• Home
  • About
  • The Good Strategy Blog
  • Strategy
    • Data Warehousing
    • Ask Martyn

GOOD STRATEGY

~ for every significant challenge

GOOD STRATEGY

Tag Archives: Banking

Consider this: Hedge Funds are Evil

30 Friday Jan 2015

Posted by Martyn Jones in Banking, Consider this, Good Strat, Good Strategy, Martyn Jones, Martyn Richard Jones, Strategy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Banking, finance, funds, Good Strat, Good Strategy, hedge funds, Martyn Jones, Martyn Richard Jones, money

Hedge Funds are evil, right? Go on, you know you want to say yes. Almost everyone has an opinion about them, but very few people can actually tell you what they are.

Indeed, there’s am awful lot of nonsense written about Hedge Funds, and this piece might just end up being a worthy addition to that body of baloney. But, the intention is somewhat different.

The objective behind this piece is to provide a quick look at where the modern hedge fund started; what they are; how they work; the mechanics of participation; and who traditionally has put their money into them.

Of course, this piece is a necessary simplification of what is a fascinating aspect of the alternative investment universe.

To begin at the beginning

In 1966 Carol J. Loomis[i] blew the lid on one of the best kept investment secrets of the 20th century.

In an article penned for Fortune titled “The Jones that nobody keeps up with”, Loomis revealed that over a five year period a fund run by Alfred Winslow Jones had consistently outperformed the Fidelity Fund, the most successful mutual fund of that time, by a remarkable 44%.

Not only that, but between 1956 and 1966 the Jones fund had outperformed the Dreyfus Fund, the best performing mutual fund of that decade, by a massive 87%.

Jones was born in Melbourne, Australia, but from the age of four he lived in the USA. He graduated from Harvard in 1923, and before becoming involved in the finance industry he toured the world working on steamships. He was to serve as a diplomat in Germany, and also worked as a journalist covering the Spanish civil war.

In 1941, with conflict raging in Europe, Jones returned to the USA. He then studied for, and obtained a doctorate in sociology at Columbia University, and became a reporter for Fortune.

His thesis, Life, Liberty and Property, is a reference text in sociology.

In 1949 Jones formed a company, A. W. Jones & Co., arguably the first modern Hedge Fund.

Robert A. Jaeger characterised the fund as “an opportunistic equity hedge fund”, that relied heavily on discerning stock picking abilities, combined with bets on long positions (rising prices) and short positions (falling prices).

In 1952 the fund was converted into a limited partnership, and during the 50s other such partnerships were set up, including the sage of Omaha’s Buffet Partners, and WJS Partners, founded by Walter Schloss.


What they are; how they work

Hedge funds are loosely regulated, exclusive and limited-membership investment clubs, usually run as partnerships or as corporations. They focus on absolute returns on investments, for themselves and their members, regardless of market conditions.

Direct participation in Hedge Funds is theoretically limited to between 100 or 500 investors, depending on the class of investor. Moreover, because of the unregulated status of most hedge funds, they are not allowed to actively market their products, so they have to use more exclusive means to attract investors, typically word of mouth.

Hedge Funds typically invest in traditional securities, such as stocks, bonds and commodities, but they can also invest in real estate, art, wine or any number of other non-traditional areas of investment. In fact, they are free to use virtually any pick and mix of strategies from the entire range of investment possibilities.

That said, a lot of Hedge Funds will opt for a specific investment strategy and will stick with that strategy for the life-time of the fund.

So what’s in it for the Hedge Fund managers and administrators?

Hedge Fund Managers typically charge a management fee of between 1and 3 percent of the value of the assets under management, regardless of performance. They may also – almost always in the past – charge a performance fee, which can start at around 20 percent of any fund gains above a certain minimum performance hurdle or target value. Managers also generally ‘eat their own dog food’, in that they will also invest in their own Hedge Fund.

Investors in Hedge Funds are informed of the value of their investments via a statement that shows the calculated value of shares in the fund, the Net Asset Value (the NAV). This can be calculated monthly, quarterly or even yearly, depending on the fund. In addition funds are free to choose if they wish to publicly disclose performance figures or not.

Some hedge funds may require additional fees and commissions, and may impose lock up periods, and strict and narrow redemption periods. They may also reject some applications for subscriptions without giving any reasons, and they may also forcibly redeem shares held, and without having to justify their actions.

In addition, some hedge funds use equalization methods – and there are a number of variants – to equitably distribute hedge fund fees amongst its partners, yet other hedge funds do not use equalization methods at all.

The mechanics of participation

So, briefly, how do you get to invest in a Hedge Fund (subscribe), how do you liquidate that participation (redeem), and what happens between ‘subscription’ and ‘redemption’.

Offer: A Hedge Fund details what’s involved in a particular offer in an ‘Offering Memorandum’, also known as a ‘private placement memorandum’. This is typically an ‘enriched’ business plan tied to a specific issuance of shares in a fund. It basically sets out the stall.

Subscription: In order to subscribe to a fund the potential participant in the fund signs up to a subscription agreement, and the conditions laid out in that agreement. Conditions may cover aspects such as minimum subscription amounts; minimum share increments, rules governing the liquidation of participation in the fund; management and performance fees; and, so on and so forth.

Redemption: This is the liquidation of shares in a fund. Typical redemption points can occur from anything from 15 days to up to 180 days, and sometimes more than this, depending on the fund and the rules related to lock-ups, redemption. In addition, redemption options may be linked to other financial charges, penalties and constraints.

So what happens between subscription and redemption?

Custody: A hedge fund subscriber may wish to use the services of a large and reputable financial service provider to act as custodian of their hedge fund shares. In addition to holding securities for safekeeping, most custodians also offer other services such as account administration, transaction settlements, collection of dividends and interest payments, tax support and foreign exchange. (Source: Investopedia).

Dividends: It is very uncommon for hedge funds to pay dividends, as any accruable earnings are realized upon redemption of the shares. However, some fundsdo incentivize the maintenance of subscriptions through the payment of dividends.

Calculating NAV: Periodically – or even on a real-time basis – a hedge fund will recalculate the Net Asset Value of the fund shares. This is done by dividing total value of all securities held by the number of shares. The NAV is more or less subjective in cases where the associated assets are more or less liquid. An extreme example of this may be the calculation of a NAV that has to take into account the theoretical market value of art.

Of course, the mechanics of participation is typically more involved and complex than this.

Who plays, who pays

Investors in Hedge Funds are individuals and institutions (such as foundations, endowments, family offices, pension funds, insurance companies, private banks and funds of funds).

One of the key criteria in the Hedge Fund business is that only people and institutions with money can invest in them. On face value this prerequisite seems a tad bizarre, but there are some very valid reasons for it.

In order to be able to invest in Hedge Funds an investor will need to meet certain legal requirements. They have to be either a credited investor or a qualified purchaser. The qualification is based on net worth and individual income. The qualified purchaser has a higher net worth than a credited investor.

In my opinion the practical rules of Hedge Funds are clear, albeit wrapped up in more indirect language. The biggest rule is: ‘do not put any money into a Hedge Fund that you are not prepared to lose’. The second big rule is: ‘only subscribe to a Hedge Fund with money that you can lose and without the risk of significantly and adversely affecting your lifestyle.’

Of course, this didn’t stop people from jumping on the Hedge Fund bandwagon with little or no clue about what they were getting themselves into.

That’s all folks

Hedge Funds are subject to a dire circle of misleading, banal and frequently reactionary published and public opinion. Which is unfortunate, because it ignores that almost all of the Hedge Funds reflect a culture and style of their managers and administrators, and that in the business there is a a lot of plurality and diversity.

Some Hedge Funds have been the epitome of sharp investment practice, hubris and good old fashioned albeit legal duplicity.

There are macho funds, and non-macho funds, high risk funds and risk-averse funds, highly leveraged funds and funds that use little or no leverage.

Some funds are discrete, some are ugly, some are charming, and some are boisterous and incredibly aggressive. Some are socially responsible, and others might ask “is social responsibility part of the NAV calculation?”

Some funds delight in planning raids on markets, mounting shark attacks on political systems and find ‘justifiable’ enchantment in destabilizing economies and currencies. Other Hedge Funds – in my opinion the vast majority – would never dream of doing such things.

Furthermore, some funds actively encourage responsible investment in developing countries and in other ethical investment strategies. Moreover, there are plenty of examples of funds that sit somewhere between the extremes, so there is no one size fits all when it comes to characterizing funds.

But whatever the style of the Hedge Fund, at the heart of each individual Hedge Fund culture is the culture of the team leaders and team players.

So, are Hedge Funds intrinsically evil?

No, I don’t think so. But that sort of headline grabs a lot of people’s attention, and frequently for all the wrong reasons.

Thank you so much for reading.

[i] Loomis, Caroll J. The Jones that nobody keeps up with. Fortune, April 1966


File under: Good Strat, Good Strategy, Martyn Richard Jones, Martyn Jones, Cambriano Energy, Iniciativa Consulting, Iniciativa para Data Warehouse, Tiki Taka Pro

Silly Season! Data Warehousing is Hadoop is Big Data?

12 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by Martyn Jones in Architecture, Ask Martyn, Banking, Best principles, Big Data, Business Intelligence, Creativity, Data Warehouse, Dogma, Knowledge, Peeves

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Banking, Behavioural Economics, Big Data, Bill Inmon, business intelligence, data integration, Data Marts, Demagogism, Dogma, enterprise data warehousing, hadoop, Information and Technology, information management

Let’s get this baby off the ground

This weekend I read a piece on the Information Management website by Steve Miller with the title of Big Data vs. the Data Warehouse. It’s an old piece, from March 2014.

It was in response to a piece penned by Bill Inmon, titled Big Data or Data Warehouse? Turbocharge Your Porsche – Buy an Elephant, in which he singled out for criticism the ad campaign of a big-data and Hadoop promoter.

Continue reading →

Operational awareness isn’t for wimps! So, get it right

08 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by Martyn Jones in awareness, Big Data, business, Business Intelligence, Data Warehouse, operational, pig data, Strategy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Analytics, Banking, Behavioural Economics, BI, Big Data, Business, business analysis, Strategy

I frequently include the term Operational Awareness in talks.

I think it’s important for strategy.

So I wrote a piece that tried to convey what I mean by the term.

But first, a diagram:

Image1

Figure 1 – Operational awareness

This is a simplified high-level example of business data objects found in certain organisations. In the above diagram I have reused an industry example of nine business data objects to represent operational data[1].

For completeness and to maintain rationality in this section here follows a summary list of the nine key groups of business data needed to have a coherent and cohesive operational awareness (these data groups are also frequently referred to as business data objects):

  • A: Party embodies all of the participants that may have contact with the organisation or that are of interest to the organisation and about which the organisation maintains data. This includes data about the organisation itself; data about external organisations; data about external and internal individuals; and, data about the roles of involved parties.
  • B: Arrangement represents a prospective or existing agreement, between two or more individuals, organizations or organizational units that provides and affirms the rights, rules and obligations associated with a transaction between parties.
  • C: Condition describes the specific requirements that pertain to how the business is conducted and includes information such as prerequisite or qualification criteria and restrictions or limits associated with the requirements. Conditions can apply to various aspects of an enterprise’s operations, such as the operational parameters of a resource item, the sale and servicing of products, the determination of eligibility to purchase a product, the authority to perform business transactions, the assignment of specific general ledger accounts appropriate for different business transactions, the required file retention periods for various types of information kept by an enterprise and the selection criteria for a market segment.
  • D: Product/Service describes the services, merchandise or facilities that can be offered, sold or purchased by the enterprise, its competitors and other Involved Parties during the normal course of its business. This concept also includes goods and services that are of interest to the enterprise such as supplies for manufacture.
  • E: Location covers a place where something can be found, a destination of information or a bounded area, such as a country or state, about which the enterprise wishes to keep information.
  • F: Classification is used to organize and manage specific business information by defining structures that represent classification categories. Classification also organizes and manages groups of business concepts that apply to multiple concepts.
  • G: Business Direction/Organisation Direction refers to and records expressions of a party’s intent with regard to the manner and environments in which it wishes to carry out its business. Business direction items contains, keeps data about, and is used to support the enterprise’s business and financial plans, policies, procedures and schedules.
  • H: Events describe a happening about which the organisation wishes to keep information as a part of carrying out its mission and conducting its mission.
  • I: Resource object includes and describes any value item, either tangible or intangible, that is owned, managed or used by, or of specific interest to, the organisation in the course of accomplishing its mission.

The key facets of operational awareness detailed above constitute a potential of fundamental importance in the formulation of organizational strategy.

Timely, accurate and appropriate data at this level can temper ambition with the facts on the ground, with operation insight, and with the effectiveness of time and place utilisation.

But take care. In most organisations there will be a spread of attention to the key facets illustrated here, and they will be treated with varying degrees of intensity relative to their overall contribution to strategy formulation. In addition, organizational specific facets may also be introduced where needed in order to complement the overall set of operational awareness facets described here.

[1] IBM’s IFW/BDW.

Don’t fight the Bull, Isolate it – Deliberately avoiding the evident

07 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by Martyn Jones in Banking, Best principles, Business Intelligence, Data Warehouse, Executive, Management, Methodology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Banking, Behavioural Economics, Big Data, business intelligence, Business Management, Demagogism, Dogma

Much of my consulting work is done in the Financial Industry.

I was there when the crisis was prepared, when it was baked and when it was brought out of the oven.

There are many theories about what went wrong.

Most of them are misleading, misinformed or simply crap.

Mainly to protect the guilty.

Continue reading →

Follow GOOD STRATEGY on WordPress.com

Top posts

  • Heaven help us! Have you seen the latest Virtual Data Warehouse bullshit?
  • Data Warehousing and Sources of Truth: Rarely Pure, Never Simple
  • The World's Best Data Quotes... Including Big Data quotes
  • Become an Instant Big Data Rock Star with 10 Insider Tips from the Top
  • Agile at Scale is bullshit by design
  • Bullshit at the Data Lakehouse
  • Head Over Heels - The many colours, hues and tones of poems, lyrics and words

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,439 other subscribers

Names in the cloud

4th generation Data Warehousing All Data Ask Martyn Big Data Big Data 7s Big Data Analytics Business Intelligence business strategy Consider this dark data data architecture Data governance Data Lake data management data science Data Supply Framework Data Warehouse Data Warehousing Good Strat goodstrat Good Strategy IT strategy Martyn does Martyn Jones Martyn Richard Jones pig data Politics Strategy The Amazing Big Data Challenge The Big Data Contrarians

The Good Strat Archives

  • March 2023
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • December 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • October 2017
  • August 2017
  • July 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • May 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • February 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014

The Stats

  • 99,717 hits

Recent posts

  • You don’t need a data warehouse to do data warehousing March 22, 2023
  • Data Warehousing means having thousands of ETL jobs March 21, 2023
  • The data warehouse is the repository for the post-transactional data March 20, 2023
  • Does your way of providing data have business value? March 19, 2023
  • Data warehousing stands in the way of progress March 18, 2023
  • Data Trailblazers: 2022 Vision January 2, 2022
  • Tea with The Data Contrarian: Afilonius Rex December 10, 2021
  • Reality Check: Data Mesh and Data Warehousing   December 5, 2021
  • Myth-busting: Data Mesh and Data Warehousing – Revisited November 25, 2021
  • Heaven help us! Have you seen the latest Virtual Data Warehouse bullshit? June 26, 2020

Hours & Info

Martyn Richard Jones
Madrid, Spain
+33 767 120 160
10:00 - 17:00
Follow GOOD STRATEGY on WordPress.com

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Top Good Strat Posts & Pages

  • The Good Strategy Company
  • Heaven help us! Have you seen the latest Virtual Data Warehouse bullshit?
  • About
  • Data Warehousing and Sources of Truth: Rarely Pure, Never Simple
  • The World's Best Data Quotes... Including Big Data quotes
  • Become an Instant Big Data Rock Star with 10 Insider Tips from the Top
  • Agile at Scale is bullshit by design
  • Bullshit at the Data Lakehouse
  • Head Over Heels - The many colours, hues and tones of poems, lyrics and words

Good strat tag cloud

accountability advertising All Data Analytics aspiring tendencies in IM awareness Banking Behavioural Economics BI Big Data Bill Inmon Brexit BS Business business analysis Business Enablement business intelligence Business Management business strategy Challenges Commercial IT Consider this corporate assets Corporate IT Creativity data data analytics data architecture data integration data management Data Marts data science Data Warehouse Demagogism Dogma DW 3.0 Economics enterprise data warehousing EU Financial Goal Setting goodstart good start Good Strat goodstrat Good Strategy hadoop Information and Technology information management Information Technology IT business IT Strategy knowledge management leadership marketforces Marketing Martyn Jones Martyn Richard Jones MDM Offshoring operationalwareness Organisational Autism organisational awareness Outsourcing Pimps Politics project management Requirements management Risk Risk Management statistics Strategy trading traditional assets UK

Categories

  • 4th generation Data Warehousing
  • accountability
  • advertising
  • agile
  • agile way of working
  • agile@scale
  • AI
  • All Data
  • Analytics
  • anthropology
  • Architecture
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Ask Martyn
  • Assets
  • awareness
  • bad strategy
  • Banking
  • behaviour
  • Best principles
  • Big Data
  • Big Data 7s
  • Big Data Analytics
  • blockchain
  • Books with influence
  • Brexit
  • BS
  • business
  • Business Intelligence
  • business strategy
  • Cambriano
  • Cambridge Analytica
  • China
  • Climate Change
  • Cloud
  • code of conduct
  • Commercial Analytics
  • community
  • Condiser this
  • Conservative Party
  • consider
  • Consider this
  • Consultation
  • Creativity
  • dark data
  • data
  • data architecture
  • Data governance
  • data hub
  • Data Lake
  • data management
  • Data Mart
  • data mesh
  • data science
  • Data Supply Framework
  • Data Warehouse
  • Data Warehousing
  • deceit
  • deep learning
  • Democracy
  • digital transformation
  • Diplomacy
  • disinformation
  • Dogma
  • Duties
  • DW 3.0
  • ECM
  • Economics
  • EDW
  • England
  • enterprise content management
  • ethics
  • EU
  • Europe
  • European Union
  • Excellence
  • Excerpt
  • Executive
  • Extract
  • Federalism
  • Financial Industry
  • fraud
  • Freedoms
  • Globalisation
  • good start
  • Good Strat
  • Good Strategy
  • Good Strategy Radio
  • goodstart
  • goodstartegy
  • goodstrat
  • goostart
  • governance
  • hadoop
  • hdfs
  • HR
  • humour
  • India
  • influencers
  • informatio Supply Framework
  • information
  • Information Management
  • Information Supply Frameowrk
  • Information Supply Framework
  • Infotrends
  • Inmon
  • instruments
  • IoT
  • IT Circus
  • IT fraud
  • IT strategy
  • IT World
  • iterations
  • java
  • Knowledge
  • knowledge management
  • Labour Party
  • leadership
  • Leadership 7s
  • life
  • listening
  • literature
  • LSE
  • machine learning
  • Management
  • market forces
  • Marketing
  • Marty does
  • Martyn does
  • Martyn Jones
  • Martyn Richard Jones
  • media
  • Memory lane
  • Methodology
  • nationalism
  • nine competitive forces
  • no limits
  • Northern Ireland
  • obituary
  • Obligations
  • offshore
  • Offshoring
  • operational
  • Outsourcing
  • Oxford
  • pain
  • Parliament
  • Peeves
  • Personal Integrity Key
  • Philosophy
  • pig data
  • PIK
  • PIR
  • Plaid Cymru
  • Planning
  • poem
  • poems
  • Poetry
  • Polemic
  • political science
  • Politics
  • pomo
  • postmodern
  • POTUS
  • Process
  • Professional Networking
  • professionalism
  • project management
  • Project to Excel
  • prose
  • public
  • Public Integrity Record
  • Quiz
  • Rant
  • Referendum
  • Remain
  • RIghts
  • Risk
  • Rivalry
  • Russia
  • Ruth Davidson
  • Sales
  • satire
  • Scotland
  • Scottish National Party
  • scrum
  • sentiment analysis
  • SMILES
  • Snippet
  • SNP
  • Social
  • Social Media
  • Sociology
  • spoof
  • statistics
  • Stories
  • Strategy
  • structured intellectual capital
  • supply chain management
  • tactics
  • Tax avoidance
  • Tax evasion
  • TEAM
  • technology
  • The Amazing Big Data Challenge
  • The Big Data Contrarians
  • The Greens
  • The Guardian
  • The hidden wealth of nations
  • Trade
  • UK
  • Uncategorized
  • United Kingdom
  • USA
  • Value
  • Wales
  • wisdom

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • GOOD STRATEGY
    • Join 131 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • GOOD STRATEGY
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
    To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy