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Bloomberg survey finds traders enthusiastic about dollar

Section: Daily Dispatches

The world has gone mad today
And good's bad today
And black's white today
And day's night today
And that gent today
You gave a cent today
Once had several chateaux.

-- Cole Porter, "Anything Goes"

* * *

If I Only Had a Hedge Fund

By Jenny Anderson
and Riva D. Atlas
The New York Times
Sunday, March 27, 2005

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/business/yourmoney/27hedge.html

It seemed like an ordinary evening at Crobar, the trendy Manhattan
nightclub. Two weeks ago, as Counting Crows performed on stage,
young women dressed in expensive jeans pushed toward the front with
their khaki-clad, mostly older boyfriends. Few, however, were
regulars. On this night, the very rich and the merely rich
intermingled on the club's two floors -- VIPs upstairs ($1,000 a
ticket) and the rest down below ($250).

Most of the 1,250 people gathered for the event, the Robin Hood
Foundation charity ball, were part of the city's unlikely new "it"
crowd. Richer than Wall Street rich and more willing to take risks
than their traditional money management peers, they are the managers
behind the staggering growth in hedge funds, those private, lightly
regulated investment vehicles aimed at the ultrawealthy, the run-of-
the-mill wealthy and, increasingly, the not-so wealthy.

To critics, the frenzy has a very familiar ring. A flood of capital
to the latest investment fad. Spectacular accumulation of wealth in
a short time. New ventures created easily and often. Those, too,
were the hallmarks of the dot-com boom, and, as everyone knows, the
bursting of that bubble was far from pleasant. The stampede to hedge
funds, some people fear, will be no different.

"It is completely obvious that this will end badly -- for the firms,
investors, everyone," said Seth Klarman, founder of the Baupost
Group, which manages $5 billion. "No area of financial endeavor is
immune from the effects of competition."

The numbers are mind-boggling: 15 years ago, hedge funds managed
less than $40 billion. Today, the figure is approaching $1 trillion.
By contrast, assets in mutual funds grew at an impressive but much
slower rate, to $8.1 trillion from $1 trillion, during the same
period. The number of hedge fund firms has also grown -- to 3,307
last year, up 74 percent from 1,903 in 1999. During the same period,
the number of funds created -- a manager can start more than one
fund at a time -- has surged 209 percent, with 1,406 funds
introduced in 2004, according to Hedge Fund Research, based in
Chicago.

In a way, hedge funds are to mutual funds what Evel Knievel was to
weekend motorcyclists. Unlike mutual funds, which are restricted in
the ways they can invest, hedge funds can use leverage, trade
derivatives and bet that stocks will fall, a technique called
shorting. And unlike mutual funds, which generally try to beat a
market average, hedge funds seek positive returns, even in down
markets.

The meteoric rise of hedge funds has had a huge impact on the
markets, investment banks and investors, who increasingly include
institutions like pension funds or endowments. A recent report
published by Credit Suisse First Boston said that hedge funds were
responsible for up to half of all activity in major markets,
including the New York Stock Exchange and the London Stock Exchange.

Investment banks are tripping over one another to service them.
According to the same report, Wall Street made $25 billion catering
to hedge funds -- lending them money, trading for them, helping to
structure complex derivative transactions or lending them stock to
bet against a company. That's one-eighth of the street's total
revenue pool.

Signs that hedge fund managers have become the financial industry's
new elite abound. Young, ambitious talent is fleeing Wall Street in
search of hedge funds' overnight riches. In hedge fund offices,
employees have perks like swimming pools and basketball courts. And
in the wedding announcements of The New York Times, hedge fund
managers are often well represented.

At cocktail parties throughout Greenwich, Conn. -- the informal
capital of the hedge fund world - investors sip apple martinis and
discuss which funds are in vogue. Because few people outside the
industry know exactly how they trade or what they trade, there is a
certain mystique to the hedge fund set, which only adds to their
allure.

Then there's the wealth effect. Billionaire hedge fund managers are
pushing up the price of everything from luxury apartments to
artwork. Kenneth Griffin, founder of the Citadel Investment Group,
based in Chicago, dished out $60 million for a Czanne. James G.
Dinan, founder of York Capital Management, paid $21 million to buy
the Fifth Avenue apartment of $6,000 shower curtain infamy, the one
once occupied by L. Dennis Kozlowski of Tyco International.

Predictably, most people in the hedge fund world scoff at the notion
of a bubble. "Hedge funds are not an asset class, so there is no
asset class to burst," said Jane Buchan, chief executive of Pacific
Alternative Asset Management, a fund made up of hedge funds with
$7.2 billion under management. "It's not like real estate. Even if
you think about people doing silly things for silly reasons, it's
not a bubble. If you look at people traveling on the fringes, it
might be a bubble."

Indeed, the so-called smart money -- rich investors like Thomas H.
Lee, the famed leverage buyout maven -- could not seem less
worried. "Every investment board I am in touch with is interested in
hedge funds," said Mr. Lee, ticking off the names of such giants as
Calpers and Harvard's endowment fund. Mr. Lee himself has invested a
substantial portion of his estimated $1.2 billion net worth in a
portfolio of dozens of hedge funds.

Yet, as Mr. Klarman said: "How many venture capital investors in
1999 said, 'We are doomed because of all the money flowing in?'"

Whether the hedge fund boom is a bubble may still be open to debate.
But it is certainly not alarmist to wonder about the consequences of
such torrid growth, built as it is on the leverage that banks
provide managers to double or triple their bets. The Federal Reserve
seemed concerned enough last fall, when it set up a group to examine
what systemic risks had been created by the explosion of entrants
into the market and the aggressiveness with which Wall Street was
welcoming them.

The Fed also encouraged the revival of a high-profile watchdog group
formed in the wake of the market-shaking 1998 collapse of the Long-
Term Capital Management hedge fund. Called the Counterparty Risk
Management Policy Group II, it will examine everything from narrow
credit spreads -- a result of low perceived risk -- to the cavalier
ways that Wall Street lends to hedge funds.

"Hedge funds are significant market players," Stephen M. Cutler,
director of enforcement at the Securities and Exchange Commission,
said in an interview. "They use leverage that mutual funds cannot,
so the power of that $1 trillion is magnified. Your concern is not
just the investors in the hedge funds but the hedge fund's impact on
the market."

To impose a modicum of order on the industry, the SEC has required
that most hedge fund management firms register as investment
advisers by February 2006, a move that an industry trade group has
protested.

Concerns about hedge funds, however, extend beyond finding out where
they are based and whether their managers are felons (two of the
objectives of SEC registration). Among other things, it remains a
mystery -- even to investors -- what kind of bizarre financial
products are traded by the funds, and how they value them. Given the
potential returns, the incentives for investors to bet the house are
huge. And many seasoned money managers have closed their funds,
opening the door to newcomers to satisfy demand for ever more funds.

Perhaps topping the list of concerns is the proliferation of funds
of funds, pools of hedge funds that are meant to lower risk but that
also come with another layer of fees on top of what standard hedge
funds charge. By the end of last year, assets in funds of funds had
soared to $359 billion, from $84 billion just four years earlier.
Traditionally, investors have needed a minimum of $1 million to get
into a hedge fund; with the newest funds of funds, investors with as
little as $25,000 to spend can gain entree.

Hedge funds may hit Main Street in other ways. At least one fund of
funds, Grosvenor Capital, with $15 billion under management, is
weighing an initial offering or a sale, people close to the company
said.

Hedge funds are the new blackboards on which dreams of high finance
are drawn. For Karim Samii, who enjoyed a successful career at the
investment firm W. R. Huff of Morristown, N.J., the decision to
start his own hedge fund came on a bright, snowy morning in December
2003, when he and his wife were visiting his in-laws in Hamburg,
Germany. "I was jogging around the lake and I said to myself, 'Where
do I want to be five years from now?' " he said.

His firm, Pardus Capital, will open for business on April 1. "It's a
big bet," said Mr. Samii, 42. "But if you think you're good, you
take the risk."

Philip Broenniman, a 39-year-old trader, spent five months in 2003
cobbling together $20 million to start Cadence Investment Partners
in New York. In late October, a week before his firm was set to
open, two investors pulled $13 million. "We opened our doors with
just $7 million," he recalled. A year later, after posting 16
percent gains, the fund has grown to $119 million.

Managers of funds of funds and other entities that invest in hedge
funds say they are overwhelmed by the numbers of start-ups. "We saw
600 pitches last year," said Ted Seides, director of investments at
Protg Partners in New York, which invests in new hedge fund
firms.
Of that number, he said, Protg ended up backing just nine.
"There
are a lot of hopes and dreams," he said. Of course, not all dreams
come true.

Ask new managers why they are starting funds and the answers often
recall the late 1990's: to build something, to test the "pure art of
investing," to be an entrepreneur. One two-year industry veteran
with $60 million under management describes why he did it: "Because
I could."

Even hedge fund experts who pooh-pooh the notion of an investment
bubble acknowledge the possibility of a compensation bubble. Instead
of just receiving a fixed percentage of the funds they manage, hedge
fund managers generally make "1 and 20," that is, 1 percent of
assets under management and 20 percent of profits.

To put that in context, a mutual fund company managing, say, $100
million and earning 1 percent of assets under management makes $1
million. By comparison, a hedge fund making the 1 percent management
fee and a 20 percent "carry" takes in $1 million for opening the
doors, and an additional $10 million if the fund returns 10 percent.
That's $11 million in revenue.

"Hedge funds are an innovation of compensation," said one fund-of-
funds executive. "It's a compensation system, not an asset class."
The comment is meant to be positive: in hedge funds, compensation is
aligned with absolute performance. In the mutual fund industry, by
contrast, compensation is usually tied to performance against a
benchmark, like a Standard & Poor's index, or assets under
management.

Will fees come down? Few people think so. "If you lower your fee,
they think something's wrong with you," said one longtime manager
who described the fees as "absurd."

In fact, fees have been moving higher. When Carl C. Icahn, the famed
takeover trader, raised a $2 billion fund last year, he demanded 2.5
percent of assets and 25 percent of the profit.

In 2003, the 25 highest-paid hedge fund managers earned more than
$200 million, on average, according to a survey by Institutional
Investor magazine. The top-ranked manager, George Soros, took home
$750 million that year. At No. 2 was David Tepper, manager of the $3
billion Appaloosa funds, who earned $510 million, according to the
magazine.

The lure of hedge funds, of course, is not supposed to be the high
pay but the outsized returns. Lately, the results have been less
than compelling. Over the 10-year period that ended last December,
hedge funds had an average annualized return of 12.57 percent,
according to an index maintained by Hedge Fund Research. That is
just slightly ahead of the 12.07 percent return of the S&P 500
during that period, though hedge funds earned their return with half
the volatility.

During the market downturn, however, hedge funds did hold up well.
In both 2000 and 2001, for example, the average hedge fund rose
nearly 5 percent, according to Hedge Fund Research. That compares
with declines of 9 percent in the S&P 500 in 2000 and nearly 12
percent the next year.

In 2004, however, the average hedge fund rose around 9 percent,
lagging behind the S&P by nearly two percentage points, Hedge Fund
Research has reported. During the first two months this year, the
latest data available, hedge funds were up nearly 2 percent,
compared with a flat return for the S&P.

Many in the industry say the sharp increase in both supply and
demand won't destroy the fundamentals of the business. "It is so
much the better way of managing money," said Julian Robertson, who
got out of the business five years ago after forging a reputation at
Tiger Management as one of the most successful hedge fund managers.
Today, he keeps a hand in the industry by providing seed money to
new hedge funds. "Hedge funds have had about a 10-year place in the
sun," he said. "I don't see any reason for that to stop."

Many industry veterans say the party will continue, partly because
of the shift in who invests in hedge funds. As recently as 2000,
hedge funds were almost exclusively for the very rich. Now
institutions want a piece of the action. Pension funds and other
institutions are expected to invest as much as $250 billion in hedge
funds over the next five years, according to a recent study by the
Bank of New York and Casey, Quirk & Associates, a consulting firm.
That would ultimately account for half of all money flowing into
hedge funds.

But as the pension money comes in, hedge fund returns are likely to
go down, as fund managers adapt their strategies to suit the new
clientele. Pension funds prize predictability over outsized returns;
the average pension fund is looking to make just 8 percent, net of
fees, on its hedge fund investments, the Casey Quirk report
concluded. That is a far cry from the 25-percent-plus returns
generated by rock-star managers like Mr. Soros and Michael
Steinhardt.

A possible check on hedge funds is the simple fact that while anyone
can start one, the industry has a high casualty rate - especially
for the smallest funds, which struggle to attract and keep
investors. Untested managers whose returns languish often see their
capital flee and are forced to shut down.

"There are very low barriers to entry but very high barriers to
staying in business," said Philip Duff, chief executive of
FrontPoint, a $4.3 billion hedge fund, citing the average annual
life of a hedge fund of 3.5 years. "That's problematic for
investors," he said -- particularly institutional investors who do
not relish moving money around.

"There's a reasonable probability a hedge fund will have a
significant problem," Mr. Duff added. The fund, he said, "will be
high-profile, and the question is, if and when that happens, does it
materially change the growth in demand? My answer is no."

While new funds have flourished, seasoned managers are also
absorbing the demand generated by institutions. "In 2004 we saw nine
$1 billion-plus start-ups, and 2005 is on track to outpace that
number," said Gerard Coughlin, a head of Morgan Stanley's prime
brokerage services. "While the high-profile start-ups command great
attention, many established managers are busy broadening their
product offering and expanding their footprint. The capacity created
by these proven managers and high-profile start-ups is effectively
raising the bar on what it takes to be successful as a new manager."

Longtime hedge fund investors have faith in the power of
Darwinism. "It will be survival of the fittest," said Michael Price,
former manager of the Mutual Series mutual funds, who now invests
$1.6 billion -- a good chunk of it in hedge funds -- on behalf of
family, friends and two college endowments. "The guys who are not
creative or don't know what they are doing won't last."

That is not to say that there is anything stopping them from
starting up -- and potentially losing investors' money. "There's
zero shame involved in launching a fund and failing," said one fund
of funds manager who, like many executives in the ultrasecretive
hedge fund universe, asked not to be identified.

Indeed, it is not unusual for managers to get a second chance.
William A. Ackman once ran Gotham Partners, one of the most
successful hedge funds in the 1990's, boasting a list of blue-chip
investors that included the Ziff family and Martin Peretz of The New
Republic.

By the end of 2002, Mr. Ackman and his business partner, David P.
Berkowitz, were forced to shut the fund after they became stuck in a
private equity investment they couldn't sell, and some investors
demanded their money back. Since then, Mr. Ackman has raised $410
million for a new firm, Pershing Square; he has promised investors
in his new fund that he will not make private equity investments.

In the same way that there is no quelling the bulls, there will be
no quieting of the critics. The Horvitz family of Cleveland, which
made its fortune in road construction, media and real estate,
started investing in hedge funds in the 1990s. A decade or so later,
it has virtually no money in such funds, said Jeffrey Horvitz, who
oversees his family's investments. Too often, he said, the funds
produced disappointing returns.

"Hedge funds are no longer attractive," Mr. Horvitz said, noting the
influx of start-ups. "I see no relief in sight, especially for
taxable investors like us."

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