Anson's Analysis

FASB's accounting alchemy

By Mark Anson     June 15, 2009

FAS 157 is the new accounting rule that applies to corporations, investment managers, private equity managers and banks. But pressured by lawmakers, the Financial Accounting Standards Board added a little accounting alchemy of its own.

Photo: Hedge funds are hurting but they still have an edge

Hedge funds are hurting but they still have an edge

By Mark Anson     May 4, 2009

Hedge funds have taken their lumps as of late. Take the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme. But to distill Mr. Madoff into some practical lessons, we need to identify three different asymmetries between hedge funds and investors. To wit: the asymmetry of alpha, incentives and risk taking.

Godzilla vs. King Kong

By Mark Anson     April 6, 2009

In good times, also known as bull markets, investors are happy and money managers seem like geniuses or clairvoyants. But these are not good times. As a result, institutional investors are reviving the great debate between active investing and passive investing.

How securities lending programs went astray

By Mark Anson     March 9, 2009

A wise man once said the road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom. It wasn’t a reference to securities lending but it could have been. In recent years, the pedestrian practice has veered unwisely into a huge revenue-seeking activity — while turning a blind eye to some of the risks involved.

One-two punch to pension funds

By Mark Anson     January 22, 2009

In 2008, pension funds were hit hard by declining Treasury rates and declining asset classes. The long recovery will likely include cutting equity allocations.

Portable alpha: what went wrong

By Mark Anson     December 22, 2008

Beyond the disturbing impact of the current recession, questions are now being raised about an asset management strategy designed to enhance the performance of pension fund investments — portable alpha.

The impending TARP tax hike
and its impact on tax-exempt investors

By Mark Anson     November 24, 2008

President-elect Obama has stated that he will make the U.S. economy his No. 1 priority. He will inherit the $700 billion bailout package passed by Congress — and a virtually inevitable need to raise taxes to support it.

So hedge funds like volatility?

By Mark Anson     October 27, 2008

If there is justice in the world, then we can rest easier because hedge fund managers are having just as hard a time with these financial markets as the rest of us.

Today’s Markets

Webcasts

Funded Status of Corporate Pension Funds

There is no charge to participate in this webcast.
The top pension plans saw their funded status cut by nearly 30 percentage points in 2008, wiping out the gains of the past five years. What does it mean to the industry? Join us and find out.

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Face to Face

062909 morrissey

British invasion: Face to Face with Helena Morrissey

The CEO of Newton Capital talks about growing the firm's U.S. institutional business by sticking with what it knows best, sprinkled with some lessons from home.

Drew Carter

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