Unstructured Finance

Hedge fund scorecard 2012: Mortgage masters win, Paulson on bottom again

Mortgage funds roared home with returns of almost 19 percent last year, trouncing all other hedge fund strategies and beating the S&P 500 stock index, which rose 13 percent.

BTG Pactual’s $245.5 million Distressed Mortgage Fund, which invests primarily in distressed non-agency Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities (RMBS), returned about 46 percent for the year, putting it at the top of HSBC Private Bank’s list of the Top 20 performing hedge funds and making it one of 2012′s best performing funds.  Bear in mind the the average hedge fund gained only 6 percent last year.

HSBC’s hedge fund platform features hundreds of funds, including many of the industry’s biggest and best known managers, and the bank releases regular performance updates throughout the year.

In fact the Brazilian bank claimed two spots on HSBC’s Top 20 list, with its Global Emerging Markets and Macro Fund gaining 28 percent. In a year-end note to investors in the distressed mortgage fund, which was reviewed by Reuters,  the portfolio manager said those returns “exceeded even the loftiest of our expectations.”

Like many of last year’s winners, that BTG fund is no behemoth in terms of assets.  (For more on the crop of smaller funds that bested many of the big brand name firms last year, see my colleague Svea Herbst-Bayliss’s story from last week.)

While you were sleeping (the China ISM number came out)

By Katya Wachtel

For Omega Advisors’ Steve Einhorn, the window of sleep-able hours is narrowing.

“One needs to know whats going on around the world. I turn in around midnight so I can monitor what’s going on in China and Japan,” Einhorn, vice chairman at Leon Cooperman’s $7billion fund, said at the Reuters Global Investment Summit last week.  ”A decade ago, did I and most others focus on what’s going on in China? No. Now we wait for the November manufacturing index for China to come out. The day is longer because of that. I am up around 6 in the morning; I review what has gone on overnight in Asia and in Europe. I spend an hour in front of the machine at home, going through data and news releases” before he’s out the door.

This was undoubtedly the most common refrain when we asked some of Wall Street’s savviest money managers and investors how they begin their day, and with what must-read literature, during the week-long summit.

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