Tag Archives: Leon Cooperman

Highest Hedge Fund Managers Paid Well, as They Should Be

By 24/7 Wall St.

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Hedge fund managers are more vilified for their pay packages, by the media and the public, than public company CEOs are. To some extent, the attacks are understandable, at least on the surface. Hedge fund managers can make hundreds of millions of dollars a year, while the highest paid CEOs make only tens of millions. The difference is that hedge fund managers are generally paid by very specific performance measures.

Hedge fund managers may be well paid, but the effects of poor performance can be extreme. It is not unusual for funds that have done poorly to lose a large portion of money that they manage, even to the extent that funds can be forced to close. That is the ultimate “pay for performance” penalty.

The latest version of a study done by Institutional Investor was released recently. Authors of the “Rich List” reported that several managers returned 20% to 30% improvements in the value of their funds. These included David Tepper of Appaloosa Management, Leon Cooperman of Omega Advisers and David Loeb of Third Point. Managers who have had longer term success also made the list. These include Ray Dailo of Bridgewater Associates and Steven Cohen of embattled SAC Capital. None are strangers to lists of top hedge fund managers.

Extraordinary high pay nearly always brings out the historical comparisons with the compensation of teachers, fireman, police and blue-collar workers. In these professions, at least, workers are part of a huge infrastructure of support, paid for by the public or shareholders. While that does not lower the value of their contributions to society or private enterprise, it does partially explain why employees supported by massive investment in the systems in which they operate are paid modestly.

The pay level of teachers has to be measured in part by the fact that school buildings and books are paid for by the public, and that many of those investments have been in place for years. For blue-collar workers at large manufacturing companies, the facilities in which they work are usually the product of billions of dollars in factories and production line investments made by their employers, often long before these people take their jobs. In all cases, the level of risk to the job security of public and large corporation workers is fairly small.

In the debate over the pay of investment managers, a single factor explains some of what is considered “obscene” pay. Underperformers get put out of business.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Compensation

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From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/15/highest-hedge-fund-managers-paid-well-as-they-should-be/

Chimera Improves But Remains on the Ropes

By John Maxfield, The Motley Fool

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The ongoing saga involving Chimera Investment  took a turn for the better today after announcing its most recent estimate of book value. However, a separate filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission shows that the high-yielding mortgage real estate investment trust is still on the ropes.

According to a press release it issued today, Chimera’s book value continues its upward trajectory. As you can see in the chart below (scroll over the bars for the estimates of book value per share), its GAAP book value came in at $3.42 per share and its economic book value came in at $3.04 per share. On a year-over-year basis, that equates to growth rates of 15% and 7.8%, respectively.

The bad news is that it still hasn’t filed its 2012 10-K and has now been put on notice by the New York Stock Exchange that it must do so within six months or face having its shares delisted from the exchange. For those of you who have followed this story over the last year, you know that this isn’t the first time Chimera’s been threatened with delisting. As I discussed here, the company’s failure to file its 2011 10-K led it to seek three extensions from the NYSE over the past year for the very same reason.

What’s an investor to make of this? The answer is both nothing and potentially everything. On the one hand, as Chimera’s book value demonstrates, its fundamentals are improving. It’s likely for this reason that billionaire Leon Cooperman recently purchased a total of 55 million shares of the company. But on the other hand, given the numerous problems with both it and its external manager Annaly Capital Management — the ongoing accounting issue being only one of them — one must wonder if this is a safe place to stash one’s money, particularly as an income investor hoping to live off one’s equity portfolio.

Want to learn more about Chimera?

It’s hard to miss the massive double-digit dividend on Chimera Investment, but when investors start to dig in, it’s also hard to miss the fact that it’s been more than a year since the company has filed audited financials with the SEC. Should you follow the dividend’s siren song into Chimera’s stock? To help you figure out whether the stock is a buy right now, The Motley Fool has just released a new premium research report on Chimera. Click here now to claim your copy of this must-have investor’s resource.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance