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  2. Hedge fund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedge_fund

    The word "hedge", meaning a line of bushes around the perimeter of a field, has long been used as a metaphor for placing limits on risk. [9] Early hedge funds sought to hedge specific investments against general market fluctuations by shorting other, similar assets.

  3. Operational due diligence (alternative investments) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_due_diligence...

    As early as 2003, a study by Christopher Kundro and Stuart Feffer of Capco indicated that operational risk failings were the sole reason for 50% of all hedge fund failures (with operational risk failings being a contributing factor in other failures as well), rather than bad investment decisions alone (38%), and anecdotal evidence seems to ...

  4. Hedge (finance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedge_(finance)

    A hedge is an investment position intended to offset potential losses or gains that may be incurred by a companion investment. A hedge can be constructed from many types of financial instruments, including stocks, exchange-traded funds, insurance, forward contracts, swaps, options, gambles, [1] many types of over-the-counter and derivative products, and futures contracts.

  5. Alternative beta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_beta

    Academic studies as well as their performance in recent years strongly support the idea that the return from hedge funds mostly consists of (alternative) risk premia. This is the basis of the various approaches to replicate the return profile of hedge funds by direct exposures to alternative beta (hedge fund replication).

  6. Analysis-Hedge fund's trades with lenders point to return of ...

    www.aol.com/news/analysis-hedge-funds-trades...

    Earlier this year a hedge fund structured two trades worth $642 million, the kinds of which have not been seen since the 2008 crisis. It sold insurance to two U.S. lenders against losses on a loan ...

  7. Bias ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bias_ratio

    The bias ratio is an indicator used in finance to analyze the returns of investment portfolios, and in performing due diligence.. The bias ratio is a concrete metric that detects valuation bias or deliberate price manipulation of portfolio assets by a manager of a hedge fund, mutual fund or similar investment vehicle, without requiring disclosure (transparency) of the actual holdings.

  8. Long/short equity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long/short_equity

    A fund manager typically attempts to reduce volatility by either diversifying or hedging positions across individual regions, industries, sectors and market capitalization bands and hedging against un-diversifiable risk such as market risk. In addition to being required of the portfolio as a whole, neutrality may in addition be required for ...

  9. Financial risk management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_risk_management

    DuPont analysis.) The numerator, risk-adjusted return, is realized trading-return less a term and risk appropriate funding cost as charged by Treasury to the business-unit under the bank's funds transfer pricing (FTP) framework; [58] direct costs are (sometimes) also subtracted. [56]