AmberGold wrote: » Throw up some of the names of these said investments, especially the 10% ones and I’ll advise further?
Paddy The Pirate wrote: » This idea feels like you're kinda full of shít , no?
AmberGold wrote: » Not amongst friends willing to offer free advice
Paddy The Pirate wrote: » Uhm, why? Because you're clearly deluded.. you're claiming returns that are unviable, you're aiming to start a hedge fund that might just profit you enough to buy a Cornetto in a few years time, and you're asking me questions ? Jesus Christ
rookieMan wrote: » In last 2 years, I have been able to find relatively safe investment opportunities offering 5-10% return annually. I was wondering if it is possible for me (an average person) to start a small hedge fund? Initially looking at starting with about €10K from friends and family to build a track record. None of my contacts/friends are qualified/professional investors, therefore the fund will have to be targeted to retail investors. I am looking at taking about 1% fees on the profit. However, since I have never founded a company before, let alone founding a financial product, I am worried that legal fees & other admin fees (registering a company, etc) would be so high that the fund (initially of about €10K) will not be profitable resulting in negative return to investors. Is there a way to optimize costs to somehow make this profitable?
gogo wrote: » I assume your suitably qualified under the central banks minimum competency code to give financial advice in the first place?
Glass fused light wrote: » Minimun capital for a fund manager was 125K + some risk weighted capital. To become an approved person you would need work history and qualifications as an professional investor. You need access to a professional trading platform. You the need the legal accounting and compliance systems to safegard other peoples money. So to even think that 10k is a good starting point, says a lot about how unprepared you are.
edit_me wrote: » Interactive Brokers Friends and Family account.
pedroeibar1 wrote: » I'm not going to bother arguing about luck/investment on a 2 year time frame. Clearly you have done no basic homework. If, without CBI approval, you take in cash for investment you are breaking several laws. A very very large multiple of 10k would not even cover the set-up costs for a fund. Any person capable of writing the above post has zero hope of CBI approval. If you want to be taken seriously in investment management, even as an employee, you need the CFA exams. Including an (almost mandatory) repeat of one exam it will cost you about 4k in fees, minimum; much more if you take a few courses.
rookieMan wrote: » Why did you assume that the fund must be setup in Ireland?
rookieMan wrote: » And why did you assume that I am looking to trade something?
rookieMan wrote: » Anyways your point is noted that an average joe cannot start a fund.
Glass fused light wrote: » EU regs, 2 main geographical centres. :rolleyes: you want to open a hedge fund Average joes who know how to do it and have the proper financial backing can do it. The average joe should avoid trying to open a retail fund as these are the hardest to run.
blackwave wrote: » From a regulatory perspective the minimum initial subscription into an Irish domiciled fund is 100k euro. Cayman is 100k USD. You are on the right track of needing to have a track record etc in order to set up but the initial seed money needs to be more.
StockTwat29 wrote: » What's your endgame here? Managed a couple million in a few years? As one poster said you'd need a minimum of 3 years before anyone would look at you, I'd stretch that out to 10 years for anyone to take you seriously. The fact you're confident you can return 10% a year "relatively safe" is in my opinion absolutely bonkers, it would lead me to believe that you must be doing some kind of peer to peer lending, high yield kind of stuff, which can easily blow up in your face, look up the Kerry golf tours as an example. I appreciate your take on showing a track record for a fund but you yourself would also need to show a long-term track record of professional experience. Then there is the size issue, not many people would invest in a fund less than €100m, you'd have to survive on friends and family really. In terms of your fees, 1% of profits is ridiculous if you're trying to make money from this, you'd want to be charging 25 of AUM as a management fee for a start and maybe 10/15/20% of profits as an incentive if you really want to make money, if you only want to cover expenses then ya 1 or 2% of AUM would be realistic. Also it doesn't have to be a hedge fund, they are for "sophisticated" investors who have millions or for institutions. Now all of this is my own opinion, completely up to you what you want to do. I also have no idea what the laws around this stuff is, would be interested in hearing them as I too am investing some of my parents money and would like to be covered legally.
rookieMan wrote: » Thanks for your input. Unfortunately, I am not looking to trade stock or commodities. I dont consider them as 'relatively safe' options.
rookieMan wrote: » My understanding is that hedge fund can also do alternate investments. Maybe its not called hedge fund then and is just called a fund. Thanks for your input though.