subscribe
back issues
reprints
contact us
Wealth in Perspective
Wealth Management
Thought Leaders
Money and Meaning
Passion Investments
Wealth Management Sourcebook
Multifamily Office 2008
Previous Issues Index
/ Home / Editorial / Thought Leaders / Profiles /
Visions & Revisions
Whistling Down the Street of Tears
04/01/2006

Barton Biggs, Wall Street’s top-ranked investment strategist and the head of Morgan Stanley’s research and asset management businesses, abandoned Wall Street in 2003 to stake his claim in the world of hedge funds. Now Biggs is baring the secret worries of those who live on financial steroids, along with a slew of gossip and a few tall tales in his new memoir, Hedgehogging (Wiley). Traxis, the moniker of the billion-dollar-plus hedge fund he launched with Cyril Moulle-Berteaux and Madhav Dhar, is, he says, "a word we manufactured that means nothing," a refreshingly candid revelation for a memoirist these days. Biggs peered beneath the facades of finance in a recent interview with Worth features editor Jan Alexander.

The Wall Street memoir is becoming a literary genre in its own right, and there are many of us who cannot resist a tale of money, power and hubris. One thing worries me, however. As you explain in the book, the fund of funds managers are always watching you: "They don’t even like their guys to get too interested in charities. They don’t like you to get distracted from fund performance." Have any fund of funds managers grilled you about the time you spent writing a book?

No, but it may happen. In my case I would argue that one of the ways I think is by writing. Some people think by talking, some by looking out the window with a glass of Chardonnay in their hands. It’s a great test to write down your impressions of things and events, and go back a year later to read what you said.

That could be unnerving when you are in the business of profiting from your own "Eureka!" moments.

There are a lot of misconceptions about the hedge fund business as being, you know, the yellow brick road to wealth. It is also a street of tears for a lot of people who do not make it. A thousand new hedge funds start out with great hopes every year, and a thousand go out of business every year.

Yet so much talent is going there. You opine in the book that a wife is not elated to tell another wife that her husband is a mere broker. The best and brightest migrate to hedge funds, leaving even very affluent individuals with short shrift from wealth managers.

Unsophisticated wealthy people, at least, definitely need help with their wealth management. The problem is there aren’t a lot of good people providing help out there. I have a friend who has a substantial amount of wealth and concentrates on the hedge funds that are longtime winners. That works for him, but he has tremendous access. For a person with $20 million to $50 million, it’s a different story. There’s nothing wrong with index funds as a place to invest. And if I had only $4 million to invest, I’d put it all into index funds. At that level you don’t have the purchasing power to get really good advice.

The crowd is always wrong during market extremes, which makes you skeptical of those who foresee a real estate bust.

Commercial real estate, definitely, is still a valid investment. Properties in the U.S. are getting pretty fully priced, but markets in Japan, elsewhere in Asia and Germany are still very depressed–and very attractive. These are parts of the commercial real estate market that wealthy individuals should be involved in, but not by themselves because the entry costs require size. This is one of those times when REITs come in.

1 | 2 | 3 | >>
Printer Friendly Version  Email a Friend


Related Articles
» Pruning the Thicket
» Storming the Citadel
» Hedged Expectations
» Hedging Our Bets
» Inside the Funds
 
Get a FREE ISSUE and a FREE GIFT

Simply fill out this form to receive a complimentary issue of Worth and a FREE gift ("The top 25 Questions for Your Private Banker"). If you like the magazine, you’ll pay just $36 for 5 more issues (6 in all). If it’s not for you, you can return your invoice marked "cancel", and owe nothing. The FREE issue and FREE gift are yours to keep.
Name
Address
Canadian orders click here
International orders click here

Unsubscribe from subscription emails click here
 



Family Office Wealth Conference