Hedge fund Pagoda Asset Management shutting after four years -source

Reuters Staff

BOSTON (Reuters) - Hedge fund Pagoda Asset Management is shutting down at the end of the month, becoming the latest casualty in the $3.2 trillion industry after a period of sluggish returns, a source with knowledge of the move said on Thursday.

New York-based Pagoda was launched four years ago by Adam Bernstein, Glenn Vogelman, and Jeffrey Holycross and specialized in betting on telecom, media, technology and consumer stocks. At the end of last year it managed $566 million and posted small gains.

Pagoda notified investors of its decision to shut down by letter on Thursday. A representative for the firm declined to comment.

The three founders had worked together at JP Morgan Chase’s Highbridge Capital Management and generated enough buzz as they set off on their own to raise $100 million for their new launch. In 2015 Bernstein, the firm’s chief executive officer, was named a Hedge Fund Rising Star by Institutional Investor.

Months after being honored by the publication, Bernstein laid out his hopes and dreams for investors. Pagoda would become an “institutional-quality hedge fund that would generate superior, risk-adjusted returns for investors,” Bernstein wrote in a letter, adding that he “could not be happier about Pagoda’s early success.”

But returns since then have been modest, climbing 1.4 percent in 2016 and 3.3 percent last year. The firm is up 1.1 percent this year, an investor said.

At the end of last year Pagoda’s top investments included industrials company KAR Auction Services, Melco Resorts & Entertainment Ltd and Tapestry, Inc., according to a government filing.

Even as Pagoda was in the black, it was becoming tougher for small and medium sized funds to raise fresh capital and stay in business. Many investors have tired of the hedge funds’ largely lackluster returns and high fees, moving money into less expensive index funds as the stock market marched higher over the last years.

Pagoda joins Hutchin Hill Capital, Magnolia Road and Folger Hill Asset Management, all hedge funds that have shut down completely recently or merged with others.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...hutting-after-four-years-source-idUSKCN1II2YS
 
these blood suckers don't add any alpha for clients. the entire industry should die.

you invest in a hedge fund to enjoy bragging rights with your neighbors.

the structure of a hedge fund is not a vehicle to make money. better still follow the words of famed comedian Groucho Marx I don't want to be a member of any club that would have me as a member,
 
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Reuters Staff

Pagoda joins Hutchin Hill Capital, Magnolia Road and Folger Hill Asset Management, all hedge funds that have shut down completely recently or merged with others.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...hutting-after-four-years-source-idUSKCN1II2YS

I know one of the PM who worked at Hutchin Hill Capital. He went to my high school, but he was a few years ahead of me. He went to Brown University. Then got his PhD in pure math at Harvard. He did a year at Cambridge University in between Brown and Harvard. So, basically, he's the best of the best when it comes to math.

But apparently, all that math didn't save Hutchin Hill Capital. I wondered what happened...
 
Reuters Staff

BOSTON (Reuters) - Hedge fund Pagoda Asset Management,...

But returns since then have been modest, climbing 1.4 percent in 2016 and 3.3 percent last year. The firm is up 1.1 percent this year, an investor said.
...

They couldn't even make enough to cover their management fees of 2%?

I don't get it, really don't, how can any professional not make money in stocks with a bull market up till February of this year. Now granted, you have to do bit better then any Index cause you have to keep on hand enough for people wanting their funds. These guys know how to read charts or only do math? And if they could read charts, not all the stocks of S&P500 were in uptrends, they can't sell short? Or at very least buy four times as many Puts, enough to cover the long stocks and rest to enjoy profits of stocks going down.

The owners of Hedge Funds, do they have "game" in their hedge fund, any of them have 50 million in them to show they have faith in it?

That is why I like trading, I don't have to understand what other people do.

And I don't believe they have to charge 2% all year, think they can start year that way and at some point when business paid for the year, stop collecting on older accounts. Pay bonuses out the 20% of profits. I think many who start them never had actual businesses before this, just too greedy.
 
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