Quote from links:
One thing that I did find rather amusing about Aaron is his computer setup, he has a basic 1.4GHz computer, with a DSL connection, dial up as backup, and the kicker is he uses FREE quote.com charts. What a sharp contract to most ET members who pride themselves with using dual processor computers with 8 monitors and have DSL, Cable, T1, use expensive trading platforms and pay hundreds of dollars in fees..
Quote from praetorian2:
Aaron- Great chat yesterday. I didn't get a chance to ask one last question. You mentioned a few sites that showed hedge fund rankings. Do you know of any others. A few like Barclaysgrp.com didn't seem to work.
I wanted to post my fund results, but was wondering if there are any legal rules that you know of? Wouldn't this go under advertising? I know that everyone else does it, but are you sure it is legal.
What do these sites want in return for allowing you to post on them? Are there fees, or do you have to pay a % of the money referred to you, or is it free?
Which have you posted your results on, and what type of feedback if any has that generated?
Thanx in advance.
Quote from Aaron:
Hi P2. Thank you.
It's www.barclaygrp.com. I'm sorry if I spelled it wrong in the chat.
I only know of about 7 hedge fund database websites. I mentioned the good ones.
The primary business model for the database sites is that they charge investors for a subscription to their database. Some of them will charge the manager (hedgefund.net) and some will ask for a split of the fees if an investors finds you through them (Iasg.com).
Reporting your results to a database company doesn't appear to be advertizing. I haven't seen any SEC ruling on the matter, though.