>>> What to look at this Week End - 17th & 18th of October 2015

Weekly Perf.
Dow +0.77% S&P+0.90% Nasdaq+1.16% Russel-0.26% Brazil-3.81% Nikkei +0.83% Hang Seng +2.71% Shanghai +6.54% EuroStoxx +0.45% FTSE-0.59% CAC +0.03% Dax +0.08% Ibex -0.76% MIB +0.36% SMI +0.41%
Global equity indices closed out the week higher, digesting dodgy data and some weak corporate news to sustain the October rally. Two giant mergers in the beer and high tech industries overshadowed a slow start to the earnings season and a profit warning from Walmart. The US September retail sales report was particularly poor and the inflation data was shaky, adding weight to arguments the Fed would have a hard time hiking rates in 2015, while Chinese trade data was notably soft. Crude prices gave up most of last week's the gains, with WTI and Brent testing back to $45 and $50, respectively, as geopolitical fears wore off and oversupply reemerged as the overriding theme. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield briefly moved below 2% for the second time this month and the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate moved back below 1.5%. For the week, the DJIA gained 0.8%, the S&P500 added 0.9% and the Nasdaq grew 1.2%.

Macro :
- Greece Must Complete Bank Recapitalization in 2015, Tsipras Says
- Economists still see Fed rate rise before year end (FT) http://on.ft.com/1Xd3uMd
- Will the US ever raise interest rates again? (FT) http://on.ft.com/1Xd3N9O
- Leader of Qaeda Cell Killed in Airstrike in Syria, Pentagon Says - NYT
- Japan's biggest association of labor unions, Japanese Trade Union Confederation, said to seek a 2% raise as part of annual spring wage negotiations - Nikkei
- The World Hits Its Credit Limit, And The Debt Market Is Starting To Realize That - ZH - http://bit.ly/1Xd6doM


Keep an eye on :
- ABBN VX : ABB Is Planning to Cut Jobs, Schweiz am Sonntag Reports
- ABI BB : Coca-Cola is next target of Anheuser-Busch InBev’s Lemann - IstoE Dinheiro
- ACS SM : ACS Group Reaches Financial Close on M11 Project in Ireland
- AAL LN : Anglo American to Cut 120-140 People From Chile Unit: Mostrador
- AREVA FP : Areva to Sign Accord With Unions on Job Cuts on Oct. 19: AFP
- POP IM : Pop Milano May Want to Accelerate on Merger Options: Corriere
- BARC LN : Barclays pushes to shrink investment bank - http://on.ft.com/1LSKoJh
- BSLN SW : Basilea Pharmaceutica Files for U.S. IPO Via Cowen, Guggenheim
- CDI FP : Christian Dior 1Q Rev. EU9.05b vs EU7.8b Y/y
- DCG LN : Dairy Crest to become more attractive takeover prospect following regulators’ ok for milk-unit sale this week - Sundfay Tiumes
- DBHN GY : Deutsche Bahn to Cut Jobs, May Sell Arriva Stake, CEO Tells Welt
- DBK GY : Deutsche Bank Announces Plan to Change Organizational Structure
- DBK GY : Deutsche Bank May List Postbank as Early as Spring 2016: Welt
- DWN GYU : Deutsche Wohnen Investors Advised by ISS to Reject LEG Deal
- EDF FP : EDF in Final Talks With Chinese Partners on U.K. Nuclear Plant http://on.wsj.com/1Xd4XlK
- EDF FP : UK plant deal hinges on ambitions of London, Beijing and EDF
- ENGI FP : Engie Hires Ex-Citi Trader Parasram as Head of Financial Oil
- FCA IM : Ferrari IPO Said to Be Oversubscribed
- HSBA LN : HSBC to Keep London HQ, Times Cites Shareholders, Insiders
- OSR GY : Cree Gains Edge at Trial Targeting LEDs; Shares Pare Decline
- PAH3 GY : Porsche’s Winterkorn to Cease as Member, Chairman of Exec. Board
- SPM IM : Saipem Banks Weigh Refinance Plans Based on Future Ratings: Sole
- SRS IM : Saras Sees Total Ebitda of EU690m in 2016, EU730m in 2019
- GLE FP : Soc Gen CEO Says Strategy Doesn’t Include New Retail Mkts: Sole
- SYNN VX : group of Syngenta shareholders plans a public push for a broad strategic review http://on.wsj.com/1Pxpy1I
- TSM US : Lowers 2015 outlook for semiconductor industry to flat from +3% - Press
- TEG GY : TAG Won’t Take Part in Real-Estate M&A Amid High Prices: EamS
- TKA AV : Austria Plans to Sell Remaining Telekom Austria Stake: Kurier, Telekom Austria shareholder OBIB denies exit rumours
- TIT IM : Telecom Italia Reviewed Metroweb Deal With FSI, F2i Funds
- UBSN VX : Swiss Capital Rules to Be ‘Manageable’ for UBS, CS: NZZ
- VISA Europe : Visa Europe Deal May Be Announced as Early as Next Week: FT
- VOW3 GY : VW’s Japanese Sales Seen Falling 30% in Early Oct.: Nikkei
- WIN GY : Wincor May Be Getting Ready for Possible Sale: Manager Magazin ( Frid. Night)
- WIN GY : Diebold in Talks With Wincor Nixdorf on Potential Transaction (Saturday)
- ZEHN SW : Zehnder CEO Berchtold Sees Signs of Better Business in 2016: FuW

(ZeroHedge) The World Hits Its Credit Limit, And The Debt Market Is Starting To

The World Hits Its Credit Limit, And The Debt Market Is Starting To Realize That

One month ago, when looking at the dramatic change in the market landscape when the first cracks in the central planning facade became evident and it appeared that central banks are in the process of rapidly losing credibility, and the faith of an entire generation of traders whose only trading strategy is to "BTFD", wepresented a critical report by Citigroup's Matt King, who asked "has the world reached its credit limit" summarized the two biggest financial issues facing the world at this stage.
The first is that even as central banks have continued pumping record amount of liquidity in the market, the market's response has been increasingly shaky (in no small part due to the surge in the dollar and the resulting Emerging Market debt crisis), and in the case of Junk bonds, a downright disaster. As King summarized it"models linking QE to markets seem to have broken down."
Needless to say this was bad news for everyone hoping that just a little more QE is all that is needed to return to all time S&P500 highs. And while this concern has faded somewhat in the past few weeks as the most violent short squeeze in history has lifted the market almost back to record highs even as Q3 earnings season is turning out just as bad, if not worse, as most had predicted, nothing has fundamentally changed and the fears over EM reserve drawdown will shortly re-emerge, once the punditry reads between the latest Chinese money creation and capital outflow lines.
The second, and far greater problem, facing the world is precisely what the Fed and its central bank peers have been fighting all along: too much global debt accumulating an ever faster pace, while global growth is stagnant and in fact declining.
King's take: "there has been plenty of credit, just not much growth."
Our take: we have - long ago - crossed the Rubicon where incremental debt results in incremental growth, and are currently in an unprecedented place where economic textbooks no longer work, and where incremental debt leads to a drop in global growth.Much more than ZIRP, NIRP, QE, or Helicopter money, this is the true singularity, because absent wholesale debt destruction - either through default or hyperinflation - the world is doomed to, first, a recession and then a depression the likes of which have never been seen. By buying assets and by keeping the VIX suppressed (for a phenomenal read on this topic we recommend Artemis Capital's "Volatility and the Allegory of the Prisoner’s Dilemma"), central banks are only delaying the inevitable.
The bottom line is clear: at the macro level, the world is now tapped out, and there are virtually no pockets for credit creation left at the consolidated level, between household, corporate, financial and government debt.
What about at the micro level, because while the world has clearly hit its debt-saturation point, corporations - at least the highly rated ones - seem to have no problems with accessing debt markets and raising capital, even if the biggest use of proceeds is stock buybacks, thereby creating a vicious, Munchausenesque close loop scheme, in which the rising stock prices courtesy of more debt, is giving debt investors the impression that the company is far healthier than it actually is precisely because it has more, not less, debt!
The reality, as we first showed in January of 2014, is that for all the talk of "fortress" balance sheets, and record cash buffers, the debt build up among US corporations has more than surpassed the increase in cash. In fact, as of early 2014, total debt was 35% higher than its prior peak, as was net debt.

Therefore, to us, the answer whether debt markets are once again approaching (or have crossed into) full capacity was clear; just look at what happened to IBM when, as we predicted, it bought back so much stock its investment grade rating was put in jeopardy and the company has seen its stock languish ever since unable to lever up any more just to repurchase its own stock.
Others, of the "more serious people" variety, have finally caught up, and as UBS' Matt Mish asks in a note late last week,"Releveraging: are debt markets approaching full capacity?"
His take:


In our latest strategy piece we concluded that, even in a stressed scenario, US and European high grade issuance could decline from peak levels yet overall activity should remain quite resilient. Well, that thesis could be tested in the coming months following a rash of (large) M&A announcements, including AB InBev's $106bn proposed acquisition of SABMiller, Dell's planned takeover of EMC, Sandisk's reported attempts to find a suitor and Analog Devices indicated to be in talks with Maxim. The phenomenon is straightforward, and one we have been touting for some time: firms are increasingly releveraging balance sheets as earnings languish. Wal-Mart is perhaps the latest example, issuing disappointing profit guidance as it seeks to spend significant sums on labor and the internet in an effort to reignite sales growth (and authorizing $20bn in share buybacks to boot).
It should be clear to most what this means, but since "most" haven't seen a rate hike in their Wall Street careers, here is UBS' summary "This is textbook later stages of the credit cycle."
* * *
Having seen the light, Mish asks why what is now so obvious to him, is so confusing to everyone else:


What we find interesting is that most issuers and equity investors do not consider the prospect that debt markets could be reaching a point of full capacity – at least not in the near term. There are two root causes of this belief, in our view. First, neither has a strong appreciation of the divergences between debt and equity market universes. First, equity investors typically focus on large cap benchmarks (e.g., S&P 500) – of which most of the market capitalization lies in the top 100 firms – and generally see strong balance sheets with low net leverage, many of which are rated single and double A. However, that is not what credit investors view in their own universe. By definition, while equity indices weighted by market capitalization have been biased towards higher quality companies which have low debt and high cash balances,debt indices weighted by debt outstanding have been skewed towards those issuers raising more debt and generally levering up (Figure 1).


In the US, this first occurred in US leveraged loans (and to a lesser extent high yield) – driven primarily by financially savvy private equity owners; now it is manifesting itself in high grade as strategics lever up balance sheets to juice earnings in an environment where hiking dividends (further), buying back (more) stock, and spending on capex (particularly overseas) appears to have diminishing marginal returns. Second, this cohort perceives low rates as a key stabilizer for financing costs. As we argued last week, low Treasury yields are a key source of support for high grade bond yields. In recent months, even as IG credit spreads have widened, government bond yield declines have helped soften the overall impact on funding costs. For high yield yields, however, the major component is credit spreads, so low Treasury yields can only do so much.

* * *

And releveraging and the underlying dynamics are not occurring in a US vacuum. In our opinion, European issuers and equity investors also do not fully appreciate the divergences in fundamentals between equity and debt markets. Our analysis shows median net leverage has been rising for European IG and HY companies for several years, while trends in median leverage for Eurostoxx 50 issuers have been more stable (until 2014, Figure 2).

Late last and earlier this year European credit investors are increasingly seeing US issuers selling Euro-denominated IG debt to fund M&A as well as viewing domestic issuers releveraging balance sheets (e.g., in technology, healthcare, consumer staples and telecom, Figure 3). And the general direction appears to be similar, whether we look at high grade or high yield (Figure 4).

For those who missed our preview of all of this from April 2012 "How The Fed's Visible Hand Is Forcing Corporate Cash Mismanagement", here is UBS' far simpler summary which even 17-year-old hedge fund managers should get:


Here lies the problem. The predestined outcome is essentially a standoff between equity and debt investors where the former will continue to pressure the latter until credit spreads widen enough to cause capital market access to contract, stemming the deal flow. In high yield, the likelihood of reaching a breaking point is greater – we have seen instances where this has already occurred and equity investors could be complacent in this respect. However, in high grade, we reiterate that the markets are somewhat bulletproof.But the stakes are rising with each record deal.Near term, credit investors in aggregate will likely continue to hold their noses and absorb the releveraging until it becomes very extreme, though extracting wider spreads in the process. Unlikely, yes, in the next quarter or two; however, even in high grade we cannot envision this type of punishment lasting for a couple more years.
And that is the real countdown, because while the Fed may or may not have any credibility left, the only thing that matters is what is left of the once proud "bond vigilantes", virtually all of whom have been euthanized by the Fed's steamrolling of every last fundamental tenet of the market held dear by the bond trades and analysts of the world. According to UBS this, too, is now coming to an end, and even in IG the relentless issuance of one record debt deal after another, will soon hit a brick wall. That, coupled with the peak debt at the macro level described on top, will be the catalyst for the next phase in the evolution of centrally-planned capital "markets", whatever it may be.

>>> Coca-Cola is next target of Anheuser-Busch InBev’s Lemann

Coca-Cola is next target of Anheuser-Busch InBev’s Lemann - report (translated)

Atlanta-based Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), the world’s largest soft drinks bottler, is the next target of Brazilian billionaire Jorge Paulo Lemann, who controls Belgium-based Anheuser-Busch InBev after the acquisition of SABMiller, IstoE Dinheiro reported in its cover story this weekend. The Sao Paulo-based Portuguese-language business weekly reported that Coca-Cola is the next target of Lemann, without giving a source.

"We would adore to acquire Coca-Cola," Lemann has told close friends, IstoE Dinheiro reported without identifying the people who supposedly cited the investor. Lemann said he could manage Coca-Cola with only 200 people though Coke now has more than 500 executives only in its headquarters in Atlanta, the Portuguese-language business magazine reported, citing the unidentified friends of Lemann.

Lemann is a little closer to his biggest dream of acquiring Coca-Cola after Anheuser-Busch InBev reached an agreement to buy SABMiller, IstoE Dinheiro reported. Anheuser-Busch InBev agreed to pay USD 104.2bn for SABMiller, or a total of USD 122bn including assumed debt, according to the report, which had no statement from Lemann, who maintains a home in Switzerland.

Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world’s largest brewery, controls Cia. de Bebidas das Americas (Bovespa: AMBV3), or AmBev, which has more than two-third’s of the Brazilian beer market, as reported.

Lemann, with his Brazilian partners Marcel Telles and Carlos Alberto Sicupira, through the investment fund 3G Capital Partners, is making acquisitions of global dimensions, regardless of the economic scenario, according to IstoE Dinheiro.

3G Capital Partners converts crises into opportunities, said Andrew Flint, a consultant at Swiss investment bank UBS in New York, IstoE Dinheiro reported. 3G Capital Partners controls Anheuser-Busch InBev.

This publication earlier has reported that Lemann may wish to bid for Coke, though the cover story report in IstoE Dinheiro this weekend may be the most extensive and emphatic report on the possibility.

IstoE Dinheiro

WSJ : EDF Could Announce Hinkley Point Nuclear Decision Soon, Says CEO

EDF Could Announce Hinkley Point Nuclear Decision Soon, Says CEO http://on.wsj.com/1Xd4XlK
Nuclear reactor would represent first in U.K. in over a generation

PARIS— Electricite de France SA may announce in the coming days an agreement with its Chinese partners to build two nuclear reactors in the U.K., the first in the country in over a generation, the French utility’s chief executive said Sunday.

The U.K. authorities have granted EDF and its partners, China General Nuclear Corp. and China National Nuclear Corp., a license to build two nuclear reactors worth £16 billion ($24.7 billion) in Hinkley Point, southern England. EDF still had to make a final investment decision for the project to proceed. The company had initially said it expected to make the decision by late 2012.

“If everything goes well, we may announce a major event, the first construction of a nuclear power plant in Europe since Fukushima,” EDF Chief Executive Jean-Bernard Levy said in an interview with French radio Europe1. The decision may be made public as soon as Tuesday or Wednesday, when Chinese President Xi Jinping is due to visit the U.K., Mr. Levy said.

Such a decision would represent a big boost for the nuclear industry, which has seen its ambitions in Western Europe crimped by high costs and safety concerns after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011.

The U.K. government guaranteed EDF and its Chinese partners an electricity price of £92.50 a megawatt hour, around twice the current wholesale power price, for 35 years for the first reactor when it is up and running.

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That means that if the wholesale price is below £92.50, EDF will receive the difference.

Hinkley Point has already been delayed a number of times since the development was first proposed. The company said it aimed to generate electricity from the new plant by the end of 2017. Meanwhile, construction costs have risen and natural gas and electricity prices have weakened.

(Barron's) Love Ferrari, Buy Fiat Chrysler

Love Ferrari, Buy Fiat Chrysler
One of the best ways to play the soon-to-be spun off sports-car maker is to buy shares in parent Fiat. And that means you can ride the global auto maker’s stock as well.

If you went car shopping for a Ferrari and came home with a Chrysler, you might feel cheated. But as far as the shares are concerned, buying Fiat Chrysler Automobiles is a pretty solid substitute for the Italian sports-car maker.

Fiat Chrysler (ticker: FCA.Italy and FCAU on Nasdaq), which is spinning off most of Ferrari to its shareholders, is the best way for investors to get exposure to the iconic car maker. With only a small portion of shares up for grabs and demand reportedly outstripping supply by 10-fold, in the near term it may be the only way.

FCA’s shares have run up 46% in 2015, but still are reasonably priced. In fact, FCA could more than double from its current level by the end of 2016.

While Ferrari produces thoroughbred vehicles, FCA is a less glamorous but efficient work horse. For now, Ferrari will hog the headlines. Shares in the auto maker, the most successful in the history of Formula 1 motor racing, are expected to begin trading in New York Oct. 21 under the symbol RACE.

FCA owns 90% of Ferrari, while Piero Ferrari, son of the late founder, Enzo Ferrari, owns 10%. FCA plans to sell up to 10% of Ferrari in the initial public offering, with the rest distributed to FCA shareholders at the start of 2016. FCA is offering 9% of Ferrari, or 17,175,000 shares, and underwriters could buy another 1%. At the top end of the expected $48 to $52 price range, the listing would raise close to $1 billion, valuing Ferrari at $9.8 billion. That is some $3 billion more than Morningstar’s sum-of-the-parts calculation and would add another five to six euros ($5.68 to $6.82) to its fair value estimate of €20 for FCA.

FCA closed in Milan Friday at €14.27, or 10 times projected 2016 earnings.

Ferrari is more a luxury-goods company than a car maker. Its products are in short supply—it sold 7,225 cars last year—with customers waiting up to two years for some models; the appreciation for limited-edition Ferraris has outperformed the S&P 500; and the business is recession-proof, with sales accelerating throughout the financial crisis.

Last year, Ferrari had earnings before interest and taxes of €389 million on €2.76 billion in revenue. Output is tightly controlled, but the company is cranking up production, targeting 9,000 deliveries annually by 2019—a level that would preserve exclusivity, while probably boosting earnings before interest and taxes to about $1 billion.

Ferrari’s shares could double over the next four years, and FCA would benefit greatly, too. Its €8 billion net industrial debt could shrink by at least €1.6 billion following the Ferrari spinoff. In the second quarter of 2015, Fiat Chrysler’s profit margins in the North American Free Trade Agreement region jumped to 7.7% from 4.9% a year earlier. That should give investors more faith in FCA’s five-year business plan, which includes making inroads in the premium sector with Maserati and Alfa Romeo, and turning Jeep into a global brand.

Fiat Chrysler sales are projected at €116 billion in 2016 and €110 billion in 2015, versus €96 billion last year. Earnings per share are forecast to rise to €1.38 this year and €1.88 in 2016, up from €0.89 last year.

Steven Wood, founder of GreenWood Investors, is a longtime FCA shareholder. Excluding Ferrari, he estimates FCA’s fair value at the end of next year at over €30 a share. “FCA remains quality misunderstood,” he observes.

WSJ : Diebold in Talks to Buy German ATM Maker Wincor for Nearly $2 Billion

Diebold in Talks to Buy German ATM Maker Wincor for Nearly $2 Billion
Deal could enable increased investments into digital services

FRANKFURT—U.S. automated teller machine maker Diebold Inc. is in talks to buy Wincor Nixdorf AG in a deal that would value the German company at more than €1.7 billion ($1.9 billion), Wincor said Saturday.

Diebold and Wincor—the industry’s No. 2 and No. 3 companies by revenue, respectively—entered into a nonbinding agreement on the key parameters of a cash-and-share deal valuing Wincor at €52.50 a share on Sept. 24, the German company said.

Such a deal would enable both companies to sharpen their focus on the growing digital-payments segment and move away from ATMs, for which prices are declining. By joining forces, they could boost investment into the development of software and IT services, which is costly.

A deal would also boost Diebold’s European presence, having previously concentrated on North America.

Diebold, led by former Hewlett-Packard Co. executive Andy W. Mattes, is in the midst of a cost-cutting drive, with revenue having stagnated over the past eight years. It is aiming to cut annual costs by $200 million, while investing $100 million into electronic security, software and IT services through 2017.

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Wincor is in a similar position. After issuing a profit warning in April, the company said it would cut its ATM-making capacity amid declining revenue, while boosting revenue from its software and IT services activities, which currently account for 59% of sales.

“The trend towards digitization embraced by both banks and retailers has added to the momentum of change, with software and high-end service solutions playing a prominent role and opening up opportunities for growth at Wincor Nixdorf,” Wincor Chief Executive Eckard Heidloff said in April.

The rise of mobile payments has raised questions over the future of cash usage and the ATM-making industry. “The market seems to be afraid of structural challenges from cashless payments,” UBS analyst Sven Weier said earlier this month.

Nevertheless, Diebold said recently that it expects cash usage to continue to grow 3% a year through 2020.

Mr. Weier even sees a silver lining on the horizon for Wincor, referring to “pent-up demand in Western European banking, as the installed ATM base is over 10 years old, [coinciding] with the need to spend on branch transformation,” he wrote. He added that demand for Wincor’s checkout machines for retailers, a very sluggish business recently, may rise as UBS expects European retailers to increase investments in the near term.

Such a transaction is still subject to material conditions and analyses, in particular the completion of mutual due diligences, Wincor said.

Credit Suisse and J.P. Morgan are advising Diebold, while Goldman Sachs is advising Wincor.

FT : Hedge fund performance fees decline sharply

Hedge fund performance fees decline sharply

The income hedge funds receive from performance fees has fallen drastically this year, dropping more in the first half of 2015 than in the previous seven years combined.
The fear is the drop in performance fees, coupled with weak returns across the hedge fund industry, could force both new and established funds into closure.

According to Eurekahedge, the data provider, new hedge funds are charging average performance fees of 14.7 per cent, a sharp drop on the 17.1 per cent typically charged in 2014.
Several high-profile hedge funds, including Fortress’s $2bn macro fund and Renaissance Technology’s $1bn computer-driven fund, have already been wound down this year after delivering poor returns to investors.
Jean Keller, chief executive of Argos, the Swiss hedge fund company, said: “The firms that cannot generate returns and demonstrate true investment talent will disappear. The fact that, overall, the industry has not delivered this year and more generally since 2008 will be an enormous challenge.”
Preqin, the data provider, last week predicted this would be the worst year for performance across the hedge fund industry since 2011 as managers struggle to respond to uncertainty over Chinese monetary policy and US interest rate rises.
Mohammad Hassan, senior analyst at Eurekahedge, said: “With increasing competition in the industry, regulatory costs and the current market uncertainty, lower fees could lead to an early demise for otherwise good hedge fund investment models.
“If things deteriorate then you could see closures spike over the next year. Smaller funds will be more at risk, given their business model places a larger reliance on performance fees.”
The drop in performance fees has been sharpest among the popular long/short equity category of hedge funds, according Eurekahedge.
The data provider added that the emergence of mainstream funds offering hedge fund-like strategies has contributed to the decline in performance fees, which have hovered between 17 and 18 per cent since 2009, after falling from 18.8 per cent in 2007.
Troy Gayeski, a partner at SkyBridge, the US fund of hedge funds company, expects more fee reductions in light of weak returns across the industry this year.
“2011 was the watershed year when high-quality managers in attractive strategies began to offer meaningful fee discounts. The trend to lower fees has been firmly in place since then, but this year’s performance will further accelerate that trend,” he said.
Fixed management fees have climbed over the past four years, from 1.6 per cent in 2011 to 1.7 per cent today, but that only matches the average management fee level in 2007.
David Walker, director of European institutional research at Cerulli Associates, the research firm, agreed that smaller hedge funds are particularly at risk.
He said: “A 2.5 per cent average loss by mid-October means many managers will be relying on their [management] fee to finance their operations and pay their staff. This will be painful for smaller hedge funds whose assets alone struggle to generate significant fees.”
However, Michaël Malquarti, co-fund manager at Altin, the Anglo-Swiss fund of hedge funds company, welcomed the reduction in fees. “Launching a hedge fund is always a risky business and will always remain so. It might just be a bit tougher to get rich very quickly, which is not a bad thing.”