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Strategies & Market Trends : Waiting for the big Kahuna -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skeet Shipman who wrote (52923)7/13/2001 3:42:13 PM
From: William H Huebl  Respond to of 94695
 
Well who wuda thout



To: Skeet Shipman who wrote (52923)7/13/2001 8:50:41 PM
From: Skeet Shipman  Respond to of 94695
 
The hedge fund bubble
A mania has gripped the US and Europe that could have unpleasant consequences for investors, warns Barton Biggs
Published: July 8 2001 19:01GMT | Last Updated: July 8 2001 19:06GMT

The hedge fund mania that grips the US and Europe is rapidly assuming all the characteristics of a classic bubble. It is not as big or as
dangerous as the technology bubble but it could rattle some gilded cages in the financial world.

The bubble is all about the fallacy of composition, which states that individuals' actions are rational, or would be if others were not behaving
the same way. It is when fire suddenly breaks out and everyone jams the exits. Or when, after spectacular returns, investors last year rushed
into private equity, oblivious of the fact that too much money would choke the goose that laid the golden eggs.

The compelling case for investing in hedge funds is well known. The belief that hedge funds can make money come rain or shine has not been
tested in a bear market - but with an ugly market environment, the collapse of technology and private equity returns plummeting, hedge funds
have become the new asset class of choice for the world's aggressive money. Originally the domain of wealthy individuals, hedge funds are
attracting money from foundations, endowments and pension funds. There is now more than $400bn (£290bn) of equity in about 6,000 hedge
funds, completely unregulated and highly leveraged.

There are four principal participants: the hedge funds themselves; the funds of funds, which charge an additional fee for packaging; the
investment banks that act as prime brokers (an enormously profitable business); and the consultants who advise institutions and wealthy
individuals. Because there is a dearth of hard information about individual hedge funds, funds of funds and consultants can add a lot of value,
not only in the selection process but also in allocating to different strategies and timing exits.

However, they must be reasonably pure. There are numerous disclosure and conflict-of-interest issues in all these roles, particularly when one
institution engages in three or four of them. Worse, they often fail to inform their clients of the conflicts. While mutual funds are subject to
intensive analysis and reporting regulations, hedge funds and their cohorts live in the dark, so to speak.

Although the great mass of the money is run from the US, Europe is going crazy too. A new hedge fund and a new fund of funds opens in
Europe almost every day. Deutsche Bank's asset management arm has $4bn invested in hedge funds and it has taken $500m of its own
money and funded 100 newer funds with $5m each in search of future stars.

The mania is worrying because the money flow is accelerating. One estimate is that $4bn of new money a month is going to hedge funds.
Several corners of the industry, particularly convertibles and long/short strategies, show signs of severe overpopulation, which means returns
are narrowing. Remember Long-Term Capital Management?

Unfortunately, the successful hedge funds with records are mostly closed because their managers have become very rich and also know that
their strategies are not scalable. Certain proved participants, instead of closing, have raised their take from 20 per cent to 50 per cent of the
profits.

A lot of money is therefore going to the apprentices who worked for the old masters. A young person with a decent CV can raise $300m
and, if he hits in his first year, he will have $1bn in a flash. However, if the first couple of years are duds, the money evaporates. A lot of small
hedge funds are being opened by incompetents - fortunately most of the money they will lose is their own.

Some funds of funds and consultants say the old masters should be avoided because they are too big (size is the enemy of performance), too
rich and probably investment senile. Thus huge amounts of capital are going to the smaller, younger funds run by glib, golden kids with itchy
trigger fingers who for the first time have true portfolio responsibility. Leverage, inexperience and volatile markets make a dangerous cocktail.

Maybe I should not worry. Maybe they are all geniuses. What seriously bad things could happen in the public markets because of this hedge
fund mania? I am not sure. As a child I was involved in the late 1960s and early 1970s hedge fund mania. No one wants to hear how that
ended for the hedge funds or the big funds of funds of the time. Perhaps today's children are wiser in using leverage and less greedy. Hedge
funds are important in initial public offerings and in many high-yield markets. Short selling and the derivative programmes that hedge funds use
can swing the overall market.

I am sure that many new funds will explode and their investors will lose a lot of money - but that would cause barely a ripple. This is not a
bubble such as technology, with a significant "wealth effect" that could affect the whole economy. But as investors, we should be aware of it.

The writer is a managing director of Morgan Stanley

Poll: Are hedge funds the new bubble?

news.ft.com.