in a non-parallel way. Merrill Lynch estimated that the CDO correlation trades in April lost 12 %, and for some hedge funds this loss was worsened by the use of leverage.

CONCLUSIONS
The important point to note is that these new strategies are relatively untried and untested in periods of market stress, and hence investors could underestimate certain risks, i.e. correlation.

This article is a part of “Investment Strategies of Hedge Funds” ebooks by Filippo Stefanini for closed private educations only. You should nuy his books for the best completely informations.
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Hedge Funds Risk Management - A Short Review of Hedge Fund Risk Management

When trying to maximize absolute returns, the importance of assessing and mitigating risk shouldn't be underestimated. Some memorable examples like LTCM and Tiger Fund not only show how heavy losses can be for some participants of the hedge fund industry, but also reinforce the perception that a good record of high absolute returns can mean absolutely nothing in an environment of improperly managed risk.

The most important lesson in terms of Hedge Fund Risk Management comes from the improper name of this kind of alternative investment: The idea that all systematic risks are diversified away is not applicable here, with the Hedge Fund returns, in reality, representing a combination of superior management of market inefficiencies and conscious exposure to some specific systematic risks. Only the systematic risks that are “undesirable” from a strategic point of view are diversified away. So, hedge funds, in reality, are not fully hedged.

Moreover, the adequate measure in terms of risk management exposure moves from the realm of excess risk in comparison to a benchmark to a total risk approach. Total return here is what matters for managers and investors and not a comparison of the hedge fund performance to some benchmark, like in other types of funds.

Also, the leptokurtosis (“fat tails”) and negative skewness associated to most class of hedge funds present a significant challenge to quantitative methodologies based on the assumption of returns normality (e.g. Riskmetrics classic approach), with the area becoming a very good study case for new approaches, like Extreme Value Theory (EVT).

Finally, with this complex framework in mind, the need for an initial and constant due diligence and managerial tracking surges as the most important issue from an investor's or fund of funds' perspective. Here, the obligation of full portfolio transparency (for legitimate investors, but not for the whole market) becomes mandatory for the successful risk manager, while, of course. other types of risk commonly non addressed through quantitative methodologies, (e.g. the liquidity barriers established through long “lock-up” periods) can't also be underestimated.
Once aware of the formal conditions offered by a hedge fund manager, knowing your manager's style in-depth and keeping frequent meetings and discussions based on updated full portfolio/single positions disclosures is the key to avoiding pitfalls as an investor.

An authoritative source in the subject is Jaeger, L., ed. The New Generation of Risk Management for Hedge Funds and Private Equity Investments, Institutional Investor Books, 2004.
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Forex Spot Trades Vs. Currency Futures

By David Goodboy

Over the last several years, Forex Dealers have been springing up everywhere. Attending the New York City Trader's Expo this year, I was surprised at the number of FX dealers that were all exhibiting very similar offerings. Some competitors even used the same trading platform just white labeled to appear customized.

My thoughts were there must be tremendous profits in the FX Dealer business to support the preponderance of dealers offering truly non-differentiated offerings. My next obvious thought was, where does this profit come from? These guys generally do not charge commissions, so how do they get paid?

Dealer profiting - your Loss is their gain
They make their money in several ways, first is from the bid/ask spread which normally is at least 2 pips and sometimes as high as 5 or 7 depending on the dealer.
The second way and some say the sneaky of dealer profiting is to actually take the other side of your trade. Your losses go directly into the dealer's pocket.

How is this possible? A little known fact about trading with FX dealers is that your trade isn't actually placed in the true interbank market, but merely held on the dealer's own books. They are the counterparty, therefore your losses enrich the dealer and your gains come directly from the dealer. Conflict of interest? I'll let you decide.

Dealers are improving; however, some are moving to a non-dealing desk model and having several banks compete for your trades with the best price on the pair. You are trading with the dealer as your counterparty in an unregulated marketplace - seems pretty risky for the serious trader.

Is there an alternative for the active currency trader?
Yes. There is an excellent alternative in the form of currency futures offered by the CME. I am particularly partial to the E-mini version of the currency contracts from the CME.
The E-Mini Euro symbol E7 is the one I am most familiar with. It moves in $6.25 ticks and the advantages of trading this future over the EUR/USD pair offered by dealers are several. First and foremost is the very tight spread and low commissions offered by most brokers.

Secondly is a regulated marketplace with price transparency.
Thirdly, your broker can't play games with your trades as dealers sometimes do, as the trade is made in the actual marketplace and not held on dealers' books.
The bottom line

FX dealers offer more flexibility for the FX trader, particularly small traders. They provide access to the market for those very little capital. In fact, several even allow you to trade micro lots with just one dollar in the account! The spreads and other negatives have less of an impact if you're a longer term or swing trader.
Currency futures definitely have the advantage for short term/day trading/scalping. In the end, it really comes down to personal choice and style.
Good Luck!

Dave Goodboy is Vice President of Marketing for a New York City based multi-strategy fund.
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