Business/Financial Desk; SECTA 
Wall Street Winners Hit a New Jackpot: Billion-Dollar Paydays 
16 April 2008
The New York Times 
Hedge fund managers, those masters of a secretive, sometimes volatile
financial universe, are making money on a scale that once seemed
unimaginable, even in Wall Street's rarefied realms.
One manager, John Paulson, made $3.7 billion last year. He reaped that
bounty, probably the richest in Wall Street history, by betting against
certain mortgages and complex financial products that held them.
Mr. Paulson, the founder of Paulson & Company, was not the only big
winner. The hedge fund managers James H. Simons and George Soros each
earned almost $3 billion last year, according to an annual ranking of
top hedge fund earners by Institutional Investor's Alpha magazine, which
comes out Wednesday.
Hedge fund managers have redefined notions of wealth in recent years.
And the richest among them are redefining those notions once again.
Their unprecedented and growing affluence underscores the gaping
inequality between the millions of Americans facing stagnating wages and
rising home foreclosures and an agile financial elite that seems to
thrive in good times and bad. Such profits may also prompt more calls
for regulation of the industry.
Even on Wall Street, where money is the ultimate measure of success, the
size of the winnings makes some uneasy. ''There is nothing wrong with it
-- it's not illegal,'' said William H. Gross, the chief investment
officer of the bond fund Pimco. ''But it's ugly.''
The richest hedge fund managers keep getting richer -- fast. To make it
into the top 25 of Alpha's list, the industry standard for hedge fund
pay, a manager needed to earn at least $360 million last year, more than
18 times the amount in 2002. The median American family, by contrast,
earned $60,500 last year.
Combined, the top 50 hedge fund managers last year earned $29 billion.
That figure represents the managers' own pay and excludes the
compensation of their employees. Five of the top 10, including Mr.
Simons and Mr. Soros, were also at the top of the list for 2006. To
compile its ranking, Alpha examined the funds' returns and the fees that
they charge investors, and then calculated the managers' pay.
Top hedge fund managers made money in many ways last year, from
investing in overseas stock markets to betting that prices of
commodities like oil, wheat and copper would rise. Some, like Mr.
Paulson, profited handsomely from the turmoil in the mortgage market
ripping through the economy.
As early as 2005, Mr. Paulson began betting that complex mortgage
investments known as collateralized debt obligations would decline in
value, much as Wall Street traders bet that shares will drop in price.
In that case, known as shorting, they borrow shares and sell them, wait
for the price to fall, buy the shares back at a lower price and return
them, pocketing the profit.
Then, over the next two years, Mr. Paulson established two funds to
focus on the credit markets. One of those funds returned 590 percent
last year, and the other handed back 353 percent, according to Alpha. By
the end of 2007, Mr. Paulson sat atop $28 billion in assets, up from $6
billion 12 months earlier.
Mr. Soros, one of the world's most successful speculators and richest
men, leapt out of retirement last summer as the market turmoil spread --
and he won big. He made $2.9 billion for the year, when his flagship
Quantum fund returned almost 32 percent, according to Alpha. Mr. Simon,
a mathematician and former Defense Department code breaker who uses
complex computer models to trade, earned $2.8 billion. His flagship
Medallion fund returned 73 percent.
Like Mr. Paulson, Philip Falcone, who founded Harbinger Partners with
$25 million in June 2001, cast a winning bet against the mortgage
market. He pulled in returns of 117 percent after fees in 2007 and made
$1.7 billion. The trade thrust him from relative obscurity to hedge fund
heavyweight: he now manages $18 billion. Harbinger recently won
agreement from The New York Times Company <javscript:void(0)>  to add
two members to its board.
Hedge fund managers share their success with their investors, which
include wealthy individuals, pension funds and university endowments.
They typically charge annual fees equal to 2 percent of their assets
under management, and take a 20 percent cut of any profits.
With a combined $2 trillion under management, the hedge fund industry is
coming off its richest year ever -- a feat all the more remarkable given
the billions of dollars of losses suffered by major Wall Street banks.
In recent months, however, scores of hedge funds have quietly died or
spectacularly imploded, wracked by bad investments, excess borrowing or
leverage, and client redemptions -- or a combination of those events.
''To some degree it's a very gigantic version of Las Vegas,'' said Gary
Burtless, an economist at the Brookings Institution.
As Alpha's list shows, managers who reap big gains one year can lose the
next.
Edward Lampert, the founder of ESL Investments and a member of the 2007
Alpha list, was absent this year. His fund fell 27 percent last year,
according to Alpha. About 60 percent of ESL's equity portfolio is
invested in Sears, whose shares plunged 40 percent last year. ESL is
also a major holder of Citigroup <javscript:void(0)> , whose abysmal
performance matched that of Sears.
A manager who ranked high in the 2007 list and fell off in 2008 was
James Pallotta of the Tudor Investment Corporation <javscript:void(0)> ,
who was 17th last year and earned $300 million. Mr. Pallotta's $5.7
billion Raptor Global Fund fell almost 8 percent last year, according to
Alpha.
A few who did not make the cut still made buckets of money. Bruce Kovner
of Caxton Associates and Barry Rosenstein at Jana Partners didn't make
the top 50. But Mr. Kovner earned $100 million, and Mr. Rothstein earned
$170 million, according to Alpha. Spokesmen for the hedge fund managers
either declined to comment on Tuesday or could not be reached.
Since 1913, the United States witnessed only one other year of such
unequal wealth distribution -- 1928, the year before the stock market
crashed, according to Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Economic
Policy Institute in Washington. Such inequality is likely to impede an
economic recovery, he said.
''For a recovery to be robust and sustainable you can't just have
consumer demand at Nordstrom,'' he said. ''You need it at the little
shop on the corner, too.''
Despite the explosive growth of the industry -- about 10,000 hedge funds
operate worldwide -- it is relatively lightly regulated. On Tuesday, two
panels appointed by Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. advised
hedge funds to adopt guidelines to increase disclosure and risk
management.
And Mr. Gross, the fund manager, warned that the widening divide among
the richest and everyone else is cause for worry.
''Like at the end of the Gilded Age and the Roaring Twenties, we are
going the other way,'' Mr. Gross said. ''We are clearly in a period of
excess, and we have to swing back to the middle or the center cannot
hold.''

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