Alt Investments
Japan-Focused Hedge Fund Start-Ups Hit Highest Level Since 2006

Hedge fund start-ups that focus on Japan are expected to hit
the highest level since the boom year of 2006 as global banks
consider closing
proprietary units to comply with new rules, according to
Bloomberg.
As many as 27 Japan-focused hedge funds may begin
trading this year, with 15 already open, the news service said,
citing Rory
Kennedy, chief operating officer at Rogers Investment Advisors,
which tracks
about 170 funds investing in the nation. The start-ups They
include R- SQUARED Master
Fund, managed by a former Goldman Sachs proprietary trader, and
Orix
Commodities Fund, which uses computer programs to invest in
commodities
futures.
Assets managed by Japan-focused hedge funds, the
world’s worst performers, have dropped 65 per cent to $13.6
billion from their
peak in 2006, according to Eurekahedge, as more than half
employed
equity-related strategies hit by the nation’s declining stocks,
the news service said.
Former proprietary-desk traders are setting up many
of the new funds as the US implements the Dodd-Frank
financial-overhaul act
that prohibits banks from risking capital by trading for their
own accounts.
In 2009, there were 25 hedge-fund startups in
Japan, according to research by Tokyo-based Rogers Investment.
There were 20
each in 2008 and 2007, and at least 35 in 2006, when the firm was
founded,
Kennedy said.
Globally, the hedge fund sector has had a
lacklustre year in 2009, as market volatility and concerns about
the risk of a
double-dip recession have blunted performance.