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An Elite Tribe Of Hedge Fund Superstars Took A Bruising In This Years Top 100 Rankings

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tiger cub

Bloomberg Markets' ranking of the top 100 large hedge funds in the world is out, and it definitely looks different from last year's list.

One major reason for the difference is that the Tiger Cubs — hedge fund managers trained and seeded by the legendary founder of Tiger Management, Julian Roberston — have slipped from the top spots on the list.

Last year, 37 year-old Chase Coleman was the most successful hedge fund manager, with his long/short equity fund Tiger Global. He's known for having made early investments in tech companies like Facebook and Zynga. This year Coleman ranks #12, the highest of all the Tiger cubs returning 21% compared to last years 45%.

The highest ranked Tiger Cub after Coleman is Maverick Capital's Lee Ainslee, with a gain of 16%.

Tiger Asia's Bill Hwang, who ranked #25 last year, returned money to outside investors in August after a three year insider trading investigation by Hong Kong regulators.

All of those funds are long/short equity funds. That's important to note because this year's top spots are mostly occupied by funds that have either asset backed or mortgage arbitrage strategies.

Check out the Top 2012 100 list here>

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The 10 Hedge Funds With The Biggest Stakes In Apple (AAPL)

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David Einhorn

Tech giant Apple posted disappointed earnings results yesterday and missed analysts' expectations pretty much across the board. 

The stock, which has been a hedge fund favorite for quite some time, was last down more than 11.6% today. 

Here's a rundown of the ten hedge funds with the largest stake in Apple, according to 13F data for the third quarter ended 9/30/2012 compiled by Bloomberg

  • Discovery Capital (Robert Citrone): The 'Tiger Cub' hedge fund held 2,017,052 Apple shares, or a 0.21% stake at the end of Q3.  The fund added 63,100 shares in that quarter, the data shows.
  • D.E. Shaw (David E. Shaw): At the end of Q3, the fund held 1,529,0777 shares or a 0.16% stake.  D.E. Shaw sold 285,887 shares during the third quarter.
  • Coatue Management (Philippe Laffont): The fund had 1,424,738 Apple shares or a 0.15% stake. Coatue sold 89,564 shares in Q3.
  • Adage Capital Partners: As of 9/30/2012, Adage held 1,321,536 million shares in Apple or a 0.14% stake. Adage added 27,600 shares in Q3, the data shows.
  • Tiger Global Management (Chase Coleman): Tiger Global held 1,300,000 shares of a 0.14% stake in Apple,  The hedge fund sold 100,000 shares of Apple in the third quarter.
  • Viking Global (Andreas Halvorsen): Viking Global, which is also a Tiger Cub, owned 1,094,000 Apple shares at the end of Q3 or a 0.12% stake.  Viking added 113,400 shares, the data shows. 
  • Greenlight Capital (David Einhorn): Greenlight owned 1,090,890 shares of Apple or a 0.12% stake.  Greenlight sold 363,630 shares in Q3.
  • Columbus Circle Investors: The fund held 985,491 shares in Apple of a 0.10% stake as of 9/30/2012.  Columbus Circle Investors sold 44,036 shares in the third-quarter.
  • Lone Pine (Stephen Mandel): The 'Tiger Cub' hedge fund held 805,269 shares of Apple at the end of Q3.  Lone Pine sold 617,940 shares of Apple during the third-quarter.
  • Third Point LLC (Daniel Loeb): Third point owned 710,000 shares of Apple or a 0.8% stake as of 9/30/2012.  Third Point had added 285,000 shares of Apple during Q3.

In his Q4 letter to investors yesterday, Einhorn wrote how their "bruised" Apple stake hurt their fourth quarter performance.  The fund was down 4.9% in Q4.

Einhorn also said that with Apple shares sliding in fourth quarter they erased their gains from the third quarter.  However, he said he used that opportunity to repurchase shares they sold in the third quarter.  

Also, as a reminder, hedge funds only have to disclose their long holdings in 13F filings with the SEC.  Fourth quarter 13Fs will be out in mid-February.

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The Fabulous Life Of 'Tiger Cub' Chase Coleman—The World's Youngest Billionaire Hedge Funder

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Baby Tiger

Charles Payson Coleman III, who goes by "Chase," was born into so-called "old money" and he's made himself quite a bit of new money as well.

The 37 year-old "Tiger Cub" runs Tiger Global hedge fund along with Feroz Dewan. 

According to ForbesColeman has an estimated net-worth of $1.4 billion. He ranks 1,031 out of the world's billionaires. 

Coleman, who lives in a swanky Manhattan apartment and is married to a wealthy and attractive blonde, definitely lives a fabulous life. 

Coleman grew up in one of America's wealthiest zip codes.

Coleman was raised in Glen Head, an affluent area on New York's Long Island.

Source: Bloomberg Markets Magazine



His father is a corporate attorney and his mother is an interior designer.

Coleman’s father is a partner at corporate law firm Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP in New York. His mother owns an interior design business.

Source: Bloomberg Markets Magazine 



Fun Fact: Coleman is a descendant of Peter Stuyvesant, the last Dutch governor of New York.

You might remember from history class, that Stuyvesant is the man who built the wall that Wall Street is named after.

Source: Bloomberg Markets Magazine



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Tiger Global Invests $50 Million In Blogging Platform WordPress.com

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Matt Mullenweg

Tiger Global has invested $50 million in web developer company Automattic, the parent company of WordPress.com. 

From Automattic's president/founder Matt Mullenweg:

Anyway, wanted to get in front of the news that will inevitably come out in the next week or two (hi Kara!): there has been a large secondary transaction in Automattic stock, about $50M worth. “Secondary” means that it’s existing stockholders, like the earliest investors or employees, selling stock to another investor versus money going into the company (“primary”). It was led by Lee Fixel at Tiger Global, one of the behind-the-scenes quiet geniuses that has previously invested in SurveyMonkey, Facebook, LinkedIn, Palantir, Square, Warby Parker… Automattic is healthy, generating cash, and already growing as fast as it can so there’s no need for the company to raise money directly — we’re not capital constrained. The minority of stockholders that elected to participate are holding on to the vast majority of their shares. We’re building an independent company that’s going to be a growing part of the fabric of the web for many years to come, so allowing early investors to lock in some returns releases any short-term pressure there might be on the company for a liquidity event and allows us to focus fully on the long road ahead.

This news comes the same week that Yahoo! announced it's buying Tumblr for $1.1 billion.

Also, WordPress is celebrating its 10th birthday next week.  

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Scientists Have Solved The Mystery Of The White Tiger's Coat

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white tiger

By: Tanya Lewis, LiveScience Staff Writer 
Published: 05/23/2013 12:21 PM EDT on LiveScience

The strikingly beautiful, milky coats of white tigers are caused by a single change in a known pigment gene, a new study finds.

Since their discovery in the Indian jungle centuries ago, white tigers, a variant of Bengal tigers (Panthera tigris tigris), have had a certain mystique. Captive white tigers have been inbred to preserve the recessive white coat trait, leading some to speculate the trait is a genetic defect.

But the genetic basis of tiger whiteness was not known. (A recessive trait will only show up if the individual gets two genes for that trait, one each from mom and dad.)

White tigers have now disappeared from the wild.

"The white tiger represents part of the natural genetic diversity of the tiger that is worth conserving, but is now seen only in captivity," study author Shu-Jin Luo of China's Peking University said in a statement. [Iconic Cats: All 9 Subspecies of Tiger]

Luo and colleagues are calling for a captive management program to maintain both white and orange Bengal tigers, and possibly to reintroduce the cats back into the wild.

To find out the genetics responsible for white tigers' creamy hue, Luo's team mapped the genomes of a family of 16 tigers — both white and orange — in China's Chimelong Safari Park. The researchers also sequenced the full genomes of the three parent tigers. They validated their findings in 130 unrelated tigers.

The team focused on a pigment gene called SLC45A2, which is linked to light coloration in modern Europeans as well as horses, chickens and fish. The white tigers carried a variant of this gene that inhibits the production of red and yellow pigments without affecting black pigments, results showed.

The gene variant explains why the majestic cats lack the rich orange shade of their feline cousins but still have their famous dark stripes. The findings are detailed today (May 23) in the journal Current Biology.

Now that the researchers have identified the white color gene, they want to investigate how these two color varieties, white and orange, have survived through evolution.

Records of white tigers in India date back to the 1500s, Luo and colleagues say. They appear able to survive in the wild, as their primary prey, such as deer, are probably colorblind. The animals were widely hunted, and the last known free-ranging white tiger was shot in 1958. Habitat destruction probably contributed to the cats' decline.

Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescienceFacebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

SEE ALSO: Follow Business Insider: Science on Facebook >

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How To Remove A Four-Pound Hairball From A 400-Pound Tiger

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Ty the tiger

Ty the tiger had a tummy problem. His caregivers couldn't figure out why he wasn't eating.

Ty is 17 years old and lives in Florida at Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation in Seminole, Fla. — a non-profit that cares for animals that have been seized by law enforcement.

When he stopped eating, he was taken to veterinarian Brian Luria, who took a look down his throat with a camera and took X-rays and ultrasounds of the big cat's belly.

The tests showed a huge hairball, and Luria knew he had to call in the big guns — veterinary surgeon Mike Reems of BluePearl Veterinary Partners. He worked with Dr. Don Woodman of Animal Hospital of Northwood.

Before the surgery, Ty was having trouble eating. The hairball blocking his stomach was so large the veterinarians said he needed surgery.



Dr. Mike Reems scrubs in to remove Ty's hairball.



Ty the tiger on the operating table. He was put out and shaved before the doctors cut him open.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

AIRPORT TRAFFIC WATCH: A Helicopter Partly Owned By Tiger Global And Bon Jovi Is Headed To The Hamptons

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Hamptons airport

The Fourth of July is almost here and that means Wall Streeters will be heading east to the Hamptons. 

They won't all be driving or taking the train or the jitney. Instead, some of them will fly just because they can.

We've been keeping an eye on the airport traffic at the East Hampton Airport (KHTO) via FlightAware.com.

There's a lot of activity there and we expect it will be picking up more in the coming days. 

What's more is you can also look up who owns the plane or helicopter on the FAA's data base using the "n-number."

During our search, we found a Bell 430, a twin-engine helicopter (N432HF), partly owned by hedge fund/private equity firm Tiger Global.  Tiger Global's founder Chase Coleman is not on the flight, though. 

It's scheduled to take off at 5:23 p.m. EDT from Newark and land at 6:17 p.m. EDT, according to FlightAware.com. 

The other owners of the helicopter include Wells Fargo Bank Northwest NA Trustee, Mark B. Grier, Greenfield Rotorcraft Holdings, Joseph S. Plumeri, Park Avenue Helicopter, Bristol-Meyers Squibb and Air Bon Jovi, FAA records show. You can see photos of the helicopter here >

Check out the helicopter's FAA registration (Click to enlarge):  

Tiger Global helicopter

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Tiger Cub Philippe Laffont Describes The Ultimate Two-Pronged Path To Success

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Philippe Laffont is a Tiger Cub, a wildly successful tech hedge fund manager, and an MIT grad. In another awesome interview with OneWire for their Open Door video series, he explains the path he took to get there.

In a few words — It wasn't typical.

After graduating from MIT, he began his career in management consulting at McKinsey & Co. Three years later, he met his wife-to-be and moved to Spain to work for her family. It was the boom days of the 90s and during this period, Laffont and his brother began buying technology stocks in their spare time.

“Our stocks were going up—we confused luck with skill,” Laffont recounts, “But nevertheless, it gave us the passion.” As a result, one year later he moved to New York to pursue a career in tech investing.

With no network in New York City, Laffont found it challenging to get hired, eventually taking a job working for free at a small mutual fund. By pure luck, Laffont wound up meeting with Julian Robertson very briefly through a friend of a friend.

“I went straight to the point…I said I want to work for you, I know about technology, and I want to pick tech names.” Robertson sent him on to interview, and he was hired by Tiger Management shortly thereafter. Eventually he started Coatue Management and the rest is history.

“The career advice I would have,” Laffont says, “is you need to do two things when you graduate. You need to do them both passionately. You need to do one thing passionately that is the obvious thing that you are supposed to do after you graduate…At the same time…you need to do one thing completely off the beaten path, but also passionately.”

Watch Part I of Laffont’s interview below and check back tomorrow for Part II of the interview, in which Laffont discusses his investment philosophy and how to get hired at a hedge fund today.

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Tiger Global Sold All Of Its Apple And Google Shares In Q2

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sumatra tiger

Tiger Global, the tech-oriented hedge fund run by Chase Coleman and Feroz Dewan, has published its 13F quarterly filing with the SEC. 

During the second quarter ended June 30, the hedge fund sold all of its Apple shares.  Tiger Global held 260,000 shares of the tech giant's stock in the first quarter. 

Tiger Global also exited its Google stake.  They held 300,000 shares in Q1. 

They also significantly pared back their stake in Groupon during the second quarter. As of June 30, the fund held 18,000,000 shares of Groupon compared with 65,000,000 in the first quarter, the filing shows. 

Fund managers only have to disclose their long equity holdings in 13Fs.



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Julian Robertson On What He Looks For In Hedge Fund Talent

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Julian Roberston

Legendary hedge fund manager Julian Robertson rarely talks about his early-life career, but in a recent interview with Skiddy von Stade, CEO and founder of the finance career site OneWire, he got candid about his younger days, and touched on some of the key traits he looks for in hiring talent.  

Robertson founded Tiger Management, one of the world’s first great hedge funds. It reached $22 billion in assets at its peak. 

Since Tiger closed in 2000, Robertson has helped seed approximately 40 hedge funds, many of which were founded by former Tiger employees, who are known today as “Tiger cubs.”  These individuals have started some of today’s most successful hedge funds, and include names such as Philippe Laffont of Coatue Management and Lee Ainslie of Maverick Capital, both of whom also appear in OneWire interviews.

When asked about the success of his former protégés, Robertson responds humbly, insisting, “I’ve loved all the people I’ve been associated with.  They’re terrific, and I’m very proud of these people.  They would have done well, whomever they went with.” 

But how has Robertson always found such great talent?

“The most important things [to look for in] hedge fund managers,” Robertson said, “is that they are smart and they are honest.  Close behind that is probably competitiveness … Someone who won’t lose doesn’t lose.” 

Check out the full interview with Julian Robertson below, and subscribe to OneWire’s series to learn about more great interviews in the coming weeks, including Sallie Krawcheck, head of 85 Broads and former head of Merrill Lynch and Smith Barney, and Ken Langone, financial backer and co-founder of Home Depot. 

Now for Robertson:

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A Pack Of Hedge Funds Is Descending On Silicon Valley With Loads Of Money

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Tigers Hunting

(Reuters) - As increasing numbers of technology companies defer initial public offerings, one influential Wall Street investor has stepped up to the plate in Silicon Valley.

Tiger Global Management, part private equity manager and part hedge fund manager, has emerged as among the most prominent of a growing club of Wall Street financiers now eyeing technology start-ups. They include hedge funds such as Coatue Management and Valiant Capital Management; private equity groups such as Rizvi Traverse Management and TPG; and mutual fund giants BlackRock, Fidelity and T. Rowe Price.

Their traditional focus on larger companies in late stages of financing has partially given way to a search for young companies that have proven their chops and attracted investments from leading venture firms, but have not yet held richly priced initial public offerings.

Despite strong public markets that have brought outsized valuations for recent IPOs such as message service Twitter, and security company FireEye, many companies are delaying going public and seeking private funding instead. And the bankrolling these days is coming as much from hedge funds and other Wall Street asset managers as from Silicon Valley money.

Tiger Global, a so-called "Tiger Cub" because of its ties to investor Julian Robertson and his once-high flying hedge fund Tiger Management, has quietly taken one of the largest positions of the newcomers, technology investors say.

"They're filling an important need in the ecostystem to provide capital for companies that are not going public right now," said Peter Levine, a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, a venture-capital firm that co-invests with Tiger.

Nontraditional late-stage investors, including Altimeter Capital, Coatue Management, Fidelity Investments, Maverick Capital, T. Rowe Price, Tiger Global, and Valiant Capital, invested $2.5 billion in 39 deals last year, up 26 percent from 2012, according to consultants CB Insights.

ROBERTSON PROTEGE

Founded in 2000 with $25 million by Chase Coleman, a protégé of Robertson's, Tiger has earned the respect of Silicon Valley denizens, in part through its highly profitable investment in Facebook.

At the time of that company's 2012 IPO, Tiger Global owned some 54 million shares. The firm made about $1 billion on its Facebook stock, according to a person familiar with the matter.

While the firm has long been active in venture-backed companies, particularly internationally, it has recently stepped up the pace in Silicon Valley. It started investing in U.S. venture-backed companies in 2008, soon funding big names such as Facebook, data-analysis company Palantir, professional network LinkedIn and gaming company Zynga

Tiger Global's Silicon Valley deals tend to come from its venture-growth funds, which have total capital commitments of $7 billion, or about half the group's total. It is targeting an April 1 close and commitments of $1-$1.5 billion for the latest fund in the group, which is in line with the size of the previous fund, according to documents provided to Reuters.

Tiger also manages technology-focused hedge funds and long-only funds, meaning the funds don't place short bets. That public-equity business also has about $7 billion in committed capital.

People familiar with the matter say that Lee Fixel, who co-runs Tiger's venture-growth business with Scott Shleifer, has been particularly active in the firm's venture-backed deals. Fixel sits on the board of Dave Goldberg's online survey business SurveyMonkey, which Tiger first backed early last year in a $444 million equity investment that valued the company at $1.35 billion.

Just this year, Tiger has led investments in data business Actifio; ticketing service Eventbrite; and business-lender OnDeck, as well as participating in an investment in credit marketplace Credit Karma. Last year, it led investments in eyeglasses company Warby Parker; jobs site Glassdoor; online real-estate company Redfin; neighborhood social-network Nextdoor; blogging tool WordPress's parent, Automattic; and an earlier investment in Eventbrite.

Coleman, 38, plays an active role on the growth-equity side of Tiger's business but like Fixel prefers to stay under the radar, a fund investor with Tiger told Reuters. He joined Robertson's Tiger Management after graduating from Williams College.

MODEL'S MORPHING

Traditionally, startups accept venture funding for the first few years of their lives, then sell to a bigger company or seek a listing on the stock exchange. If they need later-stage funding, they turn to a growth-equity firm rooted in venture capital, such as Institutional Venture Partners, Meritech, or Technology Crossover Ventures.

Now, those firms sometimes find themselves going up against the newer entrants, in particular Tiger, as they seek to provide new funding rounds for start-up companies.

Tiger's betting spree comes at a time when many public-market investors believe much of a company's traditional "pop," or stock-price appreciation in the days and months after its IPO is less pronounced than in past years. That's because greater valuations are reached on private markets than in the past.

At least 30 privately-owned U.S. venture-backed companies hold valuations of $1 billion or more, according to valuations data tracked by Reuters.

Several are Tiger-backed plays, such as SurveyMonkey, Evernote, Actifio and payments-company Square, whose investors also include Rizvi Traverse. Others are backed by different non-traditional venture investors, such as cloud-storage company Dropbox, whose investors include BlackRock and T. Rowe Price.

If firms like Tiger waited until the companies went public to invest, they would be losing out on a large portion of the gains, entrepreneurs say.

And there's benefit to the young firms, too.

Actifio chief executive Ash Ashutosh expects Tiger can draw on its experience with other growth companies to help steer his company successfully through an IPO, when that day comes.

"He's a technologist, he was an analyst, he understands tech very well," Ashutosh said about Coleman. "He's a very passionate person who invests in companies he truly loves."

Veteran investors recall a similar time in the late 1990s when investments usually reserved for venture-capital firms attracted heavy interest from other investors. For example, Fidelity said in early 2000 it had invested $300 million over five years in emerging companies in software, networking and telecommunications.

Ironically, Julian Robertson shuttered his Tiger Management funds in March 2000, partly because they were underperforming after investing in "old-economy" stocks rather than Internet highflyers. Just as he was closing, the Internet bubble's collapse was beginning.

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HEDGE FUND MANAGER: 3 Things Are Hammering Momentum Stocks Right Now

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hammer nail pound

"Tiger Cub" hedge fund manager Chris Shumway spoke at the Ira Sohn Conference about the recent volatility we've seen in the high-growth, momentum stocks.

He identified three things slamming the sector:

1. The Fed: Fed Chair Janet Yellen isn't providing a lot of guidance as to how rates will be managed.
2. Putin:"Risks are real...Dangerous game of chicken being played on a global stage." He's afraid of a real election in Ukraine. If we have an election in Ukraine, it will be pro EU instead of pro Russia, he said.  "We are worried. We think hedging is required, this is one of the big risks in the world."
3. China: Real GDP, industrial investments, exports all in decline.

Shumway presented a chart called the Hammered Index, which included a basket of momentum stocks that have been hammered this year. He cited Workday and Amazon as examples.

We haven't heard much from him since he closed his Shumway Capital Partners a few years ago. The fund had managed about $8 billion at its peak. He's running a family office fund these days.

His best investment idea at the conference was long Moody's. 

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Guys Are Posing With Tigers On Tinder In Hopes Of Attracting More Women

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Tinder Tiger

In a world filled with dating apps, it's overwhelming to think it could be your picture standing between you and the future love of your life.

So what's a guy to do to make sure his snap catches the eye of the ladies?

Pose with a tiger, apparently.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the big cats are all the rage on dating sites, especially location-based match machine Tinder, where "users estimate they encounter tigers in one out of every 10 profiles they view."

There's even a popular Tumblr — Tinder Guys With Tigers— where people can submit the photos they see of men exercising this new trend.

28-year-old Nate Levin told The WSJ that the photo he uploaded of himself with his arm slung around a Bengal tiger was the money shot, explaining that women seem to love travelers.

But when interest from the opposite sex would wane after a date or two, it wasn't because of him, "it was because of the tiger."

"I had no idea that it was a trend," he told The WSJ.

Women, on the other hand, are sick of the trend, likening a man with a photo of himself and a tiger to a man who uses mundane phrases in his profile like, "I love to laugh" or "family is very important to me."

According to The WSJ,

The anti-tiger backlash is in full swing on several dating sites—many users make comments on their profiles to indicate they don't need a tiger photo to make an impression, while others are flocking to different animals, including lions, elephants and dolphins, to stand out. 

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A 'Tiger Cub' hedge fund seeded by Julian Robertson is closing

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Ty the tiger

Tiger Veda Management, a so-called Tiger Cub hedge fund, is shutting down after 11 years, according to a memo sent to clients from the fund's CEO.

The fund will return 80% of the capital on December 31, the memo dated November 27 said. The remainder of the capital will be returned at the end of the first quarter of 2016.

Manish Chopra launched Tiger Veda in 2005 after leaving Julian Robertson's Tiger Management. Robertson, the original "Tiger," has seeded a number of hedge funds.

At the end of the third quarter, the fund was valued at around $280 million, according to a 13-F filing.

In the memo, Chopra expressed his frustration with finding "meaningful" long-investment ideas in this bull market.

"Finding a new 'value' long investment has become a needle in a haystack process, and low hanging fruit are few and far between," Chopra wrote.

He continued: "Market wide, value stocks are of parochial interest and have far underperformed the more sexy growth, and levered & re-levered names. Value investments have become better bargains as each day passes, existing in the purgatory of 'value trap'-land."

Chopra continued to explain that their long bias led them to hold "far more cash than we would like."

He added: "I viewed this cash holding as a wellspring of future outsized returns post the inevitable sell offs after exuberant markets caved in. We have witnessed and executed on this over the last five years, when we deployed cash balances to buy when others were selling and intrinsic value presented itself at a discount."

mandalaWith the market rising for the last seven years, many long/short equity funds became more long-biased.

"Our long bias with lower gross exposure strategy evolved in conjunction with a rising equity market post 2009, as shorting stocks became a different game than when we launched the fund. Today it is betting against the house, with fellow hedge funds, corporates, bankers and governments, all being inimical to profits," he wrote. "With cash balances increasing even above recent history in 2015, we have disabused ourselves of the notion that we are best served to wait it out patiently."

Those things are what led Chopra to close the fund. The decision to close did not sound easy, either.

"While making this decision, I've sometimes felt like the Buddhist who after carefully and patiently creating his elaborate sand mandala over a lengthy period of time, destroys it in a matter of minutes," he wrote.

A call seeking comment from Tiger Veda was not immediately returned.

ValueWalk was the first to report about the fund's closure.

Here's the full letter:

Dear Partner,

After close to eleven years of managing Tiger Veda, and twenty years in the hedge fund business, I have decided to close the Funds. This was a difficult decision for me, but a confluence of factors confirms that this is the right time for this action.

In anticipation of closing the Funds, we have largely completed the liquidation process and plan on returning approximately 80% of capital on December 31st, and the balance shortly thereafter, with the final date of March 31st, 2016. I will keep you updated periodically throughout this process.

I have been frustrated by the paucity of meaningful long ideas in a bull market nearing the completion of its 7th straight year. Valuations are efficient or ebullient with little room for error priced in, even as risks to global economic growth build up. Finding a new ‘value’ long investment has become a needle in a haystack process, and low hanging fruit are few and far between. Market wide, value stocks are of parochial interest and have far underperformed the more sexy growth, and levered & re-levered names. Value investments have become better bargains as each day passes, existing in the purgatory of ‘value trap’-land. Because of our long bias this has led us to hold far more cash than we would like, and more than we have done so for the previous decade. I viewed this cash holding as a wellspring of future outsized returns post the inevitable sell offs after exuberant markets caved in. We have witnessed and executed on this over the last five years, when we deployed cash balances to buy when others were selling and intrinsic value presented itself at a discount. Our long bias with lower gross exposure strategy evolved in conjunction with a rising equity market post 2009, as shorting stocks became a different game than when we launched the fund. Today it is betting against the house, with fellow hedge funds, corporates, bankers and governments, all being inimical to profits. With cash balances increasing even above recent history in 2015, we have disabused ourselves of the notion that we are best served to wait it out patiently. This realization along with a few other personal and business related factors have all contributed to my decision to return capital.

I consider our investors to be true partners, and as such built a meritocratic organization with an ethos of disciplined process, transparency, accountability, a focus on critical thinking, and quality independent research. I have learned a great deal from all of you. I very much appreciate your candor and your desire to know what you own, as well as your willingness to test us on our assumptions and encourage us down the path we took together. While making this decision, I’ve sometimes felt like the Buddhist who after carefully and patiently creating his elaborate sand mandala over a lengthy period of time, destroys it in a matter of minutes. That action is performed with a view of manifold long term benefits, and I similarly expect the same with this decision. Many of our partners have become wonderful friends during this journey, and that has truly been the icing on the cake. Thanks also to the Big Tiger and his cubs for including us in the den. I look forward to staying in touch.

With humility and gratitude,

Manish

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NOW WATCH: An early investor in Airbnb and Uber explains why he started buying bitcoin in 2009

At birth a baby kangaroo is 100,000 times smaller than an adult — here’s how other animals compare


Amazing hidden camera footage captures rare newborn Sumatran tiger cubs

London Zoo is counting its 18,000 animals one by one

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Staff at London Zoo started counting 18,000 animals as part of their annual stocktake.

The Zoo has 712 species and it takes around a week for each individual animal to be counted. However, tiny creatures such as ants and locusts are counted in colonies.

"It's an opportunity for all of the animal teams to go out and make a record of how many individual animals we've got on each section. It's part of our zoo licensing requirement to take an inventory of the animals," said Zoological Society London manager Mark Habben.

Produced by Claudia Romeo.

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Lone Pine Capital stock-pickers explain why they're investing in Tiffany and Nintendo and how they value 'disruptors' like Beyond Meat

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FILE - In this April 3, 2016 file photo, Roman Reigns holds up the championship belt after defeating Triple H during WrestleMania 32 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.  Reigns says his leukemia is in remission and he’ll be returning to the WWE ring.  The 33-year-old, whose real name is Leati Joseph Anoai, made the announcement Monday, Feb. 25, 2019 at a WWE Raw event in Atlanta. (Jae S. Lee/The Dallas Morning News via AP)

  • $19 billion hedge fund manager Lone Pine Capital categorizes companies as young disruptors,  disrupted, or "compounders" when deciding whether to go long or short.
  • Young disruptors include recently IPO-ed companies that require a "high degree of creativity" to value them, Lone Pine Capital said in an investor letter seen by Business Insider. 
  • "Compounders"— companies that Lone Pine considers undervalued — include World Wrestling Entertainment, Nintendo, and Tiffany & Co.  
  • Lone Cypress and Lone Cascade, the firm's long-short fund and long-only fund, are both up around 24% for the year. The letter, dated July 15, also said fund-of-funds Lone Juniper closed July 10. 
  • Click here for more BI Prime stories. 

What do Nintendo, World Wrestling Entertainment, and Tiffany & Co have in common?

$19 billion Lone Pine Capital, a legendary stock-picking hedge fund, owns shares in all of them and sees "long runways" for their growth, according to a recent investor letter seen by Business Insider.

Lone Pine Capital has divided the market into three segments: young disruptors such as Beyond Meat; disrupted firms like banks, ad agencies and legacy technology companies; and "compounders"— like WWE and Tiffany. 

The firm is long the compounders, short the companies it considers already disrupted, and both long and short  young disruptors, according to the letter, and it thinks judgement about the overall market misses the "nuance of underlying extremes." 

Founded by Stephen Mandel in the late 1990s, Lone Pine Capital is one of the few hedge fund firms that does not focus on a specific industry or theme. Mandel — one of several "tiger cubs" who worked at Tiger Management before going on to run high-profile funds — stepped back from day-to-day portfolio management in January.

Through the end of the second quarter, both the firm's long-short fund, Cypress, and long-only fund, Cascade, are up roughly 24% for the year, according to the letter, versus roughly 7% for the overall market.  Lone Pine Capital declined to comment.  

See more: We got a copy of billionaire hedge-fund manager Seth Klarman's letter to investors — here are his 5 biggest warnings about the economy

The letter, signed by Mandel and managing directors Mala Gaonkar, David Craver, and Kelly Granat, said young disruptors almost always lose money, "sometimes lots of it," and that "expectations embedded in their share prices are high."

Companies the firm considers young disruptors include Wayfair, Sea, Chewy, Beyond Meat, Canopy Growth, and more. The letter said Lone Pine Capital is both long and short several such companies, though it did not list any specific investments. 

The disrupted companies meanwhile are facing challenges to their long-established models, and the firm is short many of those companies, the letter said. 

"Being right about the pace of decline is critical to shorting success here," the letter said. 

See more: A $10.5 billion fund at Canyon Partners has loaded up on cash amid a shaky stock market

Companies that fall under "compounders" have a proven business model now, but might have originally been a disruptor. "Examples include credit card networks, data analytics companies, Internet platforms, and vertical software leaders," the letter states. 

The firm is particularly interested in companies it believes fall in this category because "the power of the business platforms is often underestimated," despite being well-known and established. The letter named companies like Activision, Axis Bank, Melrose Industries, Nintendo, Shiseido, Tiffany, Union Pacific, and WWE.

Lone Pine Capital owns shares in all of those "compounders," and said each should improve profitability in the coming years through "overdue management actions" on costs, distribution, and products. 

The letter also said that the firm closed the  fund-of-funds known as Lone Juniper on July 10 after 19 years, and the person in charge of it, Frank Knapp, will take on a risk and analytics role on one of its other funds. 

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Humans are beating machines, and Pershing Square and Greenlight are crushing it. Here's how hedge funds performed in the first half.

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  • Bill Ackman's Pershing Square, David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital, and $1.4 billion 12 West Capital Management are some of the hedge funds that are flying high so far this year. 
  • Quants haven't exactly flopped, but they also haven't kept up with several funds making concentrated bets.
  • Funds that have struggled include BlueMountain Capital and those making volatility bets.
  • Click here for more BI Prime stories.

The market-beating human stock-picker is far from dead. 

Quant funds now dominate hedge fund flows and assets, but the biggest winners midway through 2019 are funds run by old-school investors who take large, concentrated bets. 

Systematic strategies haven't exactly flopped, and still attracted significant assets. But stock-pickers like Bill Ackman, David Einhorn, and Gabriel Plotkin turned in a blistering first half, proving the era of the star investor is not completely over. 

 The average hedge fund returned 7.58% through the first half of the year, according to HFRI. Keep reading to see which funds soared, which ones flopped and which ones were in between. 

Soared: Concentrated stock-pickers

After a rough 2018, Bill Ackman promised to "return to his roots," but his performance so far this year is something we have never seen before. 

The billionaire founder of Pershing Square posted returns of 45% through the second quarter, the highest mark ever for the fund in the first half.

Bouncing back from a year when "we didn't get anything right," Greenlight founder David Einhorn has posted returns of 17.4% through the first half of 2019. The noted Tesla short recently added long positions in three stocks: DuPont spin-off Chemours, department store Dillard's, and gambling company Scientific Games.

An under-the-radar big winner through the first half was 12 West Capital Management, a $1.4 billion hedge fund founded by Joel Ramin, a former analyst for Roberto Mignone's Bridger Capital.

Ramin's fund has returned 46.1% through the first half, according to an investor letter of a fund-of-funds that allocated money to 12 West. Filings show that the top 10 positions in Ramin's portfolio make up more than 90% of it. 



Flopped: Blue Mountain Capital

BlueMountain's flagship Credit Alternatives fund is down roughly 4% through the end of June, and the $18.5 billion manager has been under pressure to reassess its approach.

Affiliated Managers Group, an asset manager that invests in hedge funds like BlueMountain and AQR, said on a recent earnings call that it is working with BlueMountain to bring up its profitability by year-end. The firm has already cut strategies that it deemed unprofitable this year, like its long-short equity and systematic equity efforts. 

"As a multi-strategy asset manager, BlueMountain Capital Management continuously assesses and adjusts its investment and business strategies to address clients' needs, respond to changing markets and optimize performance," the firm said in a statement.

BlueMountain has hired 10 people over the last 12 months to focus on areas where the firm believes it can grow, according to a source close to the firm. These areas include fixed income, healthcare, infrastructure, and collateralized loan obligations. 

See more: BlueMountain's flagship fund is losing money so far this year even as the rest of the industry surges, and it's just the latest blow for the hedge fund



In between: Quants

Performance at well-known quant funds like Winton Group, Renaissance Technologies, and D.E. Shaw has not been bad this year, but it also hasn't reached the eye-popping returns they put up in the past. 

Renaissance's Institutional Diversified Alternatives fund is roughly flat through the second quarter. The better-known Renaissance International Equity fund is up 5.3%, but still below the average hedge fund and the broader market. 

Winton Group's eponymous fund has posted a return of 2.74% through mid-July as founder David Harding has rewritten the firm's quantitative models. D.E. Shaw's Composite fund, which includes discretionary stock-picking teams as well as quant strategies, is up roughly 6% for the year through the end of June. 

Systematica BlueMatrix fund, which runs more than $700 million, is down more than 6% on the year, an investor document showed. The firm declined to comment. 

See more: Inside D.E. Shaw's special relationship with Blackstone, which shines a light on the power the hedge fund industry's largest investors have



Soared: Proteges

Proteges like Philippe Laffont, Daniel Sundheim, Gabriel Plotkin, and Jimmy Levin had a great run in the first half of 2019. 

Past analysts at Julian Robertson's Tiger Management like Laffont of Coatue, Chase Coleman of Tiger Global, and O. Andreas Halvorsen of Viking Global Investors all notched returns in the teens or higher, and the next generation of Tiger Cubs also seem to be off to a good start.

Daniel Sundheim, who founded D1 Capital Partners last year after working at Viking,posted returns of nearly 20% through 2019's first six months, and Lone Pine Capital has not slowed down despite founder Stephen Mandel, a one-time Robertson analyst, stepping away from day-to-day portfolio management in January.

Gabriel Plotkin, founder of Melvin Capital and a former money-manager for Steve Cohen, has been one of the top managers this year, while Och-Ziff CIO Jimmy Levin led his flagship fund to a roughly 12% return.

See more: Inside D.E. Shaw's special relationship with Blackstone, which shines a light on the power the hedge fund industry's largest investors have



Flopped: Volatility seekers

Funds that put up big numbers during volatile times can run into trouble when things are calm. And, as a recent Wall Street Journal headline put it, markets are eerily quiet right now

Ionic Capital, a multi-billion-dollar fund founded by Highbridge Capital alums, has lost nearly 32% through the first six months of the year, according to an investor document. The firm's investment strategy is to go long on volatility through options in different asset classes, including commodities, equities, and credit. 

The firm did not respond to requests for comment.

Another well-known volatility fund, Artemis Capital,  lost 8.91% through the end of June in its $200 million Vega fund. 

"The goal of the strategy is to make large asymmetric gains during periods of crisis and volatility," a recent investor letter said. The fund, run by Christopher Cole, finished 2018 flat after posting a 3.15% return in December, a month marked by market turmoil that wiped out many hedge fund returns for the entire year.  



In Between: The biggest launch

Fewer hedge funds are launching and existing ones are cutting their fees. Still, Michael Gelband's ExodusPoint launched last year with $8 billion — the most assets ever for a new fund — and a fee structure that requires investors to pay for everything but the art in the office.

The returns have been below average so far — Exodus returned 3.32% through the first half of the year after posting returns of less than 1% in 2018. To be sure, judging returns only 12 months in can be premature, especially when a firm has a large pool of assets to deploy.

But other 2018 launches like D1 Capital Partners and Steve Cohen's Point72 have outperformed Gelband. He's also been outpaced by Millennium, his former firm from which he has poached several executives and portfolio managers. 

Izzy Englander's firm has returned 4.7% through the end of June, an investor document signed by Englander and senior managing director John Novogratz said. 



Maverick Capital's human stock pickers are shining, but quant strategies at Lee Ainslie's $8.8 billion fund are in the red and lagging their peers

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  • The $8.8 billion hedge fund Maverick Capital's fundamental fund line — which includes three funds with different amounts of leverage — has beaten the average hedge fund through the first three quarters of 2019, while the firm's quant funds have lost money.
  • The two quant funds have lost 5.9% and 9.8% through the end of September. The average quant fund has had positive returns of 6.25%, according to Hedge Fund Research.
  • Human stock pickers have been leading the pack this year, with big names like Bill Ackman and David Einhorn posting big numbers, while quants like Winton and Systematica have lagged behind.
  • Click here for more BI Prime stories.

Maverick Capital's long-running fundamental stock-picking funds have outperformed peers in 2019. Meanwhile, the $8.8 billion manager's quant strategies are just hoping to break even by the end of the year.

An up-and-down first half of the year for quant funds — when managers like Winton, Systematica, and Renaissance Technologies posted returns that veered from mediocre to poor — was made worse in September, when a massive shift in momentum stocks hit many computer-driven funds. An investor document from Lee Ainslie's Dallas-based firm shows Maverick was not spared. 

The document says that the two quant funds at Maverick, which manage a combined $930 million, lost 3.7% and 5.7% in the third quarter, and are down 5.9% and 9.8% for the year. That comes as the average quant has returned 6.25% through the end of September, according to Hedge Fund Research, less than the 8% return for the average equity hedge fund on the year.

Read more: Izzy Englander just landed a quant team that was managing hundreds of millions for billionaire Michael Platt

But the firm's fundamental funds, which have been running since Ainslie started the firm in the early 1990s, have all made money this year. The Maverick LDC, the Maverick Levered, and the Maverick Long Enhanced posted returns of 10.4%, 20.4%, and 23.4%, respectively, through the end of September. Together, the three funds manage over $3.8 billion.

Maverick appears to have avoided the hits several of its stock-picking peers took when momentum crashed, as all of its fundamental funds were positive for the third quarter. Comparatively, Tiger Cub Coatue fell by 5%, thanks to the crash, and Steve Cohen's Point72 lost money because of the out-of-the-blue market shift, according to Bloomberg.

Ainslie's quant funds have not matched the yearly returns of the firm's stock-picking strategies so far, according to the document. In the four years the two quant strategies have been running, annualized returns for both sit below 6%. The lowest annualized return for the fundamental strategies is 10.4%. 

A spokesman for Maverick declined to comment.

Read more: WorldQuant's Igor Tulchinsky just guaranteed his team 75% of last year's performance bonus to soothe nerves as quant funds get slammed

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