Sunday, October 05, 2008

Affluential Hedge Funds Suffer in September

Oh how the mighty have stumbled. In a market where everyone is feeling the heat, even the well-respected, historical top performers are now finding it rough out there. We recently got some performance updates from numerous iconic hedge funds and found out that September was not kind to them. Let's take a look at some of the information.

  • Moore Capital Management, a group of global macro hedge funds ran by notable risk manager Louis Bacon has seen three of its funds 'stumble' in the recent weeks, coming in -5% in September. You can view Moore Capital's equity portfolio holdings here.
  • Maverick Capital, a $10 billion hedge fund ran by Lee Ainslie was -19.5% in the month of September alone and is now -21.2% year-to-date. As you can see, they were actually holding up pretty well all year until September hit them hard. Oh how one month can change things. Maverick's levered fund was -35.5% for the month of September. You can check out Maverick's most recent portfolio holdings here.
  • Third Point Offshore, a fund ran by notable activist Daniel Loeb's Third Point LLC was -11% for the month of September and is now -18.4% for the year. You can check out some of Third Point's most recent holdings here.
  • Paul Tudor Jones' Raptor Fund (Tudor Investment Corp) was -2% in the month of September and is now -12% year-to-date. Although Tudor employs a global macro strategy, the Raptor Fund is their equities fund. The Raptor Fund is currently run by James Pallotta; but, as I wrote about earlier, Pallotta is leaving Tudor to start his own equities fund. And, you can view Tudor Investment Corp's most recent equity holdings here.
  • Greenlight Capital, the hedge fund run by David Einhorn, was -12.8% in September and is -16.4% for the year. You can check out some of Einhorn's portfolio holdings here.
  • Lone Pine Capital, another 'tiger cub' fund managed by Stephen Mandel saw its Lone Cyprus fund -14.7% in September. That fund is -26.5% for the year. You can check out Lone Pine's recent activity here and portfolio holdings here.
  • Timothy Barakett's Atticus Capital woes continue. His Atticus European Fund was -15.8% percent in September and his Atticus Global Fund -2.8% in September. Atticus European is now -42.5% for the year and Atticus Global is -27.2% for the year. You can view Atticus' most recent SEC filings disclosing their portfolio holdings here.
  • Jeffrey Gendell's Tontine Partners wer -59.30% in September and are now -66.7% for the year... unreal. Here are Tontine's most recent portfolio holdings.
  • Bret Barakett, brother of Atticus' Timothy Barakett, is also feeling the pain. His Tremblant Capital was -19.3% for the month of September and is -28% for the year. You can check out Tremblant's recent activity here and their portfolio holdings here.
  • Shumway Capital's levered fund was -16% for September, and their Ocean fund was -8.6% for the month and is now -9% year-to-date. (Yet another case of one month doing extreme damage to a fund).
  • Chris Coleman's Tiger Global was -14.3% for September and is now -13.7% for the year.
  • Stephen Cohen's SAC Capital Multi-strat fund was -10.7% for September.
  • Farallon Capital Management was -10.5% for the month of September.
  • David Stemerman's Conatus Capital was -10.4% for September and is -8.10% year-to-date. Stemerman recently left Lone Pine Capital (referenced above) to start his own fund, which I wrote about here.
  • Jana Partners was -9% for September and is -14.7% for the year
  • Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global, who I will be profiling next week, was -7.9% for September and is 0.30% for the year. (Wow, a fund that is actually still UP on the year).
  • Bill Ackman's Pershing Square was 0.10% for the month of September and finds himself 1.9% for the year. (Another fund actually UP on the year).
  • Ken Griffin has been hit hard as well. Citadel Capital's flagship fund was -15% for September and -18% for the year. The fund has lost around $2 billion.

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Lunch is for wimps

Lunch is for wimps
It's not a question of enough, pal. It's a zero sum game, somebody wins, somebody loses. Money itself isn't lost or made, it's simply transferred from one perception to another.