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						Struggling hedge funds 
						still expense bonuses, bar tabs 
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		 [January 19, 2017] 
		By Lawrence Delevingne 
 NEW 
		YORK (Reuters) - Investors are starting to sour on the idea of 
		reimbursing hedge funds for multi-million dollar trader bonuses, lavish 
		marketing dinners and trophy office space.
 
 Powerful firms such as Citadel LLC and Millennium Management LLC charge 
		clients for such costs through so-called "pass-through" fees, which can 
		include everything from a new hire's deferred compensation to travel to 
		high-end technology.
 
 It all adds up: investors often end up paying more than double the 
		industry's standard fees of 2 percent of assets and 20 percent of 
		investment gains, which many already consider too high.
 
 Investors have for years tolerated pass-through charges because of high 
		net returns, but weak performance lately is testing their patience.
 
 Clients of losing funds last year, including those managed by Blackstone 
		Group LP's <BX.N> Senfina Advisors LLC, Folger Hill Asset Management LP 
		and Balyasny Asset Management LP, likely still paid fees far higher than 
		2 percent of assets.
 
 Clients of shops that made money, including Paloma Partners and Hutchin 
		Hill Capital LP, were left with returns of less than 5 percent partly 
		because of a draining combination of pass-through and performance fees.
 
 (For a graphic on the hedge funds that passed through low returns, 
		click: http://tmsnrt.rs/2iLRB3T)
 
		
		 
		Millennium, the $34 billion New York firm led by billionaire Israel 
		Englander, charged clients its usual fees of 5 or 6 percent of assets 
		and 20 percent of gains in 2016, according to a person familiar with the 
		situation. The charges left investors in Millennium's flagship fund with 
		a net return of just 3.3 percent.
 Citadel, the $26 billion Chicago firm led by billionaire Kenneth 
		Griffin, charged pass-through fees that added up to about 5.3 percent in 
		2015 and 6.3 percent in 2014, according to another person familiar with 
		the situation. Charges for 2016 were not finalized, but the costs 
		typically add up to between 5 and 10 percent of assets, separate from 
		the 20 percent performance fee Citadel typically charges.
 
 Citadel's flagship fund returned 5 percent in 2016, far below its 19.5 
		percent annual average since 1990, according to the source who, like 
		others, spoke on the condition of anonymity because the information is 
		private.
 
 All firms mentioned declined to comment or did not respond to requests 
		for comment.
 
 In 2014, consulting firm Cambridge Associates studied fees charged by 
		multi-manager funds, which deploy various investment strategies using 
		small teams and often include pass-throughs. Their clients lose 33 
		percent of profits to fees, on average, Cambridge found.
 
 The report by research consultant Tomas Kmetko noted such funds would 
		need to generate gross returns of roughly 19 percent to deliver a 10 
		percent net profit to clients.
 
 'STUNNING TO ME'
 
 Defenders of pass-throughs said the fees were necessary to keep elite 
		talent and provide traders with top technology. They said that firm 
		executives were often among the largest investors in their funds and pay 
		the same fees as clients.
 
 But frustration is starting to show.
 
		 
		A 2016 survey by consulting firm EY found that 95 percent of investors 
		prefer no pass-through expense. The report also said fewer investors 
		support various types of pass-through fees than in the past.
 "It's stunning to me to think you would pay more than 2 percent," said 
		Marc Levine, chairman of the Illinois State Board of Investment, which 
		has reduced its use of hedge funds. "That creates a huge hurdle to have 
		the right alignment of interests."
 
			
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			A combination photo shows Israel Englander (L), Chairman and CEO, 
			Millennium Partners, and Kenneth C. Griffin, CEO of Citadel during 
			the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, 
			U.S. on April 27, 2010 and April 27, 2015, respectively. 
			REUTERS/Phil McCarten (L) REUTERS/Mario Anzuon (R) 
            
			
			 
Investors pulled $11.5 billion from multi-strategy funds in 2016 after three 
consecutive years of net additions, according to data tracker eVestment. 
Redemptions for firms that use pass-through fees were not available.
 Even with pass-through fees, firms like Citadel, Millennium and Paloma have 
produced double-digit net returns over the long-term. The Cambridge study also 
found that multi-manager funds generally performed better and with lower 
volatility than a global stock index.
 
 "High fees and expenses are hard to stomach, particularly in a low-return 
environment, but it's all about the net," said Michael Hennessy, co-founder of 
hedge fund investment firm Morgan Creek Capital Management.
 
 
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
 Citadel has used pass-through fees for an unusual purpose: developing 
intellectual property.
 
 The firm relied partly on client fees to build an internal administration 
business starting in 2007. But only Citadel's owners, including Griffin, 
benefited from the 2011 sale of the unit, Omnium LLC, to Northern Trust Corp for 
$100 million, plus $60 million or so in subsequent profit-sharing, two people 
familiar with the situation said.
 
 Citadel noted in a 2016 U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing that some 
pass-through expenses are still used to develop intellectual property, the 
extent of which was unclear. Besides hedge funds, Citadel's other business lines 
include Citadel Securities LLC, the powerful market-maker, and Citadel 
Technology LLC, a small portfolio management software provider.
 
 
Some 
Citadel hedge fund investors and advisers to them told Reuters they were unhappy 
about the firm charging clients to build technology whose profits Citadel alone 
will enjoy. "It's really against the spirit of a partnership," said one.
 A spokesman for Citadel declined to comment.
 
 A person familiar with the situation noted that Citadel put tens of millions of 
dollars into the businesses and disclosed to clients that only Citadel would 
benefit from related revenues. The person also noted Citadel's high marks from 
an investor survey by industry publication Alpha for alignment of interests and 
independent oversight.
 
 Gordon Barnes, global head of due diligence at Cambridge, said few hedge fund 
managers charge their investors for services provided by affiliates because of 
various problems it can cause.
 
 "Even with the right legal disclosures, it rarely passes a basic fairness test," 
Barnes said, declining to comment on any individual firm. "These arrangements 
tend to favor the manager's interests."
 
 (Reporting by Lawrence Delevingne; Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Grant 
McCool)
 
				 
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