Hedge Fund Industry Ethics | Codes of Conduct

Hedge Fund Ethics

Hedge Fund Industry Ethics


Hedge Fund Ethics | A Larger Conversation Needed?A few weeks ago I posted a note hoping to create a conversation around hedge fund industry ethics and best practices. Just this morning I found an interesting article on hedge fund ethics, again it appears that the most challenging part of setting any code of ethics for the industry is that hedge fund manager are so diverse, their operations, investments, and even scheduled lifespans are often drastically different from one fund to the next. As hedge funds are forced to innovate to produce returns in 2009 while also securing capital for distressed assets I believe this diversity will only increase over the next few years. Here is the article on hedge fund ethics:

Hedge funds took a battering 2008 - and as they have been battered by the storm two questions of "right" and "wrong" have been coming up that show that there are ethical codes at work here, but no agreement on what the "right" answer is.

And here's where the "ethical" questions come up:

If your fund is down and you know it is going to take years to recoup the losses and get paid at 20% of profits again do you:

a) stay with the fund until you have recouped the losses and made your investors whole - working for "psychic income" as Kenneth Griffin of Citadel fame told the New York Times or
b) leave - retire, switch to a new fund, start a few fund - basically start again? If you had many years of excellent performance before this one terrible year you may well be able to raise another fund.

In the first case there's a moral high ground to climbing back out and keeping your commitments to your investors, but maybe the second case makes sense if you can't climb back out from that fund. Maybe you can't keep your key players or your strategy no longer works and your investors are better off with you closing the fund and returning their money.

The second question is whether to allow investors to take money out of the hedge fund. Again hedge funds are not acting consistently. One of your investors wants to pull his money out - do you

a) allow him to knowing that doing so could hurt the remaining investors that are staying in because you'll be forced to selling into a falling market? Much of the volatility in November and December was redemption selling as hedge funds were force to liquidate equities and debt so investors could withdraw funds. Or do you
b) tell investors they can't take their money out and you are going to hold it until it is a more stable time to sell?

Again this is a current raging debate in the hedge fund world that takes on the ethical language of right and wrong. I know I'd want to be able to get my money out if I'd lost faith in a fund! source

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Prime Brokerage Products - Q & A | Services Question

Prime Brokerage Q & A

Prime Brokerage Services


Prime Brokerage Products - Q & A | Services QuestionQuestion: What Services do Prime Brokerage Firms Provide?

Answer: I recently found an detailed answer to this question within the Preqin Global Hedge Fund Investor book. Here it is:

Prime brokers provide trading and financing services to hedge funds. Prime brokerage is the common name for the package of services offered by investment banks and securities firms to hedge fund and other investors allowing them to borrow securities and cash to be able to invest on a leveraged basis and achieve an absolute return. The prime broker is able to provide a centralized securities clearing facility for the hedge fund and then benefits by earning fees on financing the client’s long and short cash and security positions and by charging fees for clearing and other services. It also earns money by hypothecating the portfolios of the hedge funds it services.

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Capital Introduction Services for Funds

Capital Introduction Q & A

Capital Introduction Services for Funds


Capital Introduction Services for Funds Question: What are capital introductions services? Should our firm be using them? We are based in Miami, any help would be appreciated.

Answer: I recently found a detailed answer to this question within the Preqin Global Hedge Fund Investor book:
Capital introduction is the service whereby the prime broker attempts to introduce its hedge fund clients to qualified hedge fund investors who have an interest in exploring new opportunities to make hedge fund investments. Some prime brokers will offer a physical capital introduction service arranging meetings and events where the managers are able to meet investors. Others will apartner with a third party marketer or offer a particular marketing plan to hedge fund managers who have not attempted to raise assets before. This service is popular with hedge fund managers and can lead to new business for the prime brokerage firm.
My background is in capital raising and I am now associated with a prime brokerage firm which offers capital introduction services. If you are looking for prime brokerage or capital introduction services please get in touch with our team and we will help as we can.

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Where are Prime Brokers Located?

Where are Prime Brokers Located?


Where are Prime Brokers Located?Question: I am looking to work with a local prime brokerage firm, do you know where most of them are located?

Answer: Within a recent survey of prime brokerage firms I found some interesting statistics on prime brokerage firms. Here are the numbers:
  • 74% of firms were based within the United States
  • 13% in London
  • 3% in Canada
  • 2% in France
  • 2% in Poland
  • 2% in India
  • 2% in Russia
  • 2% in Germany
I found the Russia, Germany and France numbers to be surprising. I was also surprised that Asian countries didn’t break 2-4% of this list. Perhaps this has to do with regulations and fund structures and terms used within that area of the world. These statistics were taken from the recently published 2009 Preqin Global Hedge Fund Investor Book.

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Challenges of Multi-Prime Brokerage for Hedge Funds

Challenges of Multi-Prime Brokerage

A Guide to Overcoming the Operational Challenge of Multi-Prime


Introduction

Operational Challenges of Multi-Prime Brokerage for Hedge FundsThe ongoing market turmoil, the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers leaving $65 Billion in frozen hedge funds assets, and the doubts surrounding the leading primes have accelerated the demise of the already faltering single prime brokerage model. Single primed funds that had been slow to embrace the new multi-prime world are now highly motivated to reduce counter-party risk by establishing multiple custodial relationships. This guide explores the different options available to a single primed fund that is making the leap to multi-prime. It begins by describing the nature of the operational challenge, then weighs the pros and cons of today's multi-prime solutions, and concludes with a recommendation.

The Operational Challenge of Multi-Prime

Once a fund accepts the necessity of multiple prime relationships there quickly follows the realization that there is a cost associated with this new model. This cost, which is in the form of operational complexity and the need to acquire middle and back-office functionality, had been borne by the prime in the single prime model. At the very core of this complexity is the requirement to collect and aggregate the disparate cash, position, and transaction information, across multiple primes. Once the data are captured and reconciled the fund must then be able to present the data in real-time and historical, views and reports, which allows the fund to understand key measures such as P&L, performance, exposures and risk. Additionally, since the data are so critical to so many constituencies it must be flexible enough to meet the specific needs of everyone across the firm. Likely users include the trader, the portfolio manager, the compliance officer, the COO, the CFO, Operations and indeed ultimately external investors.

Further complicating matters is the certainty that as the expanded search for alpha continues to drive funds far beyond their domestic long/short equity roots, the middle and back-office must now be capable of handling multi-currency, global securities, and derivatives, all across multiple time-zones. Much consideration must be given to how a firm deals with this operational challenge since many of the available solutions involve a fund going in a direction that risks distracting them from their central purpose of alpha generation.

At the heart of all multi-prime solutions is the portfolio management system (PMS). Before we explore the attributes of the multi-prime PMS let's briefly look at the three key building blocks necessary to ensure that the PMS displays relevant, accurate and timely data.

The 3 Building Blocks of a Multi-Prime Solution

1 - Allocation - An effective allocation process ensures that the PMS has the ability to 'slice and dice' views and reports in a manner that is sufficiently flexible to meet the information needs of the particular end user. At the highest level it involves a process of identifying and categorizing trades down to the tax-lot level. Once these positions have been correctly categorized it becomes possible for the PMS to generate reports based on these categories. More sophisticated allocation methods allow for a layered approach so that reporting can be multi-leveled. An example would be a CFO who would like to understand the P&L attributed to a particular portfolio manager, who is associated with a specific strategy within a particular fund. The data can be quickly viewed assuming that the allocation has been correctly completed and that the PMS is capable of this multi-tiered reporting. Allocation is usually handled by an Order Management System (OMS). It is vital that the OMS and PMS share the same allocation methodology or the reporting flexibility of the PMS will be compromised.

2 - Data Capture - The subject of data capture becomes particularly important in a multi-prime environment. The data that the PMS displays will only be as good as the quality and the timeliness of the information flow between the relevant counter-parties. It is imperative that the solution can send and receive the file formats demanded by primes, fund administrators, executing brokers and market data vendors. Formats such as flat-file, XML, SWIFT and increasingly FIX are prerequisites for any modern solution. To further complicate the process, a robust security master must be at the core of the data capture process. The security master ensures that data across multiple primes is normalized so as to allow seamless integration. In addition, a security master that includes independent corporate action verification will serve as a check and balance to the primes’ corporate action reporting.

3 - Reconciliation (and Exception Processing) - The reconciliation process ensures the accuracy of the firm's data and involves the fund comparing what it understands to be its trading activity with the records of other counter-parties, such as the primes or the fund administrator. Ideally the process is automated and ensures that differences or exceptions between the various parties are discovered and corrected as soon as possible. Once these errors are discovered the PMS should have the ability to unwind the error in a one-step process.

The Portfolio Management System in a Multi-Prime World

The PMS has always been the most important hedge fund application because it is responsible for generating its books and records. This queryable repository of a fund's activity is used as a tool to understand how successful a fund's alpha generation efforts have been in terms of performance and risk, and is critical in a multi-prime environment.

It is no surprise that the evolution of the PMS has mirrored (and in many cases lagged) the evolution of the hedge fund industry. The first hedge fund PMSs that emerged 20 years ago were essentially re-purposed vendor solutions from the long-only asset management industry. As funds push beyond domestic long/short equity strategies these same vendors have responded, with varying levels of success, by grafting on the functionality required to support multi-currency, multi-market and multi-asset class.

Arguably, the biggest demand placed on the PMS by this new complex multi-prime world, and the demand that legacy systems most struggle with, is the requirement for true real-time views of data. Funds today require a real-time understanding of their strategies' performance and risk. This is particularly true in light of today's market volatility. Alpha has become increasingly fleeting in nature and funds now must be able to respond instantly to changing market conditions. Many legacy systems struggle with this real-time requirement because their architecture pre-dates the widespread adoption of the FIX protocol. To understand this we only need to look at how FIX has dramatically increased the flow of trading information into and out of the front-office. This urgency of information flow is now making its way to the middle and back-office. Legacy PMSs that were built in a "T+1" world cannot reflect the real-time effect of trade execution on performance and risk because they cannot accept FIX messages. Only a PMS built around a FIX engine can offer data that is updated both tick by tick and execution by execution.

(For a complete depiction of the typical workflow of a real-time multi-prime solution please see Figure 1 on Page 6)

Today's Multi-Prime Solutions

Various industry players have sought to offer a solution to the operational burden of multi-prime. In choosing one of these solutions, funds typically face a tough trade-off, which at its most basic level involves a choice between cost and control. Hedge funds that do not have the financial and human resources, and are willing to live with less control typically choose a less costly outsourced solution. Funds that have more resources and demand complete control of their data take the time and expense to build-out an onsite system. Let's look at the four most popular solutions available today.

1. Prime Broker (Outsourced) - "Hearsay Reporting" - Hearsay reporting is when one prime (usually the original prime) agrees to accept and aggregate the trading files from other primes on to their reporting platform. The advantage to this approach, from the hedge fund's perspective, is that the original prime shoulders all the operational complexity of going multi-prime. Not much changes for the hedge fund. They continue to receive their familiar reports but now including an aggregated view of all their relationships. There are, however, a number of significant drawbacks to this approach. First, not many primes are willing to play the role of "the prime of primes". Primes that offer this service will weigh up whether retaining a now smaller portion of a fund's business is worth taking on the cost of the very manual task of hearsay reporting. Anecdotal evidence suggests that the top tier primes are not willing to offer this service unless a fund has at least $1 Billion in assets. Additionally, as the fund adds more and more primes the original prime will find it less compelling to offer the service. Second, hearsay is a very manual process and is only as good as the data received. Factor in the possible resentment of the prime offering the service it is not surprising if accuracy suffers. Third, hearsay does not sufficiently reduce a firm's dependence on a single prime. Any problems associated with the prime offering the hearsay reporting will mean that the fund will have to scramble to replace their reporting infrastructure. Finally, this solution only goes part of the way to solving the reporting problem. This is because most hearsay solutions rely on legacy PMSs that are based on a T+1 process and therefore cannot offer a real-time understanding of P&L and Risk.

Mini-Prime Broker - A subcategory of the Prime Brokerage industry is a group known as the Mini-Primes. They typically use the clearing services of larger institutions and traditionally served the funds that the bulge-bracket primes deemed to be too small or risky. Their value proposition has been around better service at lower cost for the little guy. The turmoil surrounding the leading primes has meant a mass exodus of many smaller funds towards these mini-primes. Some of these mini-primes offer relatively robust hearsay reporting. They, however, suffer from many of the drawbacks of their larger brethren.

(Tri-Party Arrangement - Another variant of the prime model is a hybrid between a custodial bank and a prime brokerage. This involves a fund maintaining its long positions at custodial banks while using a prime or primes for stock loan and leverage. It is mentioned here because this model is becoming an increasingly popular way for funds to diversify their counterparty risk.)

2. Fund Administrator (Outsourced) - "Middle and Back Office" - The fund admin would appear to be the obvious candidate to provide a multi-prime aggregation service. After all, traditionally the admin is responsible for aggregating all of a fund’s activities to produce monthly financial statements and NAV calculations. Indeed, many fund admins have moved in the direction of offering outsourced middle and back office services. To date, however, these offerings have not been met with great enthusiasm from the hedge fund community. The typical complaint is that the reporting provided by the admin is just not flexible or timely enough for many hedge funds. The reason for this is that the vast majority of admins rely on the legacy portfolio management systems mentioned above and therefore struggle with flexibility and in particular the ability to offer true-real time P&L and risk. Finally, and a not to be underestimated factor, is that there exists a cultural mismatch between the accounting mindset of the fund admin and the trading mindset of many of the hedge funds they seek to service.

3. Microsoft Excel (Onsite) – Some firms attempt to overcome the operational complexity of multi-prime by using Excel. This is particularly true for firms that relied heavily on Excel to augment the reporting capabilities offered by their original single prime. It is true that Excel is a very flexible tool but there are many drawbacks to this approach. One, quite simply, the days of an investor willing to write a $50 million check to a fund that has no formalized infrastructure are long since gone. Investors now spend almost as much time doing operational due diligence as they do research into a firm’s risk and return profile. Two, Excel is not built to handle real-time decision making. Three, funds that delay implementing a viable long term solution will find that Excel becomes engrained in their workflow and that over time more and more internal resources will be expended just to maintain this sub-optimal solution.

4. Legacy (Onsite) - For ultimate control of their multi-prime data a fund typically feels that their only option is to acquire an onsite PMS, OMS and increasingly an execution management system (EMS). This comes at a considerable cost and usually involves hiring a team of technologists to implement, integrate and maintain these disparate legacy systems. With all this a fund may still find that the data that they demand are still elusive and that a considerable amount of time has been wasted in building a competency in technology when the firm’s primary focus should have been alpha generation.

A New Approach - Nirvana Solutions

Nirvana Solutions’ purpose built approach for hedge funds dispenses with the usual trade-off between cost and control, by combining the best attributes of the outsourced and onsite models. It involves a single integrated solution that includes a real-time portfolio management system built around a trading engine, all made available through the Software as a Service (SaaS) deployment model. It places the FIX enabled portfolio management system at the very heart of all of a hedge fund's activities. This single real-time database architecture ensures that everyone in the front, middle and back office shares access to the same real-time and historical information displayed in a form specific to their role. Furthermore the SaaS model ensures that a firm’s focus remains on alpha generation and not on IT support.

Conclusion

The credit crisis has brought home to the hedge fund community the risks associated with the captive single prime broker model. As funds embrace the world of multi-prime they are discovering that the accompanying operational burden must somehow be addressed. There are a number of competing solutions available to this problem, funds however, must realize that the capabilities of these solutions vary greatly, particularly in terms of their ability to offer true real-time views of P&L and Risk, and in the amount of IT support required. Both of these factors are now critical in this new era of increased volatility and depressed returns.


Article contributed by Peter Curley of Nirvana Solutions.

Peter is a founding managing partner at Nirvana Solutions. His areas of responsibility include managing all of Nirvana's marketing activities as well heading their west coast sales team.

Prior to joining Nirvana Solutions, Peter was the product manager for Advent Software's order managment system (OMS), Moxy. He oversaw all the product marketing activities for Moxy, which is used worldwide by over 800 firms. He had a special emphasis on trading and hedge funds and has authored a number of articles and whitepapers on these subjects.

After business school Peter joined IBM's Strategy and Change group as a strategy consultant. He was attached to IBM's Financial Services arm and completed a number of strategy assignments at major Wall Street firms as well as smaller start-ups.

Peter began his career as a registered representive at Charles Schwab and was a team lead for the introduction of Schwab's innovative e.Schwab electronic brokerage offering. He later was involved in the development of Schwab's active trader application, Velocity, which was merged with CyberTrader.

Peter holds a bachelor's degree in economics from University College Dublin, a Master's from University of Exeter and an MBA from Columbia Business School.

email: peter.curley@nirvanasolutions.com View Peter Curley's profile on LinkedIn

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Hedge Fund Training Course | CHP Designation Program


Hedge Fund Training Course




Below is a short interview just conducted with popular private equity writer Theo O'Brien.
Theo: What is the Certified Hedge Fund Professional (CHP) program?

The CHP Designation program is an online hedge fund certification program sponsored by the Hedge Fund Group (HFG) starting in 2008. The CHP Designation is a two part program. Level 1 helps participants gain a comprehensive base level of knowledge about the hedge fund industry. Level 2 allows participants to specialize within a niche area of the industry such as marketing and sales, due diligence or analytics.

Theo: What do graduates from the CHP program receive, as in what are the benefits from taking the program?

For a list of the benefits from completing the program please see this page: http://chadesignation.org/CHA-Designation-Benefits.html.

Our program also benefits hedge fund startups and sub $100M hedge fund managers. Here is how: http://chadesignation.org/How-To-Start-A-Hedge-Fund-Startup-Benefits.html

Theo: How is this program connected to the Hedge Fund Group (HFG) and who decides what goes on the exam?

The Hedge Fund Group (HFG) sponsors the CHP Designation and created it in 2008. There is a team of 5 professionals who have developed and maintain the designation and they are aided by an advisory board of approximately 55 professionals who work at hedge funds, fund of hedge funds and prime brokerage/auditing firms.

Theo: Where are classes held? New York? How much do they cost.

The CHP Designation is offered 100% online and tuition is $599 or $499 if you register within the first 24 hours of registration opening. The program and exam may be taken from anywhere in the world as long as the individual has a reliable internet connection. Last year we had participants from Hong Kong, UK, US, Canada, India and China.

Theo: So the CHP Designation program is really international and not based within the Manhattan or any one location for that matter.

Yes that is correct.

Theo: How well known is the program? Have mainstream media outlets interviewed your team?

To some extent we have been covered. We have not graced the cover of the WSJ or any large American newspaper but we have been picked up by the Financial Times, Alpha Magazine, Institutional Investor and Job Search Digest. Most of these stories were ran in interview form. The Financial Times was the most thorough, we spent over 4 hours speaking with them and that doesn’t count their inquiries to actual participants within the program as well.

Theo: Is there anything else you want to mention here before we end this interview?

Only that registration opens only twice a year and one of those days is today, January 15th, 2009. We have much more information on our website: http://chadesignation.org/ and you may register on our site here: http://chadesignation.org/Register-For-CHA-Designation-Program-Exam.html
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Family Offices List | List of Multi-Family Offices

Family Offices List

List of Multi-Family Offices

Looking for a list of family office contacts?

Please complete the form below and a professional from the FamilyOfficesGroup.com will be in touch shortly.





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Family Offices Directory | Directory of Multi-Family Offices

Family Offices Directory

Directory of Multi-Family Offices

Looking for a directory of family office contacts?

Please complete the form below and a professional from the FamilyOfficesGroup.com will be in touch shortly.





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Hedge Fund Managers | Manager Profiles & Notes

Hedge Fund Managers

Hedge Fund Managers | Manager Profiles & Notes


Below is a tool developed by HedgeFundBlogger.com which provides profiles, news and trend notes on hundreds of hedge fund managers.

Hedge Fund Manager Tracker Profiles:

Fund of Hedge Fund Tracker Profiles


Tags: Hedge Fund Managers, Hedge Fund Manager, Hedge Fund bios, Hedge Fund Manager Profiles, Hedge Fund Profile Notes, Information on hedge fund managers

Prime Brokerage Business | Wikipedia

Prime Brokerage Business

Prime Brokerage Business | Wikipedia


Prime Brokerage Business | WikipediaQuick Link: Hedge Fund Prime Brokers

Prime brokerage is the generic name for a bundled package of services offered by investment banks and securities firms to hedge funds and other professional investors needing the ability to borrow securities and cash to be able to invest on a leveraged basis and achieve an absolute return. The business advantage to a hedge fund of using a Prime Broker is that the Prime Broker provides a centralized securities clearing facility for the hedge fund, and the hedge fund's collateral requirements are netted across all deals handled by the Prime Broker. The Prime Broker benefits by earning fees ("spreads") on financing the client's long and short cash and security positions, and by charging, in some cases, fees for clearing and/or other services. It also earns money by hypothecating the portfolios of the hedge funds it services and charging a fee to those borrowing securities and other investments.

The following services are typically bundled into the Prime Brokerage package:
  • global custody (including clearing, custody, and asset servicing)
  • Securities lending
  • Financing (to facilitate leverage of client assets)
  • Customized Technology (provide hedge fund managers with portfolio reporting needed to effectively manage money)
  • Operational Support (prime brokers act as a hedge fund's primary operations contact with all other broker dealers)

In addition, certain prime brokers provide additional "value-added" services, which may include some or all of the following:
  • Capital Introduction - A process whereby the prime broker attempts to introduce its hedge fund clients to qualified hedge fund investors who have an interest in exploring new opportunities to make hedge fund investments.
  • Office Space Leasing and Servicing - Certain prime brokers lease commercial real estate, and then sublease blocks of space to hedge fund tenants. These prime brokers typically provide a suite of on-site services for clients who utilize their space.
  • Risk Management Advisory Services - The provision of risk analytic technology, sometimes supplemented by consulting by senior risk professionals.
  • Consulting Services - A range of consulting / advisory services, typically provided to "start-up" hedge funds, and focused on issues associated with regulatory establishment requirements in the jurisdiction where the hedge fund manager will be resident, as well as in the jurisdiction(s) where the fund itself will be domiciled.
History

The basic services offered by a prime broker give a money manager the ability to trade with multiple brokerage houses while maintaining, in a centralized master account at their prime broker, all of the hedge fund’s cash and securities. Additionally, the prime broker offers stock loan services, portfolio reporting, consolidated cash management and other services. Fundamentally, the advent of the Prime Broker freed the money manager from the more time consuming and expensive aspects of running a fund. These services worked because they also allowed the money manager to maintain relationships with multiple brokerage houses for IPO allocations, research, best execution, conference access and other products.

The concept and term "prime brokerage" is generally attributed to the U.S. broker-dealer Furman Selz in the late 1970s. However, the first hedge fund operation is attributed to Alfred Winslow Jones in 1949. In the pre-prime brokerage marketplace, portfolio management was a significant challenge; money managers had to keep track of all of their own trades, consolidate their positions and calculate their performance regardless of which brokerage firms executed those trades or maintained those positions. The concept was immediately seen to be successful, and was quickly copied by the dominant bulge bracket brokerage firms such as Morgan Stanley, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers, and Goldman Sachs. At this nascent stage, hedge funds were much smaller than they are today and were mostly U.S. domestic long-short equities funds. The first non-U.S. prime brokerage business was created by Merrill Lynch's London office in the late 1980s.

Through the 1980s and 1990s, prime brokerage was largely an equities-based product, although various prime brokers did supplement their core equities capabilities with basic bond clearing and custody. In addition, prime brokers supplemented their operational function by providing portfolio reporting; initially by messenger, then by fax and today over the web. Over the years, prime brokers have expanded their product and service offerings to include some or all of the full range of fixed income and derivative products, as well as foreign exchange and futures products.

As hedge funds have proliferated globally through the 1990s and the current decade, prime brokerage has become an increasingly competitive field and an important contributor to the overall profitability of the investment banking business. As of 2006, the most successful investment banks each report over two billion dollars in annual revenue directly attributed to their prime brokerage operations (source: 2006 annual reports of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs).

Fees

Prime brokers do not charge a fee for the bundled package of services they provide to hedge funds. Rather, revenues are typically derived from three sources: spreads on financing (including stock loan), trading commissions and fees for the settlement of transactions done away from the prime broker. The financing and lending spreads, which are charged in basis points on the value of client loans (debit balances), client deposits (credit balances), client short sales (short balances), and synthetic financing products such as swaps and CFDs (Contract for difference), make up the vast majority of prime brokerage revenue. Therefore, clients who undertake substantial short-selling or leverage represent more lucrative opportunity than clients who do relatively less short selling and/or utilize minimal leverage. Clients whose market activities are principally fixed income oriented will generally produce less prime brokerage revenue, but may still present significant economic opportunity in the repo, foreign exchange (fx), futures, and flow business areas of the investment bank.

Risks

Prime Brokers facilitate hedge fund leverage, primarily through loans secured by the long positions of their clients. In this regard, the Prime Broker is exposed to the risk of loss in the event that the value of collateral held as security declines below the loan value, and the client is unable to repay the deficit. In practice, such conditions arise only in the case of extraordinary volatility or unexpected correlation reversions and are exceedingly rare. Other forms of risk inherent in Prime Brokerage include operational risk and reputational risk.

Large prime brokerage firms today typically monitor the risk within client portfolios by either Value at Risk (VaR) or "Rules Based" stress testing. Stress testing entails running a series of what-if scenarios that identify the potential gains or losses for each position due to adverse market events.

Examples of stress test scenarios include:

* Flight to Quality
* 1% up or down parallel movement in 10 year treasury yield curve

Retrieved from Wikipedia

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Prime Brokerage News | Large Banks Win Business

Prime Brokerage News

Prime Brokerage News | Large Banks Win Business


Prime Brokerage News(PrimeBrokerageGuide.com) Recently hedge funds have been moving some assets away from investment banks which specialize in providing a relatively narrow number of products to broader diversified banks which are more secure in earn money in hundreds of different ways. These larger banks often make money by catering to both institutional and retail clients and are less likely to fail. Some of these firms to recently benefit have been BNP Paribas, Fidelity, Credit Suisse, and Deutsche Bank (view our list of prime brokers on the right hand side of PrimeBrokerageGuide.com).

As counterparty risk management and multi-prime bokerage both grow in popularity this trend will only increase. The list of top prime brokers by the end of 2009 could look very different than it did just this last year. Here is a recent article on this topic:
Broker-dealers such as Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are losing out in the battle for hedge funds' dwindling pool of assets, as funds seek out banks with diverse sources of funding in a major shake-up of prime broking.

The collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers (LEHMQ.PK) in September shocked hedge funds, as those with accounts at Lehman when it sought bankruptcy protection had those assets frozen and risked being unable to close trades.

"The Lehman bankruptcy ... led many hedge funds to flee the two largest prime brokers, Morgan Stanley and Goldman, for the perceived safety of the universal banks," said BersteinResearch analyst Brad Hintz in a note.

Prime brokers make money by charging hedge funds fees for providing financing for trading and settlement of trades.

Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX), whose operations include a large wealth management unit as well as prime broking, saw balances in its prime brokerage unit grow 50-60 percent last year compared with 2007, a source familiar with the business said.

Roy Martins, the bank's head of international prime services, said: "There was a peak in terms of business in September and October. All the clients we took on had existing relationships and dialogues with us as they were clients we had been targeting anyway."

Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), backed up by its big retail bank, has also benefited from an influx of business in its prime brokerage in the last six months, a source close to the bank said. source

Related to Prime Brokerage News | Large Banks Win Business

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