Log in to your IBTimes Account

close
ID
Password
  • Set your IBTimes.com Edition

Cerberus to change terms of hedge fund: source



09 July 2009 @ 08:00 pm ET

Private equity firm Cerberus is to place investors seeking withdrawals from one of its hedge funds into a special purpose vehicle which would make cash distributions over time, a source familiar with the contents of a recent investor letter said on Thursday.


Cerberus to change terms of hedge fund: source
CEO of Austrian bank BAWAG P.S.K. David Roberts addresses a news conference in Vienna April 29, 2009. BAWAG P.S.K. owned by U.S. financier Cerberus Capital, will get 755 million euros ($996 million) in fresh capital after running up more than half a billion euros of losses in 2008. (Reuters Photo / Christian Bruna )
1 of 1

For investors remaining in the fund, fees will be reduced, the source said.

The Wall Street Journal earlier reported the news. The paper cited a letter sent to clients which said that the vehicle would sell assets over time and make cash distributions.

The letter also referred to Cerberus' high profile investment into Chrysler Group LLC, which emerged from bankruptcy in June.

"In the future, we will seek to avoid transactions that receive the publicity that some of our more recent investments attracted," wrote Cerberus boss Stephen Feinberg in the letter. "We never intended to receive the publicity surrounding those investments."

The Wall Street Journal said the fund, Cerberus Partners LP, lost 24.5 percent in 2008 and declined about 3 percent through the end of May. Feinberg said "significant macro risks" remain and may affect future results, the report said.

"We are embarrassed and disappointed by our 2008 performance, and we feel an obligation to you to turn this around," Feinberg wrote, according to the Wall Street Journal. "But we just don't know when and how much pain we must take before that happens."

Cerberus declined comment.

Hedge funds posted their worst returns ever in 2008 when the average fund lost 19 percent and some, including powerhouse Citadel Investment Group's flagship funds, tumbled 50 percent.

Investors punished managers by pulling out billions of dollars from funds.

(Reporting by Megan Davies, additional reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss in Boston; Editing by Matt Daily and Tim Dobbyn)

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

    Click!
  • Rate this article:

Comments

Post Your Comment

*Name


advertisement
More Industries
SANUWAVE Health Inc. today announced the publication of a European scientific study covering the company’s dermaPACE burn treatment device. The report d...
Prime Sun Power Inc. is moving to capture the clean energy market, which is primed to explode in the next two decades according to renewable energy exper...
WikiLoan, Inc., pioneers in the bold new frontier of financial social networks and proprietors of WikiLoan.com – a website providing a powerful person-...

advertisement
 
IBTimes.com Web
Partners
International Business Times© 2010 The Ibtimes Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms of service | Privacy Policy | Advertising | About Us | Contact Us | Archives