Hedge Funds For Dummies, 2nd Edition by Ann C. Logue
Part 1 What Is a Hedge Fund, Anyway?
IN THIS PART . . .
You read about hedge funds in the financial press. You
hear about their ability to generate good returns in all
market cycles. And you wonder — just what is this
investment? In this part, you find out. Part I covers
definitions and descriptions you hear in the hedge fund
world, offers the basics on just how much regulatory
oversight hedge funds have, and lets you know how to
buy into a hedge fund.
IN THIS CHAPTER
» Knowing the long and short of
hedge funds
» Discovering the history of
hedge funds
» Factoring a fund’s position on alpha
into your investment decision
» Distinguishing between absolute-
return funds and directional funds
» Acquainting yourself with the
important hedge fund players
» Perusing the fee structure of
hedge funds
Chapter 1
Hedge Funds: Alternative
Assets and Alternative
Strategies
You see hedge funds in the news all the time, but it’s hard to know exactly
what they are. That’s because, at its essence, a hedge fund is a bit of a mys-
tery. A hedge fund is a lightly regulated investment partnership that invests
in a range of securities as the managers attempt to increase expected return while
reducing risk.
Hedge funds are part of a growing class of alternative investments. These are funds
that look to upend traditional relationships between risk and return, offering
investors better expected returns for a given level of risk. This doesn’t mean that
they are necessarily safer or better performing, by the way. There’s much