
Galleon decided last week to close all its hedge funds after founder Raj Rajaratnam was charged with insider trading. Rajaratnam has denied the charges. Still, many investors put in requests to redeem their positions in the funds.
Frequently, investors in funds under pressure to close seek to sell their stakes quickly, but at a discount, in the secondary market. But in this case, secondary market clearinghouse HedgeBay says it's had no inquiries from investors looking for quick buyers of their Galleon stakes. Another intermediary between buyers and sellers of hedge fund stakes says it also has had no inquiries.
One big reason investors trust Galleon to return their money without difficulty is that its hedge funds mostly own liquid securities, meaning selling stock to satisfying investor redemptions hasn't been a problem.
In past hedge fund blowups, investors have gone to HedgeBay, considered the
most significant secondary market for hedge-fund stakes, to sell out of their
stakes at a fraction of their value.
"First of all, there's not a blowup," Herman said. While the Rajaratnam scandal has rocked the industry and Galleon, Galleon's hedge funds are up this year.
Investors must weight several unknown factors, like whether regulators will
uncover more questionable trades, thus making it difficult for Galleon to pay
the more than
"People right now are placing their bets that they're going to get the money," Herman said.
Tullett Prebon, a company that among other things acts as an intermediary in secondary market transactions, hasn't gotten any calls from investors looking to buy or sell Galleon shares.
"I'm assuming, and I don't know this first hand, that it will be quite an
orderly liquidation," said
"Liquidity mismatches were driving a lot of the transactions in the secondary market," Campbell said. "Some hedge funds ended up having a quasi private equity portfolio."
In those situations, Cambpell said, investors often turned to the secondary market as quickly as possible, not knowing whether a fund's investments would ever regain any value.
In the case of Galleon, though, there wasn't much to worry about regarding the value of its top holdings, which include stocks like Apple Computer Inc. (AAPL) and Google Inc. (GOOG).
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires10-27-09 1137ET Copyright (c) 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.