Here is another side effect of short selling ban. For these guys below
to remain alive, they need to be able to short the stocks of the
companies whose convertibles they buy. By the way, can you short sell
the GE stock? These convertible arbitrage hedge funds are not small.

Best,
Sabri

++++++

Arbitrage disruption hits hedge funds
By James Mackintosh in London

Published: September 23 2008 23:30 | Last updated: September 23 2008 23:30

Arbitrage strategies at the heart of the hedge fund industry were
decimated last week, as a combination of fire sales of assets from
investment banks and worldwide restrictions on short selling hit their
profits.

Convertible bond arbitrageurs had the worst performance of any hedge
funds, according to investors, as large portfolios of bonds were
dumped into the market � probably, said several managers, as Lehman
Brothers� proprietary trading desks closed.

The heavy losses for convertible arbitrage, coupled with the removal
of the funds� ability to lower the risk of holding bonds by short
selling the linked equity, could make it much more expensive for
companies trying to raise capital through convertibles, managers said.
Convertible bond arbitrage involves hedging out the equity or credit
risk, or both, often trying to profit by trading the value of the
embedded option to convert the bond into shares.

So far this year, banks and other financial companies in the US have
raised more than $35bn, one fund calculated, as the convertible bond
market � which is dominated by hedge funds � remained one of the few
still open at a reasonable price.

The average convertible fund lost more than 4 per cent, according to
Hedge Fund Research�s daily indices, as the specialists had one of
their worst weeks.

�Although they are not getting fall-off-your-chair hammered, they are
among the worst out there,� said one investor in the sector, who said
several large funds were down 7-8 per cent in the week.

Other arbitrage strategies have also had a terrible time as the
combination of deleveraging and forced sales made common trades in the
fixed income and equity markets go awry.

The same effects hit some event-driven funds, as common trades � such
as the bet on Volkswagen�s share price versus its preference shares �
were hit by forced sales and the fallout from the collapse of Lehman.

Computer-driven hedge funds, which use statistical arbitrage to look
for small mispricings in shares, have also had a tough time, as the
new short-selling rules forced them to scrap all or part of their
models.

However, the biggest hedge fund sector, which follows equity
long-short strategies betting both ways on share prices, ended the
week down only 1-2 per cent, several investors said. The HFRX global
index, including all hedge strategies, was down 1.4 per cent.

�Obviously nobody�s making money apart from the CTAs [managed futures
traders], but in the long-short market nobody�s dead,� said another
hedge fund investor.

Funds have just begun reporting weekly numbers so it remains unclear
how badly the worst were hit and whether any switched their positions
at the wrong time.

Some managed futures traders, who typically use computer models to
follow short term or medium term trends in futures markets, did very
well, several investors said, as did funds trading volatility.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
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