Hedge Fund News: Leon Cooperman, Jeffrey Smith, Elliott Management

Page 2 of 2

Hedge Fund Arrowgrass Loans Margate’s Dreamland An Extra £5m (BBC)
Margate’s troubled Dreamland amusement park is borrowing a further £5m, increasing its loan from an offshore hedge fund to £15m. Arrowgrass initially agreed to a £600,000 loan in May 2016. Its investment was increased to £10m in January, with administrators Duff and Phelps saying the money would be used to get the park ready for sale. Dreamland’s interim financial director Steven Mitchell said the company wanted to “create a sustainable business”. The investment will be used for “new park rides and the restoration of existing ones”, as well as “major upgrades” to indoor and outdoor event spaces.

Perry Capital’s Westhus Begins Plans for Distressed Fund (Bloomberg)
Todd Westhus, one of the top money managers at Perry Capital, is in the preliminary stages of starting his own hedge fund, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The new fund, which will focus on investing in distressed assets, will be co-founded by Doreen Mochrie, another partner at Perry who oversees investor relations, the people said. Westhus, who sat on the investment committee at Perry, is planning to start the fund in early 2018, they said. Westhus declined to comment on the plans. Perry, the event-driven hedge fund firm run by Richard Perry, said in September it would wind down its flagship fund after 28 years, citing industry and market headwinds.

A Quiet Giant of Investing Weighs In on Trump (The New York Times)
He is the most successful and influential investor you have probably never heard of. His writings are so coveted and followed by Wall Street that a used copy of a book he wrote several decades ago about investing starts at $795 on Amazon, and a new copy sells for as much as $3,500. Perhaps that’s why a private letter he wrote to his investors a little over two weeks ago about investing during the age of President Trump — and offering his thoughts on the current state of the hedge fund industry — has quietly become the most sought-after reading material on Wall Street. He is Seth A. Klarman, the 59-year-old value investor who runs Baupost Group, which manages some $30 billion.

A Secretive Hedge Fund Firm That Has Legendary Status On Wall Street Is Attracting New Money (Business Insider)
A strategy run by Renaissance Technologies, the secretive multibillion hedge fund firm, is attracting fresh money. The firm’s Renaissance Institutional Equity Fund (RIEF) grew by about $4 billion in 2016, ending the year with $14.9 billion after starting 2016 with about $10.9 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter. The person declined to be named because the information is private. To be sure, most of that increase is from performance, as the fund returned 21.5% last year, equal to about $2.35 billion in gains. Still, a rough calculation shows that the fund probably took in about $1.6 billion in new money in 2016.





Page 2 of 2