Hedge Funds Stocks List

Hedge Funds Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Mar 28 BX Tricon Residential shareholders approve go-private deal with Blackstone
Mar 28 BEN Franklin Resources, Inc. to Announce Second Quarter Results on April 29, 2024
Mar 28 BX Rexford Industrial buys 3M square feet of property from Blackstone for $1B
Mar 28 BX Blackstone Sells $1 Billion of California Warehouses to Rexford
Mar 28 BX Rexford Industrial Acquires Blackstone Industrial Assets in Combined $1 Billion Investment
Mar 28 BX Blackstone to invest $25 bln in Indian private equity over 5 years, Bloomberg News reports
Mar 28 BLK BlackRock's (BLK) Restructuring Efforts Aid Amid Cost Woes
Mar 28 BLK UPDATE 1-US cryptocurrency ETF inflows pick up as bitcoin price recovers
Mar 28 APO Apollo to Announce First Quarter 2024 Financial Results on May 2, 2024
Mar 28 BLK First Mover Americas: Tokenized Treasury Notes Surpass $1B
Mar 28 BLK BlackRock Unveils First Active Equity ETFs in Europe
Mar 28 BX Blackstone Plans to Add $25 Billion in India Private Equity Assets Over Five Years
Mar 28 BEN Franklin Templeton Canada Introduces a Suite of Low Volatility and High Dividend ETFs for Canadian Investors
Mar 28 BLK Over $1B in U.S. Treasury Notes Has Been Tokenized on Public Blockchains
Mar 28 BEN Bitcoin price holds above $70,000 as money flows into ETFs
Mar 28 BLK Bitcoin price holds above $70,000 as money flows into ETFs
Mar 28 BLK US cryptocurrency ETF inflows pick up as bitcoin price recovers
Mar 28 BX Schwarzman Bullish on Private Credit, Citing 0.3% Default Rate
Mar 28 BLK BlackRock's Bitcoin Bet Pays Off As IBIT ETF Crushes Records, Leaves CEO Larry Fink 'Pleasantly Surprised'
Mar 28 BLK BlackRock CEO Larry Fink “Very Bullish” on Long-Term Prospect of Bitcoin
Hedge Funds

A hedge fund is an investment fund that pools capital from accredited individuals or institutional investors and invests in a variety of assets, often with complex portfolio-construction and risk-management techniques. It is administered by a professional investment management firm, and often structured as a limited partnership, limited liability company, or similar vehicle. Hedge funds are generally distinct from mutual funds, as their use of leverage is not capped by regulators, and distinct from private equity funds, as the majority of hedge funds invest in relatively liquid assets.The term "hedge fund" originated from the paired long and short positions that the first of these funds used to hedge market risk. Over time, the types and nature of the hedging concepts expanded, as did the different types of investment vehicles. Today, hedge funds engage in a diverse range of markets and strategies and employ a wide variety of financial instruments and risk management techniques.Hedge funds are made available only to certain sophisticated or accredited investors and cannot be offered or sold to the general public. As such, they generally avoid direct regulatory oversight, bypass licensing requirements applicable to investment companies, and operate with greater flexibility than mutual funds and other investment funds. However, following the financial crisis of 2007–2008, regulations were passed in the United States and Europe with intentions to increase government oversight of hedge funds and eliminate certain regulatory gaps.Hedge funds have existed for many decades and have become increasingly popular. They have now grown to be a substantial fraction of asset management, with assets totaling around $3.235 trillion in 2018.Hedge funds are almost always open-ended and allow additions or withdrawals by their investors (generally on a monthly or quarterly basis). The value of an investor's holding is directly related to the fund net asset value.
Many hedge fund investment strategies aim to achieve a positive return on investment regardless of whether markets are rising or falling ("absolute return"). Hedge fund managers often invest money of their own in the fund they manage. A hedge fund typically pays its investment manager an annual management fee (for example 2% of the assets of the fund), and a performance fee (for example 20% of the increase in the fund's net asset value during the year). Both co-investment and performance fees serve to align the interests of managers with those of the investors in the fund. Some hedge funds have several billion dollars of assets under management (AUM).

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