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Hedge funds aren’t evil. They could save us all

April 7, 2009 09:45

ByAlex Brummer, Alex Brummer

3 min read

As the credit crunch descended, the so-called “shadow banking” system, which includes hedge funds and private equity, attracted more than its fair share of opprobrium. In Germany, these groups, a symbol of free-wheeling Anglo-Saxon capitalism, were labelled “locusts”, and here in Britain the government launched a tax clampdown on private equity just as the financial system was seizing up.

Reputations were not helped when the world’s largest convicted swindler, Bernard Madoff, fund manager to Hollywood and the Florida and New York rich, was regularly described in the media as a hedge fund manager, which was not strictly true. Mr Madoff was a regulated broker-dealer who appeared to run a conventional fund management operation and which turned out to be a giant Ponzi scheme: money flowing in from new investors was used to pay-off the existing investors.

Several hedge funds, including London-based Lansdowne Partners, were accused of worsening the pressure on the banks and insurance companies by short-selling their shares. While it is unfortunate that their role in targeting Northern Rock, Bradford & Bingley et al may have hastened the collapse and nationalisation of flawed banks, no one disputes that their judgment — based on careful analysis — was correct. Indeed, in much the same way as they were short holders of the banks on the way down, they have become longer term investors in the banks post re-capitalisation.

The US government now believes that hedge funds and private equity, with their sharp analytical skills, can play a key role in rescuing the US banking system. Instead, investors such as John Paulson, who made billions of dollars out of his bets against the banking system and were seen as Wall Street’s destroyers, are being embraced. Indeed, the rally in New York share prices last month was largely based on the belief that the shadow banking system can play its part in restoring stability to American finance.