By Chris Hutching
Friday 19th October 2001 |
Text too small? |
The popularity of the new defensive funds is likely to attract investors who may feel they offer more stable returns than some of the global funds promoted strongly over the past couple of years.
The latest offering is from Rothschild Australia Asset Management and is comprised of a global fund of hedge funds providing positive returns, irrespective of market volatility. It follows the recent launch of the Rothschild Total Return Fund.
"Short" hedge fund managers select shares they think will fall in price. For example, a manager may identify shares trading at $1 and perceive they will fall to 70c. The manager borrows the shares and sells them at $1 and when the price drops to 70c buys them again at the cheaper price and returns them to the lender. This provides a profit - the sell price minus the buy price (plus brokerage and a fee for borrowing the shares). Some managers specialise in "long" selling.
No comments yet
TWR - Capital Return - ATO Class Ruling Obtained
THL - FY25 Trading Update
April 17th Morning Report
EBOS announces opening of Retail Offer
MCY - FY2025 EBITDAF guidance revised to $760m
April 16th Morning Report
AIA - March 2025 Monthly traffic update
Ryman Healthcare FY25 full year results and webcast detail
CHI - Q1 2025 Operational Update
CNU - Q3 FY25 Connections Update