HEDGE FUND ADVERTISING
HEDGE FUND ADVERTISING
by the
Alchemist, Al Thomas
5-29-05
Have you seen all those big full page
ads for hedge funds in the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, Investors
Business Daily? You haven’t. Maybe they are being drowned out by the regular
mutual funds who continually tell you how great they
are.
Shucks! I forgot. Hedge funds are not
allowed to advertise. I wonder why. Maybe they think that their potential
customers are too dumb to know that hedge funds are a poor investment. Could be.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is trying to protect investors – I
think?
To be able to buy into a hedge fund
the smallest investor must have a net worth of $1,000,000 and an income of more
than $200,000 per year. Maybe the SEC doesn’t think these folks are bright
enough to know a good thing when they see it. There are other
groups that are major investors with the hedge funds. Literally billions of
dollars are invested by university endowments, charitable trusts, state and
corporate pension plans. Could it be that they have a better return than regular
mutual funds? Naw! The media would tell you wouldn’t
they?
The media is there to report the
facts. It is hard to believe that just because a large portion of their income
is from advertising revenues of mutual funds that they would be lax about
this.
If you were a fund manager and your
fund was under performing and it was reported in the local paper, TV, or radio
would you pay them to carry your advertising? You sure would not want to be
compared with performance of a hedge fund.
What is it that makes the difference
of a standard mutual fund with a hedge fund? Why does the smart money gravitate
to them? One word. Performance. A regular hedge fund manager is paid on HOW MUCH
money he has in his fund and not on how much he makes for the investor. The
hedge fund manager is paid a percentage of the PROFITS he makes for the
investors. No profit means no bonus so he better do the job or he will be out of
a job. Smart money moves. It moves to where the profit is being
made.
The SEC will not allow standard mutual
fund managers to be compensated in this manner. Their claim is that it will be
too dangerous for the small investor. Hog wash! If a fund is losing money the
little guy should be selling his current funds like the smart money and finding
a better performing fund. None of the media recommend this to the little
guy.
My guess is there are enough
intelligent fund managers who would like to be paid for performance and would
set up no-load funds to attract investors. The SEC seems to think more of the
funds than they do of the smaller investors. It is a shame you can’t check the
advertising claims of standard mutual funds against the returns of hedge
funds.
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