Family Office
Hedge Funds That Morph Into Family Offices - The Archegos Fallout

The dramas put banks' risk management systems under scrutiny and also raise questions about whether hedge funds that morph into family office structures - thereby avoiding certain regulatory oversight - have been running more risk than a more conventional family office would ever tolerate.
The plight of US-based Archegos
Capital Management, a hedge fund structured as a family
office, raises questions about whether such entities should come
under tighter regulatory oversight. Losses at the New York-based
organisation have hit a raft of banks, notably Nomura and Credit Suisse.
The entity operates as a family office for former New York hedge
fund executive Bill Hwang. Credit Suisse and Nomura have warned
of potential large losses. Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley,
Citigroup, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and UBS are reportedly
affected, to a lesser degree, media reports said.
There has been a trend over the past 10 years of hedge fund firms
morphing into family offices by ceasing to manage third-party
funds - George Soros is an example. In July last year, John
Paulson, who earned billions of dollars by correctly anticipating
the sub-prime mortgage wreck of a decade ago, exited the business
and converted his operation to a family office. Others taking the
route are Leon Cooperman, Steven A Cohen, Eric Mindich and
Jonathon Jacobson, although for different reasons. Another
example is Clifton Robbins' switch at his Blue Harbour Group
business.
As a result, these entities aren’t covered by the Securities
and Exchange Commission, as would otherwise have been the
case following the Dodd-Frank legislation enacted after the 2008
financial crash.
These “hybrids” exist for various reasons besides avoiding SEC
control. Poor investment performance or just a desire to wind
down a business can be a factor, Alastair Graham, who founded and
runs the Highworth
Research database on single family offices, told this news
service.
These “hybrid” entities aren’t typical family offices, which tend
to be far less heavily leveraged than appears to be the case with
Archegos, Graham said. “That [leverage] isn’t typical and they
are usually the ones that are actually lending as private credit
is an increasingly popular asset class for family offices,” he
said.
“Archegos is at the extreme end of the [leverage] spectrum,”
Graham said.
It is possible that the SEC and the US Treasury might press for
more restrictions on the level of exposure that prime brokerages
and hedge funds can have to avoid undue risk to the overall
system, he said.
The story also sheds light on whether, in a world of ultra-low
interest rates and a hunger for yields, some banks’ risk controls
may have been insufficient.
This news service has contacted a number of law firms and hedge
fund specialists about the case, and may update in due course. It
also contacted the SEC for comment, which did not respond to
requests for a comment by the time of going to press.
The saga has already prompted media speculation about the risk
management systems at the affected banks.
Policy moves since the market blow-up of 2008 may have built up
more, not fewer, problems. A period of ultra-low interest rates
and tighter capital requirements means that banks which are
large enough to bear the risk have sought to bolster
revenues by serving hedge funds.
Hwang’s track record
Hwang, meanwhile, has a turbulent business history. He previously
ran Tiger Asia Management LLC in 2001, a business based in New
York, becoming one of the biggest Asia-focused hedge funds,
running more than $5 billion at one point. In the summer of 2012,
Tiger Asia said that it planned to wind down and return outside
capital to investors. Later that year, the firm pleaded guilty to
a criminal fraud charge and agreed to pay $44 million to settle
civil allegations by US securities regulators that it engaged in
insider trading of Chinese bank stocks. (Wall Street
Journal, March 29.) “Tiger Asia regrets the actions for
which it accepts responsibility today and is grateful that this
matter is now resolved and behind it in the United States,” Hwang
said in a statement at the time. The Tiger Asia business was
rebranded as Archegos.
At this stage, it is unclear whether central banks regard the
issue as systemically important, as arguably was the case when
hedge fund Long Term Capital Management imploded in 1998.
A report in the Financial Times (31 Marchl) said that
Credit Suisse “still does not know how much it will lose from the
Archegos sell-off,” although the publication said “early
estimates” put the loss between $3 and $4 billion.
The FT said that Credit Suisse’s board is investigating
which members of its executive team were chiefly responsible for
the
Greensill and Archegos crises. It said the bank has written
down $450 million on its investment in hedge fund York Capital.
It said that the bank’s clients could lose up to $3 billion from
the frozen funds linked to collapsed specialist finance firm
Greensill Capital, an amount equivalent to the lender’s entire
net income last year. Meanwhile, Credit Suisse is being sued in
London for its alleged role in bilking Mozambique’s taxpayers out
of $200 million in the so-called “$2 billion tuna bond”
scandal. The publication said the run of losses puts Thomas
Gottstein, who has been CEO for more than a year, under
pressure.