Wednesday, February 28, 2007
Can Pension Funds Forgive Hedge Fund Failures?
According to David Hammerstein of Yanni Partners, ("Fewer Second Chances For Failed Fundies" - Hedge Fund Daily, February 27, 2007), "There is an extra standard of caution and care that has to be demonstrated among institutional investors" when it comes to giving failed hedge funds another chance. Noting the significant amount of pension dollars going into alternatives, Hammerstein emphasizes the need to assess risk controls.
He's not alone. Next week, I will join other speakers at the 23rd Annual Risk Management Conference to wax and wane about all sorts of investment-related risks. Hosted by the Chicago Board Options Exchange, Chicago Board of Trade, Chicago Mercantile Exchange and OneChicago LLC, the conference brings together a variety of researchers, investors and consultants.
My presentation is entitled "What Every Institutional Investor Fiduciary Must Know About Derivatives" and will cover investment fiduciary practices related to risk control. (Click here to view the agenda.
Can the risk lion be tamed?
Absolutely - but only if one is willing to open the cage door and acknowledge its presence!
Labels: Hedge Funds, Risk
posted by Susan Mangiero at 2/28/2007 06:12:00 AM
PENSION RISK MATTERSSM focuses on pension financial risk issues from a governance and fiduciary perspective. The goal is to identify important topics, ask thought-provoking questions, examine best practices and encourage meaningful debate about the $10 trillion global pension industry upon which millions of individuals depend. Author and consultant Susan M. Mangiero, Ph.D. is a CFA charter-holder, Accredited Valuation Analyst, Accredited Investment Fiduciary Analyst and certified Financial Risk Manager. Dr. Mangiero combines many years of experience in finance with a keen interest in solving problems and simplifying the complex (
