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by throw_away_777
3599 days ago
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Don't hedge funds still take the very high 2% fee even if they don't make any profit? Doesn't the 2 and 20 structure just incentivize making risky investments (where you either win big and take the 20% or lose big and take the 2%). Hedge funds seem like a terrible investment these days given how ridiculous the fees are. Why hasn't competition brought the fees down when hedge funds aren't consistently beating the market? |
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Fees have gone down in the past couple years, Tudor slashed their fees from 3 and 30 (which is ridiculous) to 25 and 2.25 (still kinda high). Many other hedge funds have gone to 15 and 1.5.
The problem with hedge funds at the moment isn't that they are making bad security choices individually, but that taken together, a short list of securities becomes very crowded, which really hurts liquidity (though this crowding isn't calculated in their liquidity metrics, so they think they have liquidity even though they really don't)