Hedge index revises its numbers

The failing subprime mortgage market caused a hedge fund index to revise its performance returns.
JUL 19, 2007
By  Bloomberg
The recent fall out in the market for subprime mortgages caused one prominent hedge fund index this week to revise some of its performance returns. On Monday, the Credit Suisse/Tremont Hedge Index reported that its hedge fund index for fixed-income arbitrage was up 0.21% for June and 3.7% for the year-to-date. On Wednesday, the index had revised those returns, telling investors that its hedge fund index for fixed-income arbitrage had fallen almost 6% in June and was down 7.5% for the year. The index needed to be revised because Bear Stearns Cos. Inc., which in June said it was bailing out one of its struggling hedge funds that invested in bonds linked to subprime mortgages, did not report returns on time, a Credit Suisse official said. That change spurred one adviser who specializes in alternative investments to question the opaque nature of the hedge fund industry. "I just think it points out a risk to hedge funds we only remember when something like this happens," said Rob Isbitts, president and chief investment officer of Emerald Asset Advisors LLC of Weston, Fla. "And the risk is the time lag in reporting." The lack of transparency and liquidity in such cases is a clear reminder of the hazards in hedge funds, he said. "This doesn't mean that hedge funds are bad, but we tend to forget this is the one of the risk," he said. "It's a special situation," said Phillip Schenk, direct or marketing with Credit Suisse Asset Management of New York. Bear Stearns didn't make its information available until Tuesday night, he said. For the full report, see the upcoming July 23 issue of InvestmentNews.

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