Some Pension Funds Say to Hedge Funds - Hold On There

Wall Street Journal reporter Craig Karmin reports that, post credit crunch, some public pension funds are having second thoughts about hedge fund and private equity investments. Cited as a "significant reversal in thinking," the article points out that pension funds have oft-cited alternatives as a way to diversify against shifts in market conditions. (See "Pension Managers Rethink Their Love of Hedge Funds," August 27, 2007.)

In an August 26 article entitled "Just How Contagious is That Hedge Fund," New York Times contributor and financial pundit, Mark Hulbert, debunks the notion that all hedge funds generate market-independent returns. He attributes asset class interconnections and similar strategies made by large hedge funds as culprits. A loss in one sector or fund is likely to appear elsewhere. Investing in "hard to value" positions is another challenge. (This blog's author, an accredited appraiser, is working with the National Association of Certified Valuation Analysts to develop a hedge fund valuation course for October 2007.)

The Pension Governance team has been playing the role of Cassandra for many months. Click here for our January 4, 2007 post about contagion, the notion that what occurs in one market or fund cascades throughout the system. Regarding valuation, we've described the issue ad nauseum. Click on the Hedge Funds and Valuation folders on the left side of this blog's home page for lots of posts about these two topics.

For those who missed our six webinar series entitled Hedge Fund ToolboxSM, we're nearly finished with the ebook equivalent. Email us if you want to be notified when it's ready.

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