It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Yeah, Jim Rickards - who I like quite a bit and follow (he's written two books and has an active Twitter) - was the principal negotiator in the bailout of LTCM. It's sort of like that - very intelligent people doing very complex things who are married (to at least some degree) to their economic theories."
So you have a fund going long and short based on what brilliant people think should work and they would have been better off just going long (and the more heavily shorted companies, the better) for the last 5 years or so.
Remember the Long Term Capital Management hedge fund?
Remember the Long Term Capital Management hedge fund?"
So you have a fund going long and short based on what brilliant people think should work and they would have been better off just going long (and the more heavily shorted companies, the better) for the last 5 years or so.

I've been in SEQUX for very many years, so regarding "can you get into the fund", I read what you posted below, on their website, and assume someone not in the fund cannot get in, unless they meet the very narrow criteria above.SEQUX has been great in recent years (from late 2009) until this year. As far as I know the problem is Valeant which is the largest position I think(till a few years ago the largest position was Berkshire)Since Feb. Valeant ,which has been in the news alot, is down about 20%
By the way can you get into the fund? They closed it late last year to most people.
As of December 10th, 2013, we have adopted a harder close for Sequoia. The Fund is closed to new investors, except for new accounts opened with us directly by existing shareholders of the Fund or existing clients of our firm, or members of their families. The Fund remains open to contributions from existing shareholders, though we reserve the right to reject any order to purchase Fund shares.

TIAA-CREF would be my recommendation. Their programs come in many flavors, not all of which offer the same combination of retirement class funds and annuities. As a general matter, they have a nice series of target-date funds that are built purely around index funds. And their Real Estate account is, literally, in a class by itself. It invests directly in real estate rather than just in real estate securities. It utterly crashed in the 2008 market crisis; that was one disastrous 24 months period sandwiched by 18 years of remarkably steady returns.
David
© 2015 Mutual Fund Observer. All rights reserved.
© 2015 Mutual Fund Observer. All rights reserved. Powered by Vanilla