EnTrust Capital Remaining with San Antonio Pension Fund

0 comments

Posted on 23rd March 2011 by admin in Business |EnTrust Capital |Gregg Hymowitz

, , ,

Gregg Hymowitz of Entrust CapitalThe San Antonio Fire and Police Pension Fund, worth $1.9 billion, is now in the process of transitioning its existing portfolio into more direct investments. As part of that process the Fund has increased its already existing investment in HBK Capital Management.

At its December, 2010 meeting the pension’s investment committee took the decision to increase by $5 million its investment in HBK, which is indicated in the recently published minutes of the investment committee’s meeting. This added investment is part of the overall plan for the fund to change its existing portfolio to an equal division between single hedge fund investments and funds of hedge funds (FoHF) investments.

Currently the pension fund is looking for about 10 direct hedge fund managers. When they are chosen they will each be given the management responsibilities for about $20 million.
The search will be conducted with the assistance of Albourne Partners Consultants, who will help the Texas pension fund to narrow down a list of 40 single manager hedge funds to a more workable 15-20 to pick from. The final cut will leave a “stable of just 10 hedge funds to complement the fund’s current fund of funds”, state the minutes from the meeting of the board of trustees which met at the conclusion of 2010.

Part of the transition process includes the pension fund redeeming funds from three of its FoHF managers: Optima Fund Management, Ironwood Capital Management and Benchmark. The funds which will remain are Lazard Asset Management, Federal Street Advisors and Entrust Capital where Gregg Hymowitz serves as Managing Partner.

Gregg Hymowitz of EnTrust Hedge Fund of Funds Still With Cantillon

0 comments

Posted on 10th November 2010 by admin in EnTrust Capital |Gregg Hymowitz

, , ,

hedge fundsA trend has begun in the world of high finance to de-emphasize the riskier, more exciting investing in ‘shorting’ and switching to the ‘long-side’ of investing in stocks which the investment manager believes will go up in value. Shorting stocks relies on actually betting against stocks which a manager, or investor believes will fall. These types of investments are riskier, and usually involve higher fees on the part of the financial manager.

Now many investment firms are focusing on the traditional investment, and charging less in fees. In the case of Cantillon Capital Management in New York, fees have dropped considerably since William von Mueffling, head investment manager, closed his hedge funds back in June. What Cantillon is losing in fees it is making back in expansion in the size of his business at a time when a large number of hedge funds and mutual funds are shrinking, and investors are fleeing from the stock market.

Although practically all of Cantillon’s hedge funds are gone, EnTrust Capital, managed by Gregg Hymowitz, is one New York hedge fund-of-funds that Cantillon is sticking with. As Gregg Hymowitz remarked concerning Mr. von Mueffling,

“I think his analysis of securities is very disciplined,” said Gregg Hymowitz, EnTrust managing partner. “We’re not getting the short exposure, but we’re also not paying the hedge-fund fees.”