Hedge Fund News: David Einhorn, Julian Robertson, Bill Ackman

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Brevan Howard Fund Up 0.7 pct In October, Down 2.69 pct For Year – Sources (Reuters)
Brevan Howard‘s main hedge fund, one of Europe’s largest, made gains of 0.7 percent in October, two sources close to the matter told Reuters. One of the sources said that brought the loss for the year so far down to 2.69 percent for the ‘macro’ fund, which takes bets on macroeconomic trends through a variety of asset classes. Brevan’s flagship fund outperformed the average macro fund in October, which lost 1.49 percent, according to data from industry tracker Hedge Fund Research, but fell short of average gains this year of 0.17 percent. London-based Brevan manages $17.3 billion overall though assets in its main fund had dropped to $13.7 billion at the end of September from $14.24 billion at the end of August, the source said.

Ex-BlueCrest Portfolio Manager Hashemi To Launch Own Hedge Fund – Sources (Reuters)
Ex-BlueCrest portfolio manager Ardy Hashemi plans to launch an equity hedge fund with the backing of $200 million from U.S.-based Lighthouse Investment Partners, sources close to the matter told Reuters. Lighthouse, which manages about $8.5 billion in assets, currently has 110 investments in a wide range of hedge fund strategies. Hashemi is expected to start London-based Hashemi Asset Management in the new year and will focus on European equities as part of a so-called long-short strategy, one source said, betting on both rising and falling share prices. Hashemi, 32, joins a number of people to leave BlueCrest Capital Management, the $8 billion hedge fund firm founded by billionaire Mike Platt that announced it was closing to outside investors in December 2015.

The Hedge Fund Of Unsound Method (DealBreaker)
In the legalistic retellings of Heart of Darkness by the SEC and Justice Dept., with Och-Ziff Capital Management cast as the ivory trading company and former Och-Ziff London chief Michael Cohen as Col. Kurtz, the doings of the hedge fund’s inner station have been reasonably well laid out: Bribing Muammar Gaddafi’s sovereign-wealth fund for mandates, bribing the Congolese for mining rights, bribing officials in Chad, Niger and Guinea, for good measure (and mining rights). The brown current of redemptions running swiftly out of the hedge fund, ebbing into the sea of inexorable time.

Valeant Pharmaceuticals’ Stock Plunges 20% And Keeps Making Big Name Investors Look Like Amateurs (Forbes)
Bill Miller is a legendary stock picker who dazzled Wall Street by beating the Standard & Poor’s 500 index for 15 straight years. Two weeks ago, Miller hopped on CNBC and said he was buying shares of Valeant Pharmaceuticals because he liked its free cash flow. “We think the stock doubles in three years,” Miller said. Shares of Valeant Pharmaceuticals plunged by 20% in Tuesday morning trading in New York, the latest big move down in its stock market train wreck. Since its August 2015 highs, Valeant’s stock is down by 95%.

Ackman-Herbalife Saga to Hit Theaters With Distribution Deal (Bloomberg)
The documentary film “Betting on Zero,” which chronicles hedge fund manager Bill Ackman’s attempt to destroy Herbalife Ltd., is going to be seen by a lot more people thanks to a distribution deal. The film will reach theaters early next year via Gunpowder & Sky Distribution, according to a statement. The movie, which debuted in April at the Tribeca Film Festival, received some free publicity on Sunday when it was highlighted by HBO’s “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” show during a diatribe against multilevel-marketing firms such as Herbalife. After the theatrical release, “Betting on Zero” will be available through video-on-demand.






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