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Friday, November 15, 2024

Hedge Fund Survey: “Findings Are Troubling”

Courtesy of Larry Doyle.

Early last year, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Preet Bharara, in alluding to activities within the hedge fund community asserted that insider trading was rampant and routine. Strong words.

Fast forward a year and a recent survey of those within the hedge fund world unsurprisingly shows that a host of issues remain, and that the “findings are troubling.” Let’s navigate and review the results of this recent survey

An independent survey of hedge fund professionals commissioned by law firm Labaton Sucharow LLP, HedgeWorld and the Hedge Fund Association, revealed that nearly half (46%) believe that their competitors engage in illegal activity, more than one third (35%) have personally felt pressure to break the rules, and about one third (30%) have witnessed misconduct in the workplace.

Hey now . . . feel better about navigating the markets in the company of some of these sharks? Aside from those “troubling” results, we also discover:

87% of respondents would report wrongdoing given the protections and incentives such as those offered by the SEC Whistleblower Program, while 83% of respondents were aware of this important program.

29% of respondents reported that it was likely that they would be retaliated against if they were to report wrongdoing in the workplace.

28% of respondents reported that if leaders of their firm learned that a top performer had engaged in insider trading, they would be unlikely to report the misconduct to law enforcement or regulatory authorities; 13% of respondents reported that leaders of their firm would likely ignore the problem.

54% of respondents reported that the SEC is ineffective in detecting, investigating and prosecuting securities violations.

34% of respondents reported that recent regulation and law enforcement scrutiny will weaken the hedge fund industry.

13% of respondents reported that hedge fund professionals may need to engage in unethical or illegal activity in order to be successful and an equal percentage would commit a crime—insider trading—if they could make a guaranteed $10 million and get away with it.

93% of respondents reported that their firm put the best interests of investors first.

“Our members have a deep commitment to corporate integrity,” noted Lara Block, Executive Director of the Hedge Fund Association.   “Although some of the findings are troubling, this groundbreaking survey provides valuable insights that will help the industry to further strengthen its investor protection programs and root out any bad actors.”

Root out any bad actors? Really?

Or is it really cheating if you do not get caught?

Be careful out there . . . that is, navigate accordingly!!

Larry Doyle

Isn’t  it time or overtime to subscribe to all my work via e-mail, an RSS feed, on Twitter or Facebook.

I have no business interest with any entity referenced in this commentary. The opinions expressed are my own. I am a proponent of real transparency within our markets so that investor confidence and investor protection can be achieved.

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