Managing a Hedge Fund: A Complete Guide to Trading, Business Strategies, Risk Management, and Regulations Review

Managing a Hedge Fund: A Complete Guide to Trading, Business Strategies, Risk Management, and Regulations
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I am afraid I have to agree with the review here of Robert Altena wholeheartedly. This book simply describes the very basics of several investment strategies (most of which have existed for decades). Hedge funds have long ago moved beyond any of these strategies, although the obviously still employ all of them as a bulk of their operations, and they constantly move into uncharted territory. That is what is separating the top funds from the `pretenders' nowadays.
If these strategies are new to you and/or if you actually learned anything new from this book then you have NO business trying to start a hedge fund. Of course if you need to buy a book to consider doing so, then you are really in trouble anyways. This book is useful however for anyone that is considering putting their money with [reputable] hedge fund managers and therefore need to educate themselves on various basic strategies the funds may employ (thus why I gave it 2 stars instead of 0 or 1).
I think Mr. Black is an excellent professor and his writing in this book is pretty good, but the title is very misleading. A more accurate title may have been: The Basic Hedge Fund Strategy for Investors. For those who already work at buy-side institutions (or serious prop traders at bulge bracket firms), if you plan to branch out on your own please do not think ANY book will aid you in your quest. Instead, if you need insight into risk management, quant, partnership accounting, etc. in order to complete your education BEFORE starting a fund (recommended that you do!), then consider reviewing published industry papers from Wharton, MIT, Cal Tech, Chicago B.S., HBS, NYU, etc. (I would put particular concentration on the top finance and tech schools and not the top management schools - MIT, Wharton, NYU, etc.) These offer the best academic insight into how funds should be managed, in theory anyhow, in truly technical jargon. If you can't understand the jargon, then stick with working with your broker or day trading because starting a hedge fund will only put you into bankruptcy.

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Hedge funds now account for 25 percent of all NYSE tradingvolume and are one of the fastest growing sectors in today'sfinancial industry. Managing a Hedge Fund examines every significantissue facing a hedge fund manager, from managementof numerous types of risk to due diligence requirements, use ofarbitrage and other exotic activities, and more. Broad-basedwhere most hedge fund books are narrowly focused, it providescurrent and potential managers with a concise but comprehensivetreatment on managing—and maximizing—a hedge fund in today'sfiercely competitive investing arena.


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