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Hedge funds with $35 bln shut down in 2006 |
Date: Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Author: Alistair Barr, MarketWatch
Amaranth, Archeus, Sagamore funds were biggest, survey finds
SAN
FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- U.S. hedge funds that once managed $35
billion shut down last year as more big firms ran into trouble,
according to a survey released on Monday by industry publication
Absolute Return.
At least 83 U.S. hedge funds shut in 2006. The largest was the $9.1
billion multistrategy fund run by Amaranth Advisors LLC, which ranks as
the biggest hedge fund collapse in history, Absolute Return said.
But Amaranth wasn't the only large, multistrategy hedge fund to shut last year.
Archeus Capital Management's Animi Master Fund, which oversaw $2.65
billion at its peak; another run by Sagamore Hill Capital, which once
held about $2.6 billion; and Saranac Capital's Citigroup Multistrategy
Arbitrage/Saranac Arbitrage fund, which topped out at $2.2 billion,
also folded, Absolute Return reported.
Five other funds that once managed at least $1 billion also shut last
year. That's a big change from 2005, when none of the hedge funds that
folded ever had $1 billion in assets, Absolute Return noted.
Still, most of the hedge funds that shut down last year were small:
Almost half of those funds never reached $50 million in assets. That
suggests the $1.4 trillion industry is evolving into a business
dominated by the bigger and bigger firms, Absolute Return said.
Alistair Barr is a reporter for MarketWatch in San Francisco.
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