http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a5QBxVSIpVuA
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John Meriwether, who roiled global markets when Long-Term Capital
Management LP collapsed in 1998, plans to shut his current hedge fund,
according to a person familiar with the matter.

JWM Partners LLC is closing its main Relative Value Opportunity II
fund after losing 44 percent from September 2007 to February 2009.
Meriwether, credited with generating billions of dollars of revenue at
the former Salomon Brothers in the 1980s through so-called relative
value trades, returned an average of 1.46 percent a year with his new
fund since opening in 1999, compared with 2.4 percent for the Credit
Suisse/Tremont Hedge Fixed-Income Arbitrage Index.

Long-Term Capital, which assembled a team of top Salomon traders and
Nobel laureates, lost more than 90 percent of its $4.8 billion of
assets in the weeks following Russia’s currency devaluation and bond
default. The Federal Reserve orchestrated a $3.6 billion bailout by
the fund’s 14 banks to calm fears that the firm’s lenders and trading
partners would be dragged down.

“For many investors, John Meriwether is by now just another hedge-fund
manager,” said Tammer Kamel, president of Toronto-based Iluka
Consulting Group Ltd., which advises clients on investments in the
private pools of capital. “LTCM’s infamy was a big story in 1998, but
the events of 2008 might finally relegate LTCM and 1998 to footnote
status.”

JWM Partners, based in Greenwich, Connecticut, managed about $1
billion at the beginning of 2008. Meriwether, 61, joins hedge-fund
veterans Art Samberg, James Pallotta and William von Mueffling in
closing funds this year. He didn’t return a telephone call and an
e-mail seeking comment.

London Chief Departs

Adrian Eterovic, who ran the JWM Partners’ London office, plans to
start his own fund, according to the person, who asked not to be named
because the information is private.

Eterovic, 46, ran the quantitative strategies within JWM’s funds,
according to the person. Eterovic registered Episteme Capital Partners
(U.K.) LLP with the U.K.’s Financial Services Authority, according to
the market regulator’s Web site. Eterovic didn’t immediately return
calls to his office today.

Long-Term Capital relied on borrowed money to enhance returns. The
average leverage at the beginning of 1998 was about $28 for every $1
of net assets.

‘Too Big to Fail’

When the New York Federal Reserve Bank organized a rescue of Long-Term
Capital in 1998, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan defended the
bailout to Congress on Oct. 1 as necessary to prevent the “seizing-up
of markets.” Critics said the rescue extended a policy designed to
protect financial firms that were “too big to fail” to include hedge
funds.

JWM Partners was more conservative than LTCM, aiming to produce
returns of 15 percent a year and borrowing $15 or less for every
dollar of net assets.

Before Long-Term Capital, Meriwether worked at Salomon Brothers, where
he was vice chairman and built its proprietary trading desk. His team,
with at least a half-dozen Ph.D’s, used computer models to make money
from small price differences in related bonds. His group was
responsible for as much as 60 percent of Salomon’s revenue in some
years, and Meriwether was featured in Michael Lewis’s 1989 bestseller
“Liar’s Poker” about his experiences at the firm.

He lost his job at the firm following the 1991 government bond
scandal. Regulators ruled that he’d failed to supervise traders who
violated bond-auction rules.

‘When Genius Failed’

A native of Chicago, Meriwether started buying stocks in high school,
and stood out in his neighborhood for his love of golf, according to
Roger Lowenstein’s 1998 book “When Genius Failed: the Rise and Fall of
Long-Term Capital Management.” He attended Northwestern University in
Evanston, Illinois, on a scholarship for caddies, according to the
book.

Meriwether is closing JWM as the hedge fund industry recovers from its
worst year. A record 1,471 funds, or 15 percent of the total, shut
down last year after managers posted unprecedented losses, according
to Hedge Fund Research Inc.

Hedge funds rebounded this year with an average 9.8 percent return
through May after losing 19 percent in 2008, Hedge Fund Research
estimates. About 150 new funds started in the first three months, the
highest rate since the second quarter of 2008, according to the
industry researcher.

Fund assets may increase by more than 8 percent this year as clients
led by pension plans and rich families invest $50 billion of cash they
held while markets fell, Barclays Plc said in a June 2 report.

To contact the reporters on this story: Katherine Burton in New York
at [email protected]; Saijel Kishan in New York at
[email protected]
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