Tony Griffiths

11/08/2010 Author: Tony Griffiths

Hedge funds begin to adjust to Volcker

There’s no smoke without fire. After months spent fanning the hidden flames inside its hedge fund businesses, the first whiff of Wall Street’s reaction to the Volcker Rule is pluming into view.   

The first big mover was Goldman Sachs, widely acknowledged as the rule’s biggest potential victim. Reports this week that the bank is poised to spin-off its prop desk, Goldman Sachs Principal Strategies, may yet prove premature, but either way, changes are afoot. Morgan Stanley has similar plans for its prized FrontPoint Partners hedge fund, with which it is expected to sever ties within three months.

The rumour mill is now in overdrive. Another major US bank has already begun the process of spinning out a sizable prop desk, one industry insider told HFMWeek. A well-known European bank, adds the source, having heard this via the grapevine, is looking to follow suit – the fourth big-name in total to be considering a move to extricate itself from its hedge fund businesses.

“It’s a bit of a trend and we’re going to see more of it as banks look to divest their propriety desks,” says the source. “It’s becoming more and more apparent that the big banks are looking to go back to their core and even though they’re getting rid of historically what was good, profitable businesses, politically, they want to be seen to be cleaning up their act.”

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