Hedge Fund Notables for Pension Investors

Given the flood of money making its way from pension land to alternatives, fiduciaries may be interested in today's New York Times article entitled "The Private Lives of Hedge Funds." Reporter Jenny Anderson celebrates the panache of more than a few hedgies with a colorful description of the Houdini award, the Better-Than-Barings Blow-Up award, and the Debutantes award, to name a few.
Mr. Phillip Goldstein gets the Braveheart award for playing David to the SEC Goliath when he questioned their authority to have hedge funds register. After winning his case, he has since taken to the airwaves, campaigning to be exempted from disclosing details about his fund's holdings.
I have written about Mr. Goldstein on three occasions as part of a continuing commentary about transparency versus the protection of proprietary (and arguably valuable) information. While this issue remains unsettled as of today, it's noteworthy that over 1,200 hedge fund professionals showed up at a recent industry event to hear about topics such as the impact of newly released AICPA document, "Alternative Investments Audit Considerations: A Practice Aid for Auditors". For those who have yet to read this beauty, auditors must have sufficient data to support fund valuation numbers, including position detail.
Here are the links to the three aforementioned posts.
1. "Pensions, Hedge Funds and Disclosure" (October 27, 2006)
2. "Will Private Equity Stay Private? U.S. Dept. of Justice Makes Inquiries" (November 5, 2006)
3. "Hedge Fund Disclosure-Round Three" (November 12, 2006)
Is this the start of a new trend?




