hedge funds posts
Posted Jul 1st 2009 1:00PM by Daleela Farina
Filed under: Citigroup Inc. (C), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Politics, Recession, Financial Crisis
In a word: yes.
Despite all the talk about regulating these speculative investment vehicles, "Obama's financial overhaul plan included no big surprises or threats to the lucrative, secretive industry," writes The Wall Street Journal.
The name of the game is lobbying, which is easily funded by the $1.3 trillion dollar industry. Even after numerous Ponzi schemes and frauds have recently been exposed, the U.S. government has failed at regulating hedge funds, the most speculative area in finance, in part due to the industry's lobbying efforts.
Continue reading Is Wall Street influencing Obama's regulations?
Posted Jun 12th 2009 1:00PM by Daleela Farina
Filed under: Competitive strategy, Google (GOOG), Wal-Mart (WMT), Starbucks (SBUX), Mutual funds, Citigroup Inc. (C), Bank of America (BAC), Federal Natl Mtge (FNM)
Has your broker repeatedly sold you on the "safe" investment vehicle, the mutual fund? Investing in a wide variety of prominent companies, with solid, long-term track records, mutual funds have been an easy-to-understand and popular investment choice for decades.
Mutual funds are hugely diversified, holding large stakes in recognizable names such as Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), Citigroup (NYSE: C), Walmart (NYSE: WMT), Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX), General Electric (NYSE: GE), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), and Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM).
Continue reading How do hedge funds differ from mutual funds?
Posted Jun 5th 2009 12:30PM by Tom Taulli
Filed under: Deals, Private equity

Since early 2007, it's been rough for the shareholders of
Cowen Group Inc (NASDAQ:
COWN), a mid-tier investment bank. The company's stock price has gone from $20 to low of $3.54.
But lately, Cowen's stock price has perked up, primarily because of takeover overtures. For example, there was an offer from Rodman & Renshaw at $7 per share.
However, this was rebuffed. Instead, yesterday Cowen
agreed to a so-called "reverse merger" with hedge fund Ramius LLC, which will own 71% of the new entity. On the news, Cowen's shares increased 37%.
Continue reading Hedge fund goes public . . . through the backdoor
Posted May 15th 2009 7:00PM by Michael Fowlkes
Filed under: International markets, Forecasts, Consumer experience, Middle East, Oil, Recession
When we took a look at oil prices last Friday oil was hitting a new 6 month high, and we noted that we could be seeing $60 oil by the end of this week. We did indeed see oil hitting $60 this week, but today prices took a hit, dropping back down under $57 a barrel.
The main reason prices retreated today was in reaction to disappointing news on retail sales, unemployment, and more bad news from the housing market. Oil has dropped $2.10 a barrel today to $56.52, and some analysts think that it still has a way to go before stabilizing.
Continue reading Oil prices dip on economic concerns
Posted Apr 30th 2009 8:20AM by Mark Fightmaster
Filed under: Before the bell, Bad news
Early this morning, the Associated Press reported that talks between Chrysler's lenders and the Treasury Department had "disintegrated." The parties were trying to lower Chrysler's $6.9 billion in secured debt, a move that many hoped would stave off bankruptcy.
It appears that the hedge funds (roughly 40 of them) that hold roughly 30% of Chrysler's debt are looking for a deal better than the one struck between the banks and the government. The four banks that hold 70% of the automaker's debt agreed to erase that debt for $2 billion -- the hedge funds want more.
Continue reading Hedge funds break off talks with Treasury Department about Chrysler debt
Posted Mar 23rd 2009 12:30PM by Tom Taulli
Filed under: Google (GOOG)

When looking at hedge funds, an investor will check out a variety of risk measures. But over the years, there was something that was often overlooked: fraud.
However, as the credit markets seized up, we discovered that there were some shady hedge fund operators. Of course, the biggest example was Bernard Madoff, whose Ponzi scheme may have reached as high as $65 billion.
As should be no surprise, investors are now
conducting investigations and background searches on hedge funds. Good idea, huh? Unfortunately, it's too late for many investors.
Continue reading Hedge fund investors trying something new: Due diligence
Posted Mar 10th 2009 5:40PM by Alex Salkever
Filed under: Bad news, Citigroup Inc. (C), Palm Inc (PALM), Financial Crisis

Sorry, hedgies. Headhunters think you have
another 20,000 job losses ahead in 2009, representing a 10% industry contraction. As if it wasn't bad enough that your base salaries were getting hammered.
Yet
Vikram Pandit shocked with news that
Citigroup, Inc. (NYS:
C) may run a profit. The question -- for how long? Credit cards, commercial real estate, and many other shoes still dropping. Our Piqqem Sentiment on
TARP recipients shows neutral across the board, so could Vik be right, and could it be that the gloom is lifting? Has TARP really been great coverage?
Continue reading Doomsday Scenario: Hedge fund jobs evaporate, but are big banks really back?
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