Prime brokers vie for blue-chip hedge funds |
Date: Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Author: Dealscape
Credit may be hard to come by
if you're a small business owner, but if you're a hedge fund,
particularly of the blue-chip variety, you're probably not complaining.
Prime
brokers, having retrenched following the collapse of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc., are now vying for business from blue-chip hedge funds by
extending credit and cutting fees, according to Reuters.
Prime brokerage is an industry in flux, and the most recent trend is indicative of a larger shift.
Following
the collapse of Lehman Brothers, funds began switching to a multiprime
brokerage model instead of using one main institution. This has forced
the largest prime brokers, which depended on those monogamous
relationships for a sweet chunk of revenue, to explore ways to attract
new business.
In September, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) announced that it had created a combined prime brokerage-custodial platform -- the first of its kind -- "to help fund managers broaden
their trading and assure investors that assets wouldn't be tied up
by a brokerage failure like the one that felled Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc.," Bloomberg explained.
Another result is that smaller funds no longer make economic sense for the largest prime brokers to service.
Writes Peter Curley, managing partner of software firm Nirvana Solutions:
Historically
the group charged with picking up the crumbs left by the leading primes
was a group known as the mini-primes. This term is rapidly becoming
obsolete as the mini-primes now find themselves expanding their
offerings to attract the funds that have been displaced.
Two
important differences remain: 1 - The mini's still use the clearing
services of their larger prime broker brethren, and 2 - more
importantly, their cost-structures evolved in a way that allows them to
offer prime services profitably at this lower end of the market.
These
changes are no doubt positive. The more that boutique firms can compete
in a marketplace that has so long been dominated by only a few names,
the better. And the more aware hedge funds are of risk, the safer it
will be for every investor. - Sara Behunek