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Hedge funds hoard $600 billion in cash

Posted Sep 25 2008, 02:10 PM by Minyanville
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While they’re not deviously plotting the demise of the worlds’ most powerful financial institutions, hedge funds are loading up on another popular trade: Cash.

According to the Financial Times, Citigroup estimates hedge funds have recently squirreled away as much as $600 billion in cash, of which $100 billion is held in money market funds -those same money market funds Washington so graciously propped up last week.

With good risk-reward investment opportunities in short supply, hedge funds -- paid handsomely to manage risk -- are relying heavily on the safety of cash to ride out recent market turmoil. It’s telling that for those whose livelihoods depend on beating the market, the investment du jour is no investment at all.

Money market funds, which offer a superior return to most traditional bank accounts, hold more than $3 trillion dollars for retail and institutional investors alike. The funds are offered by private wealth managers, as well as big financial institutions like JPMorgan, Charles Schwabb and even General Electric.

Managers are supposed to invest in safe financial instruments that yield their clients a moderate but secure return. Since there's no chance for principal appreciation, funds compete on this return alone. During the credit boom, certain funds stretched for yield on the back of cheap leverage, investing in riskier and riskier assets, including the now-infamous mortgage-backed securities and other structured debt.

Last week, as if markets needed any more problems, the Reserve Primary Fund announced it had become only the second fund in history to “break the buck.” It turns out that in order to earn investors a higher yield, the fund had purchased debt backed by Lehman Brothers. When Lehman folded, the fund was forced to write off more than $785 million and halt redemptions as clients clamored for cash.

As uncertainty spread about which fund could be next, investors raced to withdraw money from what were feared to be the “next shoe.” That is, until the Treasury Department stepped in to prevent what could have been the bank run to end all bank runs.

Money markets don’t just act as a savings account on steroids; large financial institutions use them to maximize the cash they use to run day-to-day operations. Their willingness to sock away precious dollars at competing banks represents a healthy level of trust, that when they wake up in the morning the money will be right where they left it.

The past week has witnessed an evaporation of that trust, as banks are literally hoarding cash, forgoing returns in the interest of keeping their money close to home. Despite hopes the $700 billion bailout plan will defeat partisan politics in time to rescue the financial system, banks still won’t part with their cash. The recent spike in the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, is evidence of just how pervasive fear is.

Top Stocks blogging partner Todd Harrison is founder & CEO of Minyanville.com. This post was written by Minyanville Contributor Andrew Jeffery.

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Comments

 

The hell with a bailout for the  speculation and high risk taking financial market.  If AIG is too big to fail then surely the US is too BIG to fail.  The world is depending on us as  the engine that drives everything.  Let the Hedge funds and other governments put up the cash to free up credit.  Didnt we bail out Mexico and other nations before?  I say let the markets fall, let the banks and business who cant make it close!

ali,

you've not only over simplified the problem, you don't understand it either.  it is not only about some companies failing; it is about the economy coming to a halt.  jobs lost, houses lost, retirements lost, bullets being more valuable than stocks... etc.  go rent MAD MAX and get some ideas. :)

We can get the money back by taxing the ridiculously high Wall Street incomes and the "death tax". These people have taken money from our economy and squandered it on unproductive ventures as well as their own aggrandizement. Time to fight back.

larry,

i believe you've got it right.  when some people walk away with tens of millions (or hundreds of millions) in some cases, when everyone else is losing their a__ then something with this capitalist model isn't working.  REGULATION is required or the thieves will keep stealing... and yes, let's raise the tax bracket to 50% or more for salaries like that.

The markets will NOT die.  For god's sake...banks can't survive and make money if they dont't LEND money.  It's their ONLY source of income over the long run.  Business will survive because TO survive they will find ways to get the goods and services to their consumers.   Business will have to just get more creative.  Let the strong survive and the weak fall, and get government out of the business world.  They can't get governing right how the hell they gonna get business management right.

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