About Us  |   Contact Us  |   Register  | Login  |   

Follow HedgeWorld on Twitter HedgeWorld on LinkedIn




Tudor mulls stock funds, Druckenmiller on entitlements, what Marty Zweig can teach us now and more

By Chris Clair

What’s news around the hedge fund industry for Friday, March 1, 2013:

Around the web

Tudor Investment Corp. mulls first stock funds since ‘09. (FINalternatives)

Falcone seeks dismissal of SEC lawsuit. (FINalternatives)

Man Group names Carl Esprey as arrested portfolio manager. (FINalternatives)

Citigroup completes spinoff of Napier Park Global Capital hedge fund business. (FINalternatives)

Entitlement transfers worry Stanley Druckenmiller (Bloomberg TV)

What Marty Zweig can teach us now. (MarketWatch)

Masters Capital Management’s Michael Masters bullish on energy, airlines. (Atlanta Business Chronicle)

Bless David Einhorn for taking the fight to Apple. (Bloomberg View)

U.S. watchdog set to weaken derivatives rules. (Financial Times)

Dodd-Frank swap oversight goal stymied as firms fight over data. (Bloomberg)

CBOE says SEC probe settlement may cost as much as $10 million. (Bloomberg)

Hedge funds plotting CMBS gatekeeper coup. (Bloomberg)

South Carolina teachers’ hedge fund bet trails as fees soar. (Bloomberg)

People moves

Lombard Odier Investment Management adds Tim Yetman for global macro. (FINalternatives)

HedgeMark International hires hedge fund expert Wayne Hu for risk team. (FINalternatives>)

Armstrong Investment Managers hires Newedge’s Vincent Tournant as COO. (Citywire)

Leave a Reply






Contact Us:    About Us   Privacy   User Policy  Legal Disclosure Copyright/DMCA  Site Map    FAQ    Glossary  Reuters for Hedge Funds
All rights reserved. Users may download and print extracts of content from this website for their own personal and non-commercial use only. Republication or redistribution of HedgeWorld content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. HedgeWorld is a registered trademarks Thomson Reuters.