Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories

Hedge fund billionaires on the hot seat

A Congressional committee questioning five prominent hedge fund managers wanted to know what role they might have played in the financial meltdown and whether regulations are needed. Nancy Marshall Genzer has the story.

Download

TEXT OF STORY

Kai Ryssdal: Hedge funds have been blamed for a lot of the crazy volatility that’s been hammering the markets since September. That goes a long way to explaining why some high profile hedge fund managers, including billionaire George Soros, had their turn at the long, green witness table on Capitol Hill today. Five of them answered questions from the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

Marketplace’s Nancy Marshall Genzer reports.


Nancy Marshall Genzer: Hedge funds helped send the Dow down 14 percent last month. Investors forced them to sell stock as they withdrew their money. Hedge funds invested in credit default swaps, contracts that insure investments if they go sour. The swaps helped bring down Lehman Brothers. Republican Congressman Tom Davis of Virginia questioned the role of hedge funds today.

Tom Davis: Hedge funds now pose very public peril when the bets go bad.

What to do about those bad bets? California Democrat Henry Waxman chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. He asked hedge fund managers what they thought.

Henry Waxman: Do you believe the collapse of large hedge funds could pose systemic risks to the economy, and if so, do you believe this justifies greater federal regulation?

George Soros said yes . . .

George Soros: But we must beware of going overboard with regulation.

He and some of the other fund managers supported the idea of a new public clearinghouse to keep track of credit default swaps, which are often traded. Kenneth Griffin is founder and CEO of the Citadel Investment Group.

Kenneth Griffin: Regulators will have far greater transparency into this vast and important market.

Other hedge fund executives said they would support stricter disclosure requirements for their investments. Events may be getting ahead of them. On the other side of Capitol Hill today, Iowa Republican Senator Chuck Grassley said he’d re-introduce legislation to require hedge funds to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In Washington, I’m Nancy Marshall Genzer for Marketplace.

Related Topics

Latest Episodes

View All Shows
  • Marketplace Morning Report
    5 hours ago
    7:08
  • Marketplace Tech
    11 hours ago
    11:03
  • Marketplace
    a day ago
    25:19
  • Make Me Smart
    a day ago
    19:00
  • This Is Uncomfortable
    3 days ago
    56:05
  • Million Bazillion
    24 days ago
    32:45