Sober in Sin City: Hedge funds focus on work at Las
Vegas event
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[May 12, 2018]
By Lawrence Delevingne and Svea Herbst-Bayliss
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - A hedge fund industry
gathering in Las Vegas this week was far less decadent than those of the
past, as big money investors focused less on gambling and
champagne-soaked "Sin City" celebrations and more on the grind of
vetting fund managers.
After years of underperformance that have humbled hedge fund managers,
investors welcomed the more sober approach at the Context Leadership
Summit, said Michelle McCloskey, who helps construct portfolios of hedge
funds as Man Group's President of the Americas.
"It’s not such a party atmosphere anymore" she said in an interview,
"which is far better aligned with the preferences of most institutional
clients."
Instead of Anthony Scaramucci's splashy SkyBridge Alternatives
Conference -- which featured celebrities, rock concerts and pool parties
-- investors attended a new, subdued gathering. It was organized by
Context Summits, best known for "speed date" events where investment
executives who choose hedge funds for wealthy families and funds of
funds quickly grill managers about their track records, investment
strategies and risk-management practices. In spare, curtained booths in
an Aria Resort and Casino ballroom, investors could meet with private
debt specialist Direct Lending Investments, non-performing loan-focused
Legacy Capital Group, corporate event-focused Paulson & Co and
cryptocurrency expert Pantera Capital, among others.
The industry’s performance has turned a corner lately, with the average
hedge fund rising 0.4 percent this year, beating the slumping Standard &
Poor's 500 Index for the first time in years, according to Hedge Fund
Research.
"Now people are seeing hedge funds as a diversifier and not as a
substitute to what they already have in the portfolio," said Lionel
Erdely, chief investment officer for alternatives at $22 billion
Investcorp Group.
With market volatility and stock price dispersion expected to pick up,
analysts and investors said hedge funds are starting to look more
attractive, particularly smaller managers with niche strategies.
Erdely said he likes funds that invest in non-performing loans,
particularly from Italy. Jeff Assaf, chief investment officer of $4
billion ICG Advisors, recommends private credit strategies, which
typically pursue borrowers banks avoid.
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Hedge fund managers and investors meet at the Context Leadership
Summit in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., May 10, 2018. REUTERS/Lawrence
Delevingne
SALT-LITE
Las Vegas was for years the $3.2 trillion hedge fund industry's party venue of
choice. The epitome was Scaramucci's "SALT" event with billionaire managers like
Steven A. Cohen, Paul Singer and Kenneth Griffin.
That event was canceled this year for the first time since 2009 after
Scaramucci briefly joined the Trump administration and tried, unsuccessfully, to
sell SkyBridge.
The Context event, created to fill the void, was lower key by design.
"We don't want to ever be viewed as a boondoggle," Context's Ron Biscardi said
in an interview. "We’re about a serious business event for our industry." It
retained some glitzier elements, including a moderately attended late-night
party at Lavo Lounge and a few high-level panels of paid speakers, including
former Vice President Dick Cheney, former Defense Secretary and CIA Director
Leon Panetta, and former Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer.
At one networking event, Reuters found clusters of managers wearing color-coded
badges, khaki pants and blazers, discussing niche real estate funds and bank
lending over beers and sliders.
Context drew an estimated 750 attendees to its Vegas event, less than the 2,000
who flock to its flagship Miami event each January, or the approximately 2,000
who attended SALT.
In an interview this week, Scaramucci said his event will return in May 2019.
He will move back to SkyBridge as co-managing partner after the sale to a
division of Chinese conglomerate HNA Group fell through in April, although a
distribution partnership is planned.
SALT will likely be in Las Vegas again but potentially slimmed down by several
hundred people, Scaramucci said. SkyBridge is also considering new concepts for
programing, though he expects it to remain a must-attend event for the hedge
fund industry.
"The brand is big enough,” he said, “and people want it."
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Lawrence Delevingne; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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