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6 Things You Didn’t Know About Hedge Funds

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 Brad Kline, Corporate Advisory Executive, Connector Virtuoso, Hedge Fund Capital Introductions, 3000+ Connections

 Sunday, July 10, 2016

I bet you never knew...


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3 comments on article "6 Things You Didn't Know About Hedge Funds"

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 Jon Grah, Trading Signals Automation Expert AwarenessForex.com

 Tuesday, July 12, 2016



Your right back to square one with sample selection bias. How does an investor know which hedge fund to pick? The majority of hedge fund articles I read seem to suggest that hedge funds are not that much better than just taking your chances with a prop trading firm or even using a monkey to acheive results http://www.marketwatch.com/story/how-hedge-fund-geniuses-got-beaten-by-monkeys-again-2015-06-25

There are a few that do actually perform really well, but by then it is too late to join or it has a very high minimum capital.


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 private private,

 Wednesday, July 13, 2016



@Jon Grah: hedge funds (companies) run a few hedge funds (investment vehicles) at the same time and the well performing ones get promoted, overall profitability of hedge funds (companies) are roughly the same as everywhere else


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 Oscar Cartaya, Private Investor

 Thursday, July 14, 2016



There are a few things in the article by Inan Dogan, PhD in Hedge funds, Insider monkey that were left unsaid. For example points 1 and 2 of the article make a lot to do about hedge funds investing 50-60% of their funds long in stocks. I I am correct (and this is a zero sum formula we are using) that means the remaining 40-50% of their funds are not invested long in stocks. What percentage of these funds in in short bets and what percentage is allocated to other types of investment is left unsaid. This makes the conclusions reached in the first two point rather inaccurate. For example let's take a hedge fund that is invested 50% long in an SP 500 ETF (just an example) and at the same time it is invested 50% short in the same SP 500 ETF. The returns on this type of investment would be 0 with the gains from any one side being cancelled by the losses of the other side. So there has to be more clarity to the investment patterns used by hedge funds in order to clarify this issue.

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