Hedge Fund News: Dan Loeb, John Thaler, Citigroup Inc. (C)

Page 2 of 2

…use the product buy from somebody,” he said. “We are not making the money by loading up people and then having them leave the sales force….That should be the distinguishing characteristic if I were regulating the industry.”

Hedge Fund Honcho John Thaler Makes 3.4% Annual Return on the Upper East Side (New York Observer)
John Thaler, JAT Capital ManagementJohn Thaler is best known for his tech-heavy hedge fund picks, but this morning he cashed out on a more old world investment: real estate. The JAT Capital manager just sold his condo combo at 450 East 83rd Street for $5.2 million, according to city records. Mr. Thaler bought the two 17th-floor apartments at the Cielo in 2006 and 2009, for a combined total of almost $4.4 million. After an average of five years of ownership, his profit—exclusive of any taxes, fees or renovation costs—comes out to about $800,000, or an average return on his initial investment of about 3.4 percent per year.

Hedge fund Mariner navigates turbulent markets (Risk.net)
Faced with paltry bond yields and the risk of severe losses when interest rates inevitably rise, large institutional investors are stepping up their search for alternative sources of diversification. Mariner Investment Group, which manages around $10 billion in hedge fund assets together with its associated advisors, could be one of the main beneficiaries. While equities are enjoying a bull run, many of the big pension plans Mariner serves are fretting over the fate of their fixed income investments. “Pension funds face a real challenge,” says Bracebridge Young, Mariner’s CEO. “They need to maintain a relatively high allocation to equities to have any chance of meeting their return targets but none of them really like their fixed income exposure. They’re concerned about the duration of their bond portfolios and are looking for other ways to diversify their equity risk.”

HFRX: Hedge Funds Up 0.62% In April (FINalternatives)
Hedge funds continue to lag as stocks continue to surge, according to an industry index. Hedge Fund Research’s HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index rose 0.62% in April, a month that saw the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index add a further 1.81% to its double-digit returns for the year. By contrast, the HFRX benchmark is up only 3.77% in the first third of 2013. Emerging markets funds did best in April, rising 2.32% (3.38% year-to-date). Convertible arbitrage funds returned 2.2% (5.97% YTD), special situations funds 1.2% (8.65% YTD) and credit funds 1.12% (4.2% YTD). Master-limited partnerships rose an average of 0.51% on the month to hit 15.98% on the year, by far the best return of any strategy tracked by HFR.

Hedge fund manager convicted in fraud case (The Virginian-Pilot)
The former head of a Newport News-based investment group was found guilty today by a jury on 17 criminal counts in a fraud trial in U.S. District Court. Jeffrey A. Martinovich, who led the now-defunct MICG Investment, was indicted last year on charges including mail fraud, wire fraud, unlawful monetary transactions and bankruptcy fraud. In addition to returning a guilty verdict on 17 counts, the Newport News jury found him not guilty on three counts and couldn’t reach a verdict on five others. U.S. District Judge Robert Doumar set sentencing for Aug. 7 in Norfolk. There is a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for each count.

Hedge fund manager warns US housing crisis ‘not over’ (Investment Week)
Alistair Lumsden, the London hedge fund manager who foresaw the US sub-prime mortgage crash that led to the credit crunch, has warned the US housing crisis begun in 2007 is far from over. He said the large inventory of US homes expected to be offloaded by distressed sellers, coupled with constrained financing from US banks and agency lenders, means there are more problems to come in the housing market. The manager has predicted US home prices could fall up to a further 10% in 2012, denting confidence among American homeowners. Along with veterans such as John Paulson, Lumsden, of $11bn asset manager CQS, was among the few portfolio managers to predict and correctly bet on the US sub-prime crisis, delivering 179% through his $1.5bn ABS fund in the two years to June 2009.

Threadneedle Maintains Bullish Gold Outlook on Stimulus Programs (Bloomberg)
The London-based fund has not changed its positioning in gold after the slump, according to David Donora, a fund manager for commodities at Threadneedle Investments, which managed 84 billion pounds ($131 billion) in assets, including equities and fixed income, as of March 31. Their top pick is oil-based energy such as Brent crude, gasoline, gasoil and heating oil, Donora said. Threadneedle joins John Paulson’s Paulson & Co. and hedge- fund firm Elliott Management Corp. in staying with bullion, which has slumped 12 percent this year as investment holdings contracted at a record pace. Prices had the biggest two-day drop in more than three decades last month.




Page 2 of 2