Createwealth8888: The truth in investing/trading, even the world's best may also fail badly one day.
Last January, when investors in one of Paulson & Co.'s best-known
hedge funds saw the value of their investments had been slashed in
half, some wondered how much worse it could get.
Then by Sept. 30, there was an additional drop of 15 percentage points-with three months left to go in the year.
As a result, some Paulson investors-who gave the firm a pass
last year when the riskier version of the firm's umbrella fund, Paulson
Advantage Plus, saw enormous losses-are now throwing in the towel.
Fed up with lagging returns at the hedge-fund management company, a
number of investors large and small are opting to either reduce their
capital at risk or yank it entirely by year's end.
It's the latest blow to fund manager John Paulson, who became famous
in the investing world after he bet correctly on the collapse of housing
prices in 2008.
"We expected, based on the way [Paulson] does things, that we're
going to have periods of time where he's out of favor," said Craig
Husting, the chief investment officer of the Public School and Education
Employee Retirement Systems of Missouri, a pair of pension funds that
have trimmed their investments in Paulson's Advantage Plus to a third of
the original size over the past year and a half. "But just the beta -
the volatility of his bets - is why we pared back."
With just days to go before an Oct. 31 deadline for investors who
want to redeem their capital to notify Paulson, Husting may well be
joined by a panoply of others.
They range from the private bank of of Citigroup (C), which revealed in August that it would claw back its funds (a process starting in 2013), to the 92nd Street Y,
which people familiar with the matter said pulled its capital this year
because of concerns about future potential losses and its investment
mix.
Other significant players, including the brokerage arm of Morgan Stanley (MS),
are considering pulling funds, but haven't yet made a final decision,
people familiar with the matter said. (A spokeswoman for the 92nd Street
Y didn't return calls for comment, and a Morgan Stanley spokesman
declined to comment.)
Paulson, which is known for its aggressive, 25-person investor-relations team, isn't taking the reversals lying down.
"Recent performance in our Advantage Fund is disappointing and we
understand investor frustration," said the firm in a written statement.
The firm noted that over the lifetime of the Advantage Funds, which
were opened in 2004, Paulson had "far exceeded" both the event-driven
hedge fund index and the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index (^GSPC), returning more than 10 percent annually.
It also noted that the vast majority of its current Advantage fund
participants - 89 percent - have invested in it using gold as a
currency, rather than dollars, an option Paulson offers to all its
investors. In gold-share terms, the Advantage fund is flat for the year,
the firm added, not down.
During the past year, Paulson has worked to appease worried investors.
Last winter, the company invited unhappy Advantage fund participants
to move their capital into other Paulson funds while preserving their
high-water marks. That meant that the former Advantage investors had the
chance to participate in 100 percent of their new funds' profits,
rather than the standard 80 percent, with the remaining 20 percent
reverting back to Paulson management.
At the same time, Paulson set up a new risk-management structure that
gathered for biweekly meetings and set new trading and leverage limits.
Ironically, though, it was some of the resultant hedges against a
further credit crisis in Europe, as well as battered performances in
Paulson's gold-miner portfolio, that have given the firm's Advantage funds trouble since.
Through Sept. 30, people familiar with the matter said, the Advantage
Plus fund has fallen 15 percent, meaning that a dollar invested in it
on Jan. 1, 2011, would be worth about 41 cents today. In the Advantage
fund, the drop was roughly 10 percent, meaning that that dollar would be
worth 57 cents today.
That fall has been equally pronounced in the firm's total assets under management.
Once $38 billion, the figure has fallen to nearly half that since
early 2011, and now sits at nearly $20 billion, people familiar with the
matter said.
Of that, about $12 billion belongs to John Paulson and his employees, creating what the firm described in its statement as "a very sticky capital base."
The firm also points out that on a capital-weighted basis, its funds are up an average of 2 percent this year.
Heartened by Paulson's tremendous wins during the recession and hoping 2011 was a one-off, many investors hung tight over the past year.
But an August announcement that Citigroup would remove Paulson from
its internal hedge-fund platform, which initiated a $410 million
redemption process, crystallized the doubts among some of the fund
company's more patient investors.
"In my 20-plus years, I have never seen someone go from so high to so
low in such a time period," said Brad Alford, who runs the Atlanta
investment firm Alpha Capital Management and had originally invested
about $10 million of his high net worth clients' money in Paulson. That
figure, Alford estimated, is now closer to $3 million.
His frustration with Paulson is such that he's pulling out of a
broader fund-of-funds platform entirely just to remove his capital from
Paulson - even though the platform contains other funds he likes, such
as DE Shaw's Oculus Fund, which is up by double digits so far this year.
"You just get so frustrated that you are done with the name, you are
done with the manager, he's done something you can never go back from,"
Alford added. He's had better luck with mutual funds that employ hedge
fund-type strategies with much more liquidity and a fraction of the
fees, he said.
Wall Street struggles for direction after in-line monthly producer prices
-
[#item_full_content] Read More
29 minutes ago
Just curious. Why is he losing money when many people i know make this year.
ReplyDelete