Posts tagged “alternative investments”

N.Y. Pay-To-Play Ringleader Gets Up To Four Years

February 21st, 2011

Andrew Cuomo

Henry Morris, the man at the center of New York’s pay-to-play pension scandal, was sentenced to between 16 months and four years in prison yesterday.

Morris, who pleaded guilty to corruption charges in March, was sent straight to jail by New York State Justice Lewis Stone. Stone called Morris’ scheme of taking kickbacks from investment advisers, including hedge funds, in exchange for allocations from the New York State Common Retirement Fund, “evil.”

“My actions diminished the integrity of New York State’s government,” Morris said at his sentencing. “Most importantly, they caused ordinary people to question their faith in the political system.”

The case against Morris was led by former New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, now the state’s governor. His successor, Eric Schneiderman, said, “today’s sentencing decision by the court sends a strong message to New Yorkers that those who abuse positions of power to line their own pockets will be held accountable by this office.”

Morris was the top political consultant under former state Comptroller Alan Hevesi, who resigned after an unrelated scandal and last year pleaded guilty to corruption charges himself. Among the alternative investments firms caught up in the scandal were the Carlyle Group and Riverstone Holdings.

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Hedge Funds, Banks Drive Up Prices In Madoff Claims Market

February 15th, 2011

Competition in the secondary market for claims against fraudster Bernard Madoff is driving up prices, says one of the UK’s biggest hedge fund market makers.

“We’ve had these positions on our books for two years, and two years ago you couldn’t get a price,” Neil Campbell, head of alternative investments at brokerage Tullett Prebon told Reuters. “Up to six months ago it’s been one or two cents in the dollar, as optionality, but now it’s become more serious because there’s more competition.”

In the past six months, the price of holdings in Madoff feeder funds like Fairfield Sentry and Kingate has risen to 7 or 8 cents on the dollar from 1 or 2 cents, says the news agency. Buying bankruptcy claims from a direct investor with Madoff can cost 30 or 40 cents.

The market has been encouraged by the successor of Irving Picard, trustee for the Madoff bankruptcy, who has recovered about $10 billion for victims of Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.

According to Campbell, distressed hedge funds, distressed desks at banks and funds of funds specializing in the secondary market are all entering the sector. And on the other side, many funds of funds are trying to dump Madoff holdings to limit damage to their reputations.

“There are a lot of vehicles globally looking at this opportunity,” said Campbell. “A variety of buyers are coming in, due to the success of the trustee, who has been fairly ferocious in getting results, and the (small) amount of claims made, especially in Europe, which has created a very interesting window of opportunity.”

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At Last! EU Reaches Final Agreement on “Passport” Regulations

October 27th, 2010

We have been reporting on this ongoing saga for some time, but it looks like the curtain is finally coming down.  Following a year of battling, back-biting and bickering, the representatives of the 27-member European Union have reached agreement on new regulations for foreign alternative investments – the so-called “passport” controversy.

It was a week ago that France and the U.K. struck their own deal on the directive, paving the way for its approval by the EU’s member states.  Those states have reached a deal that assures its passage by the European Parliament. Approval by both institutions is required for the proposal to become law, which it is now expected to do early next year.

The European Commission’s agreement with the parliament contains a few changes from the draft approved by EU governments. But those are relatively minor; the real heavy-lifting on the compromise was accomplished last week by EU finance ministers after an increasingly isolated France agreed to drop its opposition to granting access to all EU markets to foreign hedge funds.

The directive will impose strict new reporting and custody requirements on hedge funds and private equity funds, as well as placing them under the authority of the new European Securities and Markets Authority. Private equity funds will also face new asset-stripping rules.

The controversial passport will not come into effect for EU firms until 2013, and foreign funds will not be eligible until 2015. Until then, the current regime that allows each EU country to decide which funds will have access to their markets remains in place.

The European Parliament is set to vote on the directive on Nov. 11.

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Pension Fund Moving Assets from Madoff-Linked Hedge Fund

October 25th, 2010

The Dorset County Pension Fund (DCPF) has $2.23 billion in investments, 2% of which were tied up with Pioneer Alternative Investments, a Madoff-tainted hedge fund. It is now reallocating that money into International Asset Management (IAM), a long-established European fund of hedge funds (FoHF).

The pension fund is doubling the $25.6 million investment it has with IAM, according to Nick Buckland, investment officer at Dorset County Council.

It was only last year that DCPF  had investments with three FoHFs, IAM, Gottex Fund Management and Pioneer Alternative Investments, which each managed a portion of the pension fund’s hedge fund allocation.

“We decided to redeem from Pioneer last year due to the hedge fund’s exposure to Bernard Madoff,” stated Buckland, adding that the fund was now planning to re-invest the redeemed assets. “We are very happy with our remaining two managers, and all the redeemed assets from Pioneer are being reinvested with IAM,” he said.

However, it has taken over a year for the pension fund to receive the assets back from Pioneer, which had 10% of its assets entangled with the Madoff fraud, and the pension has not yet received its entire investment back.

Dorset County has a 6% target allocation to hedge funds, and currently has 5.5% invested. Buckland confirmed that the pension fund is unlikely to increase that target in the foreseeable future and is unable to make direct investments, as the council doesn’t have the resources to do so. “For now, FoHFs work for us,” he said.

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UBS Prime Brokerage Expanding in Asia and U.S.

October 18th, 2010

UBS Hong Kong headquarters

Swiss bank UBS is growing its prime brokerage unit. It has hired 11 new employees in Asia in the last year, and has expansion plans in the U.S.  This is in addition to its London-based managed account business that stresses transparency and liquidity as compared to other alternative investments.

“We’ve bulked up our staffing and our resources in the region,” Stu Hendel, head of UBS global prime broking business, told reporters. Besides Asia, the UBS will try to increase its market share in the United States, where it currently ranks sixth, and will soon announce a top banker to head the Zurich-based hedge fund business, Hendel added.

Hendel had survived 18 years at Morgan Stanley, which ranks alongside Goldman Sachs as the top two prime brokers in the United States, joined UBS in July last year. “We have hired about 11 people in the last year,” said David Gray, head of UBS prime brokerage in Asia, adding the hires included specialists in areas such as information technology and law.

Singapore and Hong Kong are seeing an increase in hedge fund activity as global funds move to Asia, attracted by the region’s strong economic growth and lighter regulation at a time when Western countries are looking to tighten control over the industry.

Hendel said the bar to start a new hedge fund has gone up to $100 million in the United States from $25-$50 million before the financial crisis, and warned that smaller startups will find it hard to attract investor money. He said established hedge funds have not been forced to cut fees despite the noise around the issue even as the industry struggled to make double-digit gains in each of the last three years.

Hedge funds typically charge a management fee of 2 percent or sometimes more on assets — well above the fee charged by mutual funds — plus 20 percent of returns above a pre-agreed benchmark. But Hendel said fund of hedge funds managers are already facing investor pressure to cut fees.

“First it is going to hit fund of funds. I think it already has because of the added level of management and performance fees coming out of the relatively muted hedge fund environment,” he said. Hendel also warned that if European regulations change dramatically, hedge funds will move out of key money management centers in Europe such as London to places like Geneva and Asia.

“Some hedge funds have moved from the U.K. to Geneva and other places outside the main money centres but it is a trickle,” he said. “The whole regulatory environment is the huge elephant in the room when it comes to hedge funds.” France, Britain and the United States have been embroiled in a months-long dispute about a draft European Union law to tighten controls on hedge funds and private equity firms.

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France Surrenders EU Passport Opposition

October 8th, 2010

There were indications yesterday that the French will no longer hold out against the majority of European Union members favoring new foreign hedge fund “passport” regulations. The shift could presage a breakthrough in the deal-making, which has been unexpectedly contentious in recent weeks. Foreign hedge funds are seeking a single centralized registration process that allows access to all EU member markets.

French diplomats dropped their outright opposition to the so-called “passport” for non-EU funds, which would give those hedge funds and private equity funds that meet stringent new EU standards access to all 27 member countries’ markets, a change from the current system where individual national regulators make the decision.

Last week, France, backed by Germany, announced it would not accept any passport for foreign hedge fund managers, appearing to sink a carefully-crafted compromise. Now, the French say they might accept such a provision, but only if the new European Securities and Markets Authority has the sole authority to issue the passport.

The passport proposal is backed by both the European Commission and European Parliament, as well as the U.K., home to the bulk of Europe’s alternative investments industry, and the U.S. On Tuesday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner urged France to back the directive, calling its opposition to the passport for foreign hedge funds “discriminatory.”

France has denied that charge, saying it is only concern about “ensuring maximum protection for investors.”

France’s openness to accepting a passport does not ensure a deal, however. The French are willing to allow the current system of national regulators to remain in place until as late as 2016. Others, including the U.K., may want the current system to remain in place alongside the passport system, allowing individual countries to approve funds that fail the EU test.

“This is progress but not yet a breakthrough,” one diplomat told the Financial Times.

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Traders at JPMorgan Doing the Sideways Shuffle

September 29th, 2010

JPMorgan Chase has created a new unit for alternative investments that will be a part of its asset management division. Proprietary traders for the investment bank are being transferred to the new unit.

This move is part of the continued fallout from this year’s financial reform legislation. Investments banks are expediting the demise of their proprietary trading operations, which will soon be forbidden under the newly-enacted bank regulations in the U.S. In contrast to prime broker Goldman Sachs’ decision to shut down its proprietary desks, JPMorgan will relocate its traders for equity, emerging markets and structured credit to the new alternatives unit. The traders will no longer manage money for the bank itself – they will focus exclusively on outside clients.

Dealbraker .com reports the following quote from an internal memo from Mary Erdoes, CEO of JPMorgan Asset Management: “Colleagues who will transition have delivered strong risk-adjusted returns for the firm, and we are confident that clients will benefit from their investment experience and insight,”

Erdoes will supervise the proprietary traders moving to the new unit. The transition, headed by co-head of global emerging markets Mike Stewart, will take a number of years, Erdoes and Jes Staley, CEO of JPMorgan’s investment banking unit, said.

Stewart, who will lead the new unit, is also working with Larry Unrein, who heads JPMorgan Asset Management’s hedge fund and private equity operations, to establish it. Stewart will remain in his current post through the end of the year.

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Financial Services Industry Pondering Impact of Dodd-Frank Act

August 23rd, 2010

Providers of financial services, such as prime brokers, are now calibrating how to respond to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Under review are the Act’s effects on returns, leverage, risk-taking, innovation, and transparency.  That is because the Act drives higher margin requirements and less leverage.  Providers also worry that the threat of increased SEC scrutiny will inhibit certain proprietary strategies favored by hedge funds and other alternative investments.

Private equity and real estate funds are also feeling the heat. For example, Bank of America Merrill Lynch effectively departed the business when it outsourced management of its Asian real estate fund to Blackstone Group in July, said Steven Coyle, chief investment officer of Cohen & Steers’ fund-of-funds management arm, Global Realty Partners, New York.

Anticipating that financial reform would likely make the businesses obsolete was one reason leading to the decision to sell, Mr. Coyle noted. The other was “realizing that recent hits to real estate made these businesses less attractive on an ongoing basis,” he said.  “If they remain as banks, I don’t think they will stay in business,” Mr. Coyle said. “Most investors invested because the house (bank parent to the investment management firm) had a major investment.”

Large non-bank financial institutions may also suffer as investors start to shy away from large investment firms. While “this is not the death knell of large firms,” he said, on balance, investors will move toward a smaller operating model, Mr. Coyle added.

Financial reforms — both in the U.S. and globally — are expected to have the combined effect of making debt, a key ingredient in real estate and private equity investments, even harder to come by.  “There is a concern that, whereas normalcy would return to the debt capital markets, the de-risking (caused by the financial reform law) will cause debt capital markets for real estate to be slower to recover,” said Robert T. O’Brien, real estate leader for New York-based consulting firm Deloitte. “Lending standards will be tighter with more documents, more diligence and with banks having to have more capital reserves.”

With the financial overhaul signed into law, institutional investors and managers now are waiting for the other shoe to drop: that is, the regulatory specifics.

One little-discussed aspect of the so-called Volcker Rule – which restricts banks from proprietary trading – is that it also prohibits financial institutions owning more than 3% of any alternative investment fund.

“Banks cannot buy 3% of a private equity or hedge fund and banks cannot sponsor or operate a fund and invest more than 3%,” said David Sahr, partner in the financial services, regulation and enforcement division at the New York office of law firm Mayer Brown LLP.

This not only applies to funds being raised, but also to any funds — private equity, real estate and hedge funds — the financial institutions now sponsor, said Lennine Occhino, partner in the Chicago headquarters of Mayer Brown.

More widely discussed has been the aspect of the Volcker Rule that banks’ total private equity and hedge fund exposure must not be more than 3% of Tier One capital — banks’ cushion of core capital intended to absorb losses so they won’t cut into deposits, Mr. Sahr said. What’s more, a bank must have a fiduciary relationship with investors and have an existing asset management relationship with investors to sponsor alternative investment funds at all, Mr. Sahr said.

But the rules do not stop there. Even if a financial institution does not own a bank, if the institution is so important to the U.S. economy that it could cause the economy to break down, it could be subject to supervision by the Federal Reserve, he said.

These could include large insurance companies, large private equity and hedge fund firms, large manufacturers or their investment management subsidiaries like General Electric Co.‘s GE Capital. These firms would not be prohibited from owning and sponsoring alternative investment funds; but they would be subject to overall capital limits that have yet to be set by the Federal Reserve, Mr. Sahr said.

“The legislation gives the Federal Reserve the authority to designate non-banks as systemically important financial institutions,” Mr. Kahn said.

Some private investment firms see this as an opportunity to expand their businesses. Many expect to scoop up talented investment executives from large financial services firms or acquire existing investment management units from players departing the business, he said.

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Citigroup Hits An Iceberg

August 12th, 2010

“Citigroup sold these products like tickets on the Titanic and, with this ruling, they’re going to pay their victims whose investments they sunk.”

So says Robert Pearce, whose law office has just won a judgment against bank/prime broker Citigroup for $1.8 million. After an arbitrator awarded a pair of investors the lump sum amount, Citigroup now fears it may be facing a blizzard of lawsuits over a series of hedge funds it bailed out two years ago.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority panel found that Citigroup Global Markets and Citi Alternative Investments negligently mismanaged the MAT/ASTA funds and negligently supervised employees, the Law Offices of Robert Wayne Pearce and Page Perry said. The two law firms have now teamed up to represent other clients of the municipal bond hedge funds, and they are not alone in that endeavor.

Mr. Pearce added “Citigroup tried the ‘blame the customer defense,’ but blaming the customer does not make sense for Citigroup’s failing to follow its own investment strategy and then sailing MAT/ASTA directly into the storm it saw on the horizon. The negligent management claim now is available to all MAT/ASTA investors, including employees not involved in the management of the funds.”

The $1.8 million award follows a $550,000 award made by a FINRA panel in June.

Investors say the MAT/ASTA funds were marketed as relatively safe, fixed-income products. But Pearce said that they “were risky investments that exposed investors to a 100% or more loss of principal.”

Pearce and Page Perry aren’t the only firms seeking to drum up clients against Citi. The Securities Law Firm of Klayman & Toskes issued a press release yesterday to “all Smith Barney/Citi Private Bank customers who invested in ASTA and MAT funds,” offering their services and promising to “aggressively” pursue claims for MAT/ASTA clients.

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