Ospraie, the world's biggest commodities hedge fund firm, with $7 billion under management, recovered from that crisis -- only to be hit by another much less severe downdraft in July and August, when the U.S. credit markets seized up in response to rising defaults in subprime mortgages. ``August was a very difficult month for commodity hedge funds,'' says David Friche, portfolio manager at Geneva-based Banque SYZ & Co., which invests more than $8.5 billion in hedge funds. ``The fundamentals of demand and supply weren't in place, and people were selling commodities just to get cash.''
понедельник, 29 октября 2007 г.
Ospraie's Anderson Dives Into Commodities, Survives Swoon
For Dwight Anderson, it was the kind of death-defying ride he hadn't experienced since the last time he jumped out of a helicopter on skis in Alaska. In the first five months of 2006, Anderson's commodities hedge fund firm, New York-based Ospraie Management LLC, suffered a series of setbacks that led to the closing of one of its funds and a 19 percent loss in Anderson's flagship $3.6 billion Ospraie Fund. ``Every single major position we had -- equities, agriculture, energy, precious metals and base metals -- lost money,'' says Anderson, 40, referring to losses in April and May 2006. ``It was highly stressful. You just feel a fatigue in your whole body.''
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