FT : The performance problems at a British hedge fund giant

The performance problems at a British hedge fund giant

Man Group made its name with a trend-following investment strategy that was once the envy of the hedge fund world. Nowadays, not so much.

Shares in the world’s largest listed hedge fund are down 8 per cent since the start of the year. And while some traders have been able to make a killing off US President Donald Trump’s tariff war, the yo-yo effect it had on markets was bad news for trend followers.

Man Group’s flagship institutional strategy, AHL Alpha, is down 2.4 per cent this year. (If that sounds bad, consider that it suffered a 9 per cent fall earlier in the year.)

It extends a run of poor performance at the AHL quant unit over the past three years that’s heightened the prospect of investors pulling money out of Man Group’s most lucrative strategies.

The group is at something of a juncture: over the past decade it’s expanded into new areas such as private credit, yet its struggling hedge fund business continues to make up a significant chunk of returns.

The big question for executives is whether they should continue an inevitably costly push into alternative revenue streams or focus on improving hedge fund performance.

But it’s not like staying competitive in the hedge fund world is cheap.

DD wrote on Tuesday about how big multi-manager firms were offering payouts of up to $100mn to lure away star talent. Man Group simply can’t match those kinds of packages, insiders say.

Whatever the solution, one thing seems clear: any comeback will need more investment over several years. And therein lies the rub.

Unlike most of its rivals, Man Group is publicly listed and its shareholders’ interests don’t always align with those of the investors in its funds.

Shareholders have come to enjoy a 7 per cent dividend yield with buybacks on top, but the type of investment that fund investors would value — in talent and trading strategies — could threaten that.

“The problem is if they announce that the dividend yield will be 1 per cent, the share price will crater,” said one former employee. “It’s a terribly difficult situation.”

FT : India’s man of steel bids for Thyssenkrupp

India’s man of steel bids for Thyssenkrupp

German industrial giant Thyssenkrupp’s steel business was once its pride and joy, but low demand, cheap imports from Asia and high energy costs have taken their toll.

The company was exploring a deal to sell half of its steel operations to Daniel Křetínský, but there’s been little word from the Czech billionaire since his EP Group took a 20 per cent stake in the business last year. 

Then on Tuesday last week, Indian metals magnate Naveen Jindal made a surprise bid for the steel unit, shaking up proceedings and setting up a showdown with Křetínský.

It’s a characteristically bold move from the 55-year-old, polo-playing chair of Jindal Steel, who’s known on the field as “Captain Cool”.

While the value of his bid was undisclosed, Jindal has promised to invest more than €2bn into the steel unit.

In Jindal Steel, he owns India’s fourth-largest producer of the alloy. And flush with cash, the group has embarked on an expansion that could put it in the big leagues of steelmakers globally.

Jindal Steel’s assets include mines in Africa and Australia and steel plants in Oman and Europe. At the start of this year, it closed its acquisition of Vítkovice Steel, an 800,000-tonne-per-year manufacturer in Křetínský’s homeland.

The bid for the German steel unit is a risky ploy: Thyssenkrupp was forced to write down the value of the unit by €1bn last year. That came after a €2.1bn impairment in 2023, and the steel division has pension liabilities of about €2.7bn.

Yet you don’t have to look too far to see the benefits a successful takeover could bring.

Europe is re-arming and defence spending is on the up. If the Indian tycoon can mimic his success at Jindal Steel, where shares have risen fivefold in as many years, he could net a fortune. 

FT : EU fingerprint scanners will not cause delays, Eurotunnel boss says

EU fingerprint scanners will not cause delays, Eurotunnel boss says
New system will come into force in October across all European borders

The boss of Eurotunnel has promised that a new EU biometric passport system will have a “minimal impact” on crossing times between the UK and France, less than three weeks before the programme rolls out nationally. 

The heavily delayed Entry-Exit System (EES) will require any non-EU citizen travelling in or out of the bloc to record fingerprints and take a photo at a dedicated booth the first time they cross the border. 

The system, originally intended to begin in 2022, comes into force on October 12, with a staggered increase to April to allow port operators to gradually increase the number of passengers required to comply. 

The process would have a “very minimal impact on the time to cross the channel”, promised Yann Leriche, CEO of Eurotunnel.

The scheme should add “a maximum of two minutes” to the 90-minute process of crossing from motorways in England to those in France, he added. 

Airlines, ports and Eurostar and Eurotunnel have all installed booths or technology to process people under the new system, which applies to all non-EU citizens. 

Eurotunnel, which operates the channel tunnel and trains carrying cars but does not run Eurostar, has spent £80mn on EES kiosks and technology to process all passengers, including hiring 120 people to help travellers use the self-service system. 

The group, which accounts for six in 10 passenger cars that cross from Britain to France, will begin processing coaches and lorries from October and the first passenger cars by the end of the year.

Its set-up will require passengers to leave their cars in specific bays, before scanning their passport into a machine that takes their photo and then scans their fingerprints. 

Once fingerprints have been recorded, passengers will only need to have their picture taken and scan their passports in future crossings, up until they change their passport or if they do not travel again for three years. 

“There is no excuse not to be ready,” Leriche said.

“The only risk I see for ourselves is that others are not ready and they are going to cry so loud and manage to convince people to postpone their journey,” he added.

Other ports had been slower to install new equipment, he said. “Those who are not ready are only showing they did not do a good job. That they didn’t want to look at EES and by looking away they thought it would go away. But that didn’t happen.” 

FT : German grid operator Tennet to raise up to €10bn from sovereign funds

German grid operator Tennet to raise up to €10bn from sovereign funds
Private placement could be prelude to Berlin taking a stake

Dutch state-owned grid operator Tennet Germany is to raise up to €10bn in a private placement that could be the prelude to a further stake sale to the German government.

The company may announce the capital raise as early as Wednesday, according to five people with knowledge of the plans. The deal values the grid operator at about €40bn including existing debt, and the Dutch state would be left with a stake of about 55 per cent after the transaction, they said.

The investors participating in the private placement included the Norwegian state oil fund Norges as well as a Dutch pension fund and Asian sovereign fund, the people said. The deal is expected to be closed in 2026.

The Dutch finance ministry and Tennet declined to comment.

The Dutch government has tried to sell the German grid operations for years, as it grows reluctant to invest billions of Dutch taxpayer funds into modernising German electricity infrastructure.

But a plan to sell a stake in the unit to Germany fell through last year after Berlin and The Hague failed to agree on valuation. The Hague then launched a dual-track process, exploring both a private placement and a listing.

Since German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and his coalition took office in May, Berlin has resumed work to buy a stake, according to two people with knowledge of the plans. The German government was considering making an offer for 25 per cent of Tennet Germany, one of the people said.

The capital increase was seen by Berlin as a way to settle the disagreement over valuation, they added.

Another person familiar with the matter said Tennet and the Dutch state would be open to a German investment in upcoming negotiations, but that no agreement had been reached. Berlin would need to meet the same conditions as the new investors, they added.

The capital increase, which would happen partly at initial closing and partly in the upcoming years, would put Tennet Germany in position to raise the debt needed to finance the expansion of the German electrical grid amid a transition to greater reliance on renewable energy sources, a person added.

A spokesperson for the German finance ministry could not be immediately reached for comment. A spokesperson for Norges declined to comment.

>>> US After Hours

After Hours Summary: LAC +72% on Reuters report that Trump administration is seeking equity stake; MU +2.8% higher on earnings; WOR -4.6%, AIR -1.1% lower on earnings

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: MU +2.8% (also partnering with TSM to manufacture HBM4 base logic die)

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: LAC +72% (Trump administration is seeking an equity stake of as much as 10%, according to Reuters), GIFI +3.4% ($7 mln task order from Defense Logistics Agency), ABVX +2% (presentation of abstract for Obefazimod), FTI +1.9% (awarded a "significant contract" for subsea production systems by Petrobras), WNC +1.9% (partnership with Global Tank), ALGN +1.6% (files ITC complaint), CYBN +1.4% (highlights neuropsychiatry platform), WFRD +1% (awarded an 8-year contract by SNGN Romgaz), ORCL +0.9% (Oracle and OpenAI bringing online flagship site of the $500 bln Stargate program, according to CNBC), BIIB +0.1% (FDA letter requests update to technical info in CMC module of sNDA), MSFT +0.1% (Oracle and OpenAI bringing online flagship site of the $500 bln Stargate program, according to CNBC)

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: WOR -4.6%, AIR -1.1%, MLKN -0.7%

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: COHU -10% ($200 mln convertible notes offering), CTRE -3.5% (CFO to retire, names new CFO), INSG -0.5% (partnership with Telcloud), BYD -0.4% (reports cybersecurity incident), EVH -0.1% (EVH to sell Evolent Care Partners to PRVA for up to $113 mln; also reaffirms Q3 guidance), PRSU -0.1% (acquires Glacier Park subsidiary)

WSJ : Jeff Bezos’ Billionaire Dad Is Hiring a CEO to Run His Family Office

Jeff Bezos’ Billionaire Dad Is Hiring a CEO to Run His Family Office
Expansion comes amid a boom in family offices, private firms set up by wealthy families to manage their money—and more

  • Jeff Bezos’ father, Mike Bezos, is significantly expanding his family office, Aurora Borealis, to support more family members.
  • Valeria Alberola was recently hired as CEO of Aurora Borealis, and the firm is seeking a chief investment officer to manage its assets.
  • The expansion plans predate Jacklyn Bezos’ death and aim to further diversify Mike Bezos’ holdings beyond Amazon.

Jeff Bezos’ father, Mike Bezos, is undertaking a “major expansion” of his small family office to support more family members and manage a fortune estimated to be worth more than $40 billion, according to people briefed on the effort and a document viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The office recently hired a chief executive, Valeria Alberola, several of the people said, to manage the entity from Miami. Alberola recently worked for Walmart heir Ben Walton and his wife, Lucy Ana Walton, in the Denver area overseeing their investment and philanthropic activities. The firm also is looking to hire a chief investment officer.

The name of the family office is Aurora Borealis, according to one of the people, and it was established to manage the wealth of Mike and Jacklyn Bezos, who died in August of Lewy body dementia. A job description from the search firm Russell Reynolds describes Aurora Borealis as a small family office set up in 2020 that is going through a significant expansion.

Neither Mike Bezos nor a representative for Aurora Borealis could be reached for comment. A spokesman for Jeff Bezos didn’t respond to requests for comment. Alberola also didn’t respond to requests for comment. Russell Reynolds declined to comment.

Family offices are private firms set up by rich families to manage their wealth and, in some cases, provide legal, tax and concierge services such as the management of homes and planes.

The number of family offices has swelled in recent years, a rough reflection of what by some measures is the most rapid accumulation of riches by the ultrawealthy in the U.S. since the Gilded Age.

Deloitte estimated that 8,030 single family offices existed worldwide as of 2024, a 31% increase since 2019. The firm projects the number will grow to 10,720 family offices by 2030. Entrepreneurial activity and the great wealth transfer—with baby boomers handing over trillions of dollars in assets to the next generations—are expected to drive that growth.

SGF Capital was set up in Dallas last year to manage the fortune of the late oilman Autry Stephens, who died in 2024, months after selling his company for $26 billion. A former investment arm of the crypto exchange Binance was rebranded YZi Labs early this year and separated from Binance as a family office. It invests money for billionaire Binance founder Changpeng Zhao.

Family offices also have become increasingly attractive sources of capital for Wall Street and Silicon Valley. In contrast to public pensions and other institutions, many of which have maxed out their investments in alternative assets, wealthy families are seen as a stable and rapidly growing source of money for investment firms.

The Bezoses are one of the wealthiest families in the world, and Aurora Borealis is now “rapidly growing…to support the second (G2) and third (G3) generations,” said the Russell Reynolds document.

The plans for Aurora Borealis’s expansion had been in the works before Jacklyn Bezos’ death. The family office has discussed hiring an investment team that would continue to diversify Mike Bezos’ holdings beyond Amazon.com, one of the people said. Filings from the Bezos Family Foundation show that he and Jacklyn Bezos made gifts in recent years of stock in a few companies besides Amazon, including Uber Technologies and the company then known as Facebook.

Jeff Bezos once described the “first, sort of initial startup capital” for what became Amazon as coming primarily from his parents, whom he said invested several-hundred-thousand dollars. That has proven to be one of the greatest venture investments in history; wealth-data firm Altrata estimated their wealth to be around $45 billion before Jacklyn Bezos’ death.

Jacklyn Bezos was a high-school student in Albuquerque, N.M., when she gave birth to Jeffrey Preston Jorgensen in 1964. She filed for divorce from his biological father, whom she dated in high school, before her son turned two. She juggled working and caring for her young son with attending night school, she recalled in a 2019 commencement address, choosing classes based on whether the professors would let her bring her son to class.

She married Mike Bezos, a Cuban immigrant who came to the U.S. by himself at the age of 16, in 1968. They met because their shifts at a bank overlapped by an hour, according to “The Everything Store,” a book by journalist Brad Stone chronicling Amazon’s and Jeff Bezos’ rise.

Mike Bezos, who also goes by Miguel, adopted Jeff, and he and Jacklyn Bezos had two other children, Christina and Mark. “My dad is my real dad, not my biological dad,” Jeff Bezos said during 2018 remarks at the Economic Club of Washington, D.C.

Bezos in a 2001 interview said his parents invested “a large fraction of their life savings” in what became Amazon. He described their decision as “bold and trusting,” with his father’s first question about the investment being, “What’s the internet?”

The couple was able to build a nest egg that enabled them to invest in Amazon because Mike Bezos’ employer at the time, now known as Exxon Mobil, covered most of their living expenses while he worked overseas, “The Everything Store” said. They later co-founded the foundation, which describes its focus as helping young people by investing in the “science of learning.”

Jeff Bezos’ siblings, Christina and Mark, also each invested $10,000 in Amazon early on, according to the book—investments that would be worth more than $1 billion apiece today if left untouched.

Mark Bezos has said he expects to have money managed through Aurora Borealis, according to a person familiar with his plans. He founded and sold an ad agency and worked at Robin Hood, a foundation that focuses on fighting poverty in New York City. He also co-founded a private-equity firm, HighPost Capital, that sold a stake to an Italian asset manager in May.

Mark Bezos didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Valeria Alberola graduated from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and received her M.B.A. from Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management, according to her LinkedIn profile. A onetime McKinsey associate, she became chief executive of the Waltons’ Zoma Lab in 2017.

The investment chief would work with the CEO but have responsibility for a large portfolio of assets, including stocks and a host of alternative investments, the Russell Reynolds document said. The portfolio includes investments held by various trusts and a foundation. Aurora Borealis has a “Family Board,” and the CIO would manage a small staff and work with external asset managers.

The I,formation : Nvidia Could Get 2% Stake in OpenAI From $10 Billion Investmen

Nvidia Could Get 2% Stake in OpenAI From $10 Billion Investment

Nvidia has committed to investing the first $10 billion of a planned $100 billion investment in OpenAI at the startup’s recent $500 billion valuation and then will make the remaining staggered investments at future valuations, according to a person with direct knowledge of the plans.

The chip giant is making the investment in cash and will receive equity in OpenAI as part of the deal. Based on OpenAI’s recent valuation in an employee share, Nvidia would get about 2% of the company from the first $10 billion invested.

Earlier Monday, both companies said Nvidia would make a $100 billion investment to support 10 gigawatts of data center capacity for OpenAI. Nvidia will make the investment as each gigawatt comes online. This structure should limit the amount of dilution other OpenAI investors experience, assuming the valuation of OpenAI continues to rise.

By the end of this year, OpenAI will have raised over $70 billion since its founding, including an investment by Nvidia last fall when OpenAI was valued at $157 billion. OpenAI needs to support the immense costs of training and running its models, which the company has projected will cost at least $450 billion through 2030. OpenAI is in the middle of a restructuring that could pave the way for an eventual public offering.

>>> US Gapping down

Gapping down
In reaction to earnings/guidance
:
  • FLY -9.9%, AZO -3.5%, GNFT -1.7%
Other news:
  • EPRX -9% (prices offering of 12,727,273 common shares at $5.50 per share)
  • STSS -6.2% (Sharps Technology and Jupiter Exchange announce a partnership to utilize Jupiter's staking infrastructure as part of the company's treasury strategy)
  • KC -5.2% (proposes offering of 282 mln ordinary shares of the Company)
  • MXCT -3.2% (operational restructuring; also reiterates full year guidance)
  • EBR -3.2% (reports that Manaus--Boa Vista Transmission Line entered into commercial operation)
  • MBX -2.8% (10,000,000 share common stock offering)
  • BNTC -2.1% (files for $200 mln mixed securities shelf offering)