Decomposing FoHF returns
Where and when funds of hedge funds add and lose value
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16/06/2010
Another week, another ‘Cayman in peril’ story. Last time it was SkyBridge Capital considering Luxembourg versions of its soon-to-be-acquired Citigroup funds of hedge funds (FoHFs). This week it’s Zais Group, the $8bn distressed specialist, considering re-domiciling a whopping $500m in Cayman-based assets.
Add to the mix the wholesale relocation to Ireland earlier this year of Marshall Wace’s funds, along with rumours of similar considerations at big-name managers, and you could be forgiven for thinking Cayman was yesterday’s news. So to speak.
Well, not everyone is convinced. “It’s true that there is a lot of jurisdictional arbitrage going on, but, in terms of Cayman, it’s not statistically significant,” says Appleby’s Matthew Feargrieve.
Re-domiciliation is a very expensive and complicated procedure, and it is only the bigger managers that are likely to be able to absorb the cost.
“On the other side of the coin, and this is something you don’t really read about, we are seeing more inflows of single managers into Cayman,” Feargrieve adds.
Increased US economic activity and what Feargrieve calls a growing “boredom” with the AIFM carnival are all playing their part, but, essentially, while the regulatory hubbub will subside, onshore products will never provide the alpha managers and investors crave. “And Cayman is still the default jurisdiction for that,” Feargrieve says.
29/02/2012
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29/02/2012
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02/02/2011
HFMWeek's European Hedge Fund Services Awards are designed to recognise companies that have outperformed...
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