2008-09-03ft.com

Atticus Capital, one of New York’s most powerful hedge funds, has lost more than $5bn (€3.4bn) this year, as its record as one of the world’s top performing money managers was damaged by the credit crunch.

The firm’s two flagship funds fell by a quarter and almost a third by the end of August, marking among the biggest losses in dollar terms ever recorded by a hedge fund. This was as a result of its strategy of taking large, concentrated bets and using few “short” positions betting on a fall in prices to lower risk.

Atticus had $14bn under management at the end of July, according to letters to investors, down from a peak of more than $20bn last year.

The losses reflect widespread difficulties for event-driven funds, which aim to buy cheap stocks in the expectation of a catalyst that will boost their value. Atticus, co-chaired by Nathaniel Rothschild, son of Lord Jacob Rothschild, has been closely involved in several of the highest-profile deals of recent years, helping scuttle Deutsche Börse’s bid for the London Stock Exchange and Barclays’ bid for ABN Amro, among other activism.



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