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Hedges, Private Equity, and the Little Guy
Robert B. Reich
With the bond market dropping and the bull market slowing, hedge funds and
private equity funds are all the rage on Wall Street, and their managers are
raking in fortunes. These funds are so unregulated they can get high returns
from risky deals unavailable to mutual funds or publicly-traded companies.
And with lots of money sloshing around the global economy, those risky deals
don’t seem all that risky. But what happens when the bottom falls out?
It’s one thing if wealthy investors lose the shirts off their backs.
They still have plenty of freshly-ironed ones in the closet. In fact, the argument
for not regulating hedge funds and private equity funds is that their investors
are big enough and tough enough to take care of themselves.
But corporate and government pension plans are increasingly investing in these
funds, with money that was previously invested conservatively on behalf of
their beneficiaries. Some states are now putting 20 percent or more of public
employee pension savings into them. Corporate pension plans, as much as 40
percent of employee savings. But the individuals counting on retirement checks
are neither big enough nor tough enough to take care of themselves.
Few if any pension plan managers have any idea of the specific risks they’re
taking – because hedge funds and private equity funds don’t have
to disclose them. And the people whose pensions are at stake – teachers,
policemen, civil servants, and other working Americans – haven’t
a clue.
The fact is, there’s no free lunch, folks. High rewards coming from
high risks are vulnerable to high losses. Diversification is wise, but there’s
no escaping Newton’s Law: What goes up eventually comes down. Even after
the fall, hedge and private equity managers will be able to retire with the
fortunes they’ve amassed. But the rest of us may not even get what we’re
owed. Message to the rest of us: At least call your plan manager and find out
how much of your savings are being invested in hedge funds and private equity.
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