Untitled Document
The highest paid US hedge fund operator made more than $1 billion in 2004, the
first time a Wall Street financial manager has topped the billion dollar mark
in annual income, according to a survey published last week by a trade publication.
Edward S. Lampert made $1.02 billion, while his firm, ESL Investments, raked in
a 69 percent return on investment, largely due to Lampert’s deal-making
in the merger of Kmart and Sears.
While thousands of Kmart and Sears workers have lost their jobs—Kmart
announced hundreds of additional job cuts this weekend with the closing of customer
cafeterias in 188 stores—the price of Kmart stock soared after the merger.
Lampert is now chairman of the merged company as well as chief of ESL Investments.
His income more than doubled, from $420 million in 2003.
Hedge funds are private investment firms that cater only to millionaire clients
and pay stratospheric fees to the managers. The typical hedge fund formula is
“1 and 20,” meaning the manager collects a fee of 1 percent of assets
plus 20 percent of all profits. Some particularly successful managers have received
fees as high as 50 percent of profits.
According to the survey by Alpha, a magazine published by Institutional Investor
that follows hedge funds, the average compensation for the top 25 hedge fund
managers was $251 million, over $6 billion combined. This figure has nearly
doubled since 2002.
Besides Lampert, others in the top 10 of hedge fund managers included James
Simons of Renaissance Technologies, $670 million; Bruce Kovner of Caxton Associates,
$550 million; Steven Cohen of SAC Capital Advisors, $450 million; David Tepper
of Appaloosa Management, $420 million; George Soros of Soros Fund Management,
$305 million (Soros was number one in 2003, with $750 million); Paul Tudor Jones
II of Tudor Investment Corp., $300 million; Kenneth Griffin of Citadel Investment
Group, $240 million; Raymond Dalio of Bridgewater Associates, $225 million;
and Israel Englander of Millennium Partners, $205 million.
These gargantuan incomes dwarf even the huge salaries and bonuses paid to corporate
CEOs. Edward Lampert’s income is 200 times the salary of the typical Fortune
500 CEO ($5 million a year), which is, in turn, 200 times the salary of the
typical worker ($25,000-$30,000 a year). Here we have the upper crust of the
financial oligarchy that dominates American society.
The $6 billion combined income of the top 25 hedge fund managers is more than
the entire budget of the city of Chicago. It is more than the gross domestic
product of 33 of the 51 countries in Africa. It would provide full four-year
college scholarships for 60,000 students. It would pay the annual salaries of
200,000 workers making the median wage—or 600,000 making the minimum wage.
This $6 billion rewards activities that are counterproductive and parasitic
from the standpoint of the interests of society as a whole. Lampert and his
counterparts at other hedge funds produce nothing. They perform no useful labor.
They devise methods through which, by the manipulation of paper and electronic
assets, the rich get richer while the economy as a whole grows more indebted,
conditions of life deteriorate, and working people are impoverished.
The hedge fund managers are one element in the formation of what the New York
Times described Sunday as the American “hyper-rich,” a layer of
wealthy that “have even left behind people making hundreds of thousands
of dollars a year.” The top 0.1 percent of American taxpayers had at least
$1.6 million in annual income, and an average income of $3 million, an increase
of 150 percent since 1980. The share of US national income held by this tiny
layer—145,000 households out of nearly 150 million—came to 7.4 percent
in 2002, double the level of 1980.
According to figures compiled by the Times, the hyper-rich are reaping the
lion’s share of Bush’s tax cuts, even compared to the “merely
rich,” those with incomes between $200,000 a year and $1.6 million. The
400 wealthiest taxpayers—those making $87 million a year or more—pay
the same share of their income in federal income tax and Medicare and Social
Security taxes as those making between $50,000 and $75,000.
One figure provided by the Times is particularly striking: it compares how
much the top 14,000 households, the richest 0.01 percent, gained for each new
dollar earned by the bulk of taxpayers, the bottom 90 percent. From 1950 to
1970, for every additional dollar earned by working class and middle-class people,
the hyper-rich gained an additional $162. But from 1990 to 2002, for every additional
dollar earned by the bottom 90 percent, the top 0.01 percent gained $18,000.
Such figures not only prove the existence of a financial aristocracy in the
United States, they demonstrate that this social layer profited under Clinton
and the Democrats as well as under Bush and the Republicans. Both parties carried
out policies that enriched the privileged few at the expense of the mass of
working people.
The assets under management by hedge funds have risen from $400 billion in
2000 to more than $1 trillion in January 2005—a figure which itself expresses
the staggering increase in the wealth of the super-rich, since only the wealthy
can find entry to these funds.
The runaway growth of hedge funds is not only an example of parasitic wealth
accumulation. It is also an extremely destabilizing economic factor. The flood
of capital into this form of speculation, despite the exorbitant fees taken
by the managers, is driven by the poor performance of more traditional, relatively
more stable investment vehicles: the stock market has stagnated for the past
two years, while bond rates remain at historical lows.
The hedge funds themselves have faced increasing difficulty in this environment.
According to figures compiled by UBS Investment Research, while hedge fund assets
reached an all-time high, fund managers’ fees declined 21 percent from
2003 to 2004. (The combined fees of the thousands of hedge funds worldwide were
still a massive $44.8 billion.)
These funds, largely unregulated, play a growing role in the functioning of
the stock, bond and currency markets. Under conditions of major financial shocks,
hedge fund operations can become an enormously destructive force in the markets.
Because they are highly leveraged, their impact on day-to-day trading far outweighs
the actual size of their assets. Griffin’s Citadel Investment Group, for
instance, accounts for more than 1 percent of daily trading on the New York,
London and Tokyo stock exchanges. Another of the top 10 funds accounts for 3
percent of trading in New York alone.
Hedge funds were originally devised as a means of guarding against the risk
of a sudden fall in asset values, by balancing purchases of one kind of assets,
expected to rise in value, with the purchase of another kind of asset that generally
rises when the other asset falls. Thus, a corporation might hedge against fluctuations
in the value of the dollar by buying euros, since the fall in one currency will
generally be mirrored in the rise of the other. Many of the more than 8,000
hedge funds now operating, however, are nothing more than large one-way bets,
which can be easily lost if the markets move in a different direction.
As the New York Times Magazine noted in a generally admiring profile of one
hedge fund operator, also published June 5, “What got lost over time was
the idea that hedge funds were supposed to hedge. That was primarily because
of the powerful bull market that began in August 1982 and ended in March 2000.
Investors took outsize risks and invariably wound up being rewarded, because
the market was going straight up. The bull market forgave a lot of investing
mistakes. Hedging seemed unnecessary—even a little silly.”
The result: “A vehicle developed to help reduce individual risk has heightened
risk to the system.”