According to a source of Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) is going to cut the expenses and performance fees on its poorly performing hedge funds. The source reported that "new participants won't pay the 2 percent management charge and Goldman will cut its performance fee in half."
This is a very interesting move for a company that claimed the recent $3 billion infusion was capitalizing on an investment opportunity, not a rescue. It would seem like the company is cutting management fees to prevent being forced into further "capitalizing" on this investment opportunity.
In my opinion, this whole debacle is just a bump along the way for Goldman's funds. Goldman Sachs is an incredible fund manager and business (as displayed by the stock's performance since coming public) and I think that, over the long term, funds such as Global Alpha will recover and flourish.
I think the sell-off in Goldman's shares has created a buying opportunity and I reiterate what I said about a month ago here. The fact that this stock has sold off nearly as much as problem-ridden Bear Stearns (NYSE: BSC) simply due to poor hedge fund performance (Bear had two blow-ups) is simply ridiculous.
As you can see from the chart to the right, I've been wrong on this call so far, but hedging with the Vanguard Financials ETF (NYSE: VFH), as I suggested would have reduced your losses.
This is a very interesting move for a company that claimed the recent $3 billion infusion was capitalizing on an investment opportunity, not a rescue. It would seem like the company is cutting management fees to prevent being forced into further "capitalizing" on this investment opportunity.
In my opinion, this whole debacle is just a bump along the way for Goldman's funds. Goldman Sachs is an incredible fund manager and business (as displayed by the stock's performance since coming public) and I think that, over the long term, funds such as Global Alpha will recover and flourish.
As you can see from the chart to the right, I've been wrong on this call so far, but hedging with the Vanguard Financials ETF (NYSE: VFH), as I suggested would have reduced your losses.
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