Sunday, October 11, 1998
Questions and answers about hedge funds
By MARCY GORDON
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Hedge funds are under close scrutiny because
of the $3.6 billion private bailout last week of Long-Term Capital
Management LP, facilitated by the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York. Outside of Wall Street, little is known about these secretive
and largely unregulated investment funds.
Here, in question and answer form, is a look at hedge funds.
Q: What are hedge funds?
A: They're investment funds that make sophisticated financial
bets with money from wealthy investors. Hedge funds often use
the money to speculate on relative differences in interest rates
among securities.
Q: How do they do that?
A: They use computer modeling and derivatives -- often-complex
financial instruments whose value is derived from an underlying
security, commodity or asset -- in hopes of producing a profit,
no matter which direction stock prices or interest rates move
as a whole.
Q: How many hedge funds are there?
A: Nobody knows for sure. Experts estimate there are as many
as 4,000 domestic and offshore hedge funds controlling as much
as $400 billion in investor equity.
They are not subject to the same kind of strict disclosure
and oversight rules as mutual funds because high-rolling investors
presumably have the resources to look after themselves. The government
doesn't require hedge funds to disclose investors' names or investment
strategies -- even to investors themselves.
Q: How wealthy do investors have to be to participate?
A: Federal securities laws limit participation in each fund
to 500 investors. Individuals must have incomes of at least $200,000
in each of the past two years ($300,000 for couples) or a net
worth of at least $1 million.
Q: Why should we be concerned about hedge funds?
A: The collapse of a major hedge fund could damage the banking
system and the economy. The banks and brokerage firms lending
to the fund would face huge losses, and unwinding of the fund's
positions could spur panic selling and losses for other investors.
In the case of Long-Term Capital, three of the companies that
joined together to rescue the fund and take control of it -- Bankers
Trust, Chase Manhattan and J.P. Morgan -- are banks that benefit
from the taxpayer-financed deposit insurance fund. Some critics
suggest that puts ordinary taxpayers at risk, and that banks that
lend money to troubled hedge funds may pass the costs on to consumers.
Q: How did Long-Term Capital make its financial bets and what
went wrong?
A: It was a two-step process. The fund received about $2.2
billion in capital from its original investors and it also borrowed
money from financial institutions to buy securities worth more
than $90 billion. Fund managers then used those securities as
collateral to make speculative bets representing $1.25 trillion.
Among those making a minimum investment of $10 million was
the government of China. Other countries may also have contributed,
but it's hard to tell because of the lack of disclosure rules.
Unfortunately for the fund and its investors, Long-Term Capital's
investment models failed to account for the sudden collapse of
the Russian ruble in late August or the dramatic intensification
of the global financial crisis, which has widened the spread between
interest paid on U.S. Treasury securities and other less-safe
securities.
Q: Who was running Long-Term Capital when it got into trouble?
A: The 4-year-old fund's chairman, John Meriwether, is one
of Wall Street's most celebrated traders. His senior partners
include two Nobel laureate economists and a former vice chairman
of the Federal Reserve. The fund is based in Greenwich, Conn.
Q: What happened in the past few weeks when Long-Term Capital
nearly collapsed?
A: A group of major banks and brokerage firms began talks about
chipping in to save it, with officials of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York acting as facilitators and providing office space.
At one point, the fund's managers reportedly turned down a
$250 million buyout offer by legendary investor Warren Buffett,
American International Group Inc. and Goldman Sachs. The offer
was conditioned on Meriwether being ousted.
When it was over, the group of banks and brokerage houses had
agreed to put up $3.6 billion to rescue Long-Term Capital and
take control of it. In addition to the three banks mentioned above,
the group also includes brokerage houses Merrill Lynch & Co.,
Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, Goldman Sachs, Salomon Smith Barney
and several big European banks.
Q: Why did the Federal Reserve get involved?
A: Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan testified at a congressional
hearing Thursday that the central bank stepped in to avert potential
damage to the U.S. and world economies.
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