Tag Archives: management

Fund Liquidations: TeaLeaf, Fortress, Ramius And Redmont

In this edition of Fund Liquidations, we note four funds that have recently liquidated or filed for liquidation. The four funds cut across four investment categories: Long/short equity, long/short credit, event driven and multi-alternative. TeaLeaf Long/Short Deep Value Fund (MUTF: LEFIX ) Fortress Long/Short Credit Fund (MUTF: LPLIX ) Ramius Event Driven Fund Redmont Resolute Fund (MUTF: RMRGX ) TeaLeaf Long/Short Deep Value Fund In a January 25 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), the Board of Trustees of Tea Leaf Management Investment Trust decided to close the TeaLeaf Long/Short Deep Value Fund. The reason cited by the board was its relatively small size. For the year of 2015, the A shares of the fund returned -1.14%, which while not spectacular was still enough to rank the fund in the top half of its category. Nevertheless, the Board decided to terminate the fund, and its shares were entirely liquidated by January 29 – one month shy of the fund’s 3-year anniversary. Fortress Long/Short Credit Fund In a February 12 filing with the SEC, the Fortress Long/Short Credit Fund’s Board of Trustees voted to terminate the fund. This news comes just shortly after reaching the 5-year anniversary of the fund, which was launched in December 2010. Any shareholders who have not sold their shares by March 12 will have them automatically redeemed, according to the filing. The fund’s original Advisor share class returned -4.83% in 2015, ranking in the bottom 10% of its category. The fund is sub-advised by Logan Circle Partners. Ramius Event Driven Fund The Ramius Event Driven Fund’s Board made the decision to terminate the fund on December 28, 2015, just three months after the fund’s second anniversary. Any outstanding shares that hadn’t been redeemed by February 2 were automatically retired, with holdout shareholders receiving their proportion of the fund’s remaining net assets, according to the filing . The fund’s A shares returned -7.68% in 2015, ranking in the bottom 14% of Morningstar’s Long/Short Equity category. Redmont Resolute Fund I The Board of Trustees for the Redmont Resolute Fund I voted to liquidate it on December 17. The fund was launched on December 30, 2011. According to the SEC filing , the liquidation was expected to be completed by January 29. The A-class shares of the Redmont Resolute Fund, a multi-alternative fund, returned +0.15% in 2015, which was enough to rank it in the top 15% of funds in its category. Nevertheless, the fund’s Board determined it was in the best interests of shareholders to liquidate. The fund was advised by Highland Associates and sub-advised by PineBridge Investments. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. Jason Seagraves contributed to this article.

Investment Wisdom From The Original Global Guru

Sir John Templeton, who passed away at the age of 95 in 2008, was the original Global Guru. Templeton provided me with an introduction to the world of global investing when I picked up a book on Templeton’s investment philosophy many years ago in Amsterdam. While today you can buy a Brazilian or Malaysian or South African stock with a click of the mouse, the world was a very different place when Templeton began his global investing career. John Templeton: A Pioneer in Global Investing Born in 1912, Templeton hailed from the South (Winchester, Tennessee), graduated from Yale in 1934 and won a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford. After studying law in England, Templeton embarked on a whirlwind grand tour of the world that took him to 35 countries in seven months. That tour exposed him to the enormous investment opportunities that exist outside of the United States. In the very first display of his famous contrarian streak, Templeton came to Wall Street during the depths of the Great Depression to start his investment career in 1937. Templeton soon borrowed a then-princely sum of $10,000 ($170,000 in today’s dollars) as a 26-year-old investor and bought shares of 104 European companies trading at $1 per share or less. This was in 1939, the year German tanks rumbled into Poland, launching World War II. Though dozens of companies were already in bankruptcy, only four companies out of those 104 turned out to be worthless. Templeton held on to each stock for an average of four years and made a small fortune. In 1940, he bought a small investment firm that became the early foundation of his empire. Templeton then went on to build an investment management business whose name became synonymous with value-oriented global investing. He launched the Templeton Growth Fund in 1954 – notably in Canada, which then had no capital gains tax. He made his company public in 1959 when it only had five funds and $66 million under management, and eventually sold his business to Franklin Resources for $913 million in 1992. Templeton focused his final years largely on philanthropy, endowing the Centre for Management Studies at Oxford. He also established the Templeton Prize in 1972, which recognized achievement in work related to science, philosophy and spirituality. His Templeton Foundation, which today boasts an endowment of $1.5 billion, distributes $70 million annually in grants to study “what scientists and philosophers call the Big Questions.” Past winners have included Mother Theresa, Billy Graham, Desmond Tutu and the Dalai Lama. John Templeton: Contrarian to the Core Templeton’s investment track record was impressive, although, given his deeply contrarian style, inevitably quite volatile. A $10,000 investment in the Templeton Growth Fund in 1954 grew to roughly $2 million, with dividends reinvested, by 1992. That works out to a 14.5% annualized return since its inception. Templeton was perhaps best known for investing in Japan in the 1950s when “Made in Japan” was synonymous with free toy trinkets found in cereal boxes. And like all great investors, Templeton was not afraid of big bets. At one point in the 1960s, Templeton held more than 60% of the Templeton Growth Fund’s assets in Japan. That kind of a concentrated position in a global fund would be illegal on Wall Street today. But Templeton also had the savvy to exit markets when they were overvalued, selling out of Japan well before the market collapsed in 1989. Central to Templeton’s investment philosophy was buying superior stocks at cheap price points of “maximum pessimism.” He diligently applied this approach across a range of countries, industries and companies. As Templeton noted in an interview in Forbes in 1988: “People are always asking me where the outlook is good, but that’s the wrong question. The right question is, ‘Where is the outlook most miserable?’ ” My favorite Templeton anecdote was his bet against the U.S. dotcom bubble in 1999. Templeton famously predicted that 90% of the new Internet companies would be bankrupt within five years, and he very publicly shorted the U.S. tech sector. I think it’s a terrific irony that John Templeton – a value investor known for sussing out little known global opportunities – made his quickest and possibly biggest fortune by shorting U.S. stocks. John Templeton: Lessons for Today’s Market With most global stock markets trading in bear market territory, you may find some comfort in John Templeton’s most famous piece of advice: ” To buy when others are despondently selling and to sell when others are greedily buying requires the greatest fortitude and pays the greatest reward .” This advice is simple – but not easy to implement. Templeton also added a small refinement to this approach. He recommended that you initially take a small position in your investment ideas before rushing in. If it’s a truly great bargain, there’s no need to hurry. Finally, what I found most refreshing about John Templeton is his relentless optimism. Templeton once asked a journalist to write about why the Dow Jones Industrial Average might rise to one million by the year 2100. At first blush, “Dow 1,000,000” sounds absurd. Yet, it turns out that thanks to the miracle of compound interest, the Dow would only need to rise about 5% per year to hit that level in 86 years.