28/07/2010 Author: Shannon Hawthorne

What's in a name? Nephila Capital

Describing hedge fund managers as having ‘weathered the financial storm’ is by now a well-worn cliché – in fact, if we had a pound for every time we’ve read it, we could afford to start up our own fund (well, almost).

But using bad weather as part of an investment strategy, as investment manager Nephila Capital has been doing since 1998, is noticeably less common.

The Bermuda-based firm specialises in the reinsurance industry, investing in niche markets such as insurance-linked securities, catastrophe bonds, insurance swaps and weather derivatives.

It is named after the Nephila spider, a creature that, according to Bermuda folklore, is renowned for its ability to predict bad weather and is said to spin its strong, golden web close to the ground when a hurricane is approaching – resulting in the dual nicknames of “hurricane spider” and the more-long-winded “golden silk orb-weaver”.

The company, in which Man has a 25% stake, is reported to have attracted institutional inflows of $340m into its catastrophe reinsurance fund in the second half of 2009, bringing total assets under management in the platform to $2.6bn

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