Quote from Greg Richards:
So he claims, but what does that have to do with the returns? But as I say, he lets representations and rumors of wealth bleed into the market, so it seems he may care very much about the appearance of great wealth, but middle class may have been the reality. My point is that the representations bear scrutiny. Now he is involved with a fund once more, so the questions are fair. Instead of facts and answers, one gets incomplete information on Wikipedia and excuses about health scares instead of audited returns for Empirica.
While this may mean nothing, or it may mean he is simply embarrassed about underperformance and doesn't want to bring it up, now that he is associated with a fund, more transparency is in order. Again, while it may be nothing, and there may be verifiable explanations, they haven't been provided. These issues are red flags for anyone doing due diligence.
no question. good points. most fund managers talk their book, from soros to the little guys-- if given the chance.
surf
