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25 Richest Hedge Fund Managers Made $22 Billion Last Year

Hedge Managers

First Posted: 04/01/11 01:32 PM ET Updated: 06/01/11 06:12 AM ET

Corrects paragraph to say $4.9 billion, instead of million

NEW YORK (By Matthew Goldstein) - The richest 25 hedge fund managers made a bit less money last year.
But don't cry too hard. Collectively, this privileged class of traders did quite well for itself -- raking in some $22 billion in compensation, according to AR Magazine.

Topping the charts in hedge fund pay was John Paulson, who reportedly earned $4.9 billion. Paulson's name at the top of the "rich list" isn't too surprising, given that his $36 billion Paulson & Co has emerged as one of the industry's top performing funds.

AR reports that Paulson's 2010 earnings even bested the $3.7 billion he made in 2007, when he rocketed to hedge fund fame with his enormously successful wager on the housing market's collapse.

Other top earning managers were: Bridgewater Associates' Ray Dalio with $3.1 billion, Renaissance Technologies' Jim Simons with $2.5 billion, Appaloosa Management's David Tepper with $2.2 billion and SAC Capital Advisors' Steve Cohen with $1.3 billion.

Overall, the hedge fund trade publication reports that compensation for the top 25 managers declined by 13 percent from 2009. But 2010 still came in as the third best year for hedge fund pay since AR began estimating industry compensation in 2001.

AR notes that many of the managers on its rich list are "serial earners." It found that 11 managers, including Simons,
Tepper, Cohen and Citadel's Ken Griffin, have made the rich list at least seven times.

Other rich managers include ESL Investments' Eddie Lampert, Pershing Square's William Ackman, Moore Capital Management's Louis Bacon and Third Point Advisors' Dan Loeb.

Hedge fund managers typically charge investors 2 percent for managing their money, meaning that a $10 billion hedge fund takes in $200 million in fees. In good years, managers also can skim off 20 percent or more of the profits from their trades.

Last year hedge funds, on average, returned about 7 percent after managers collected their fees.
Many of the managers on the rich list scored big by keeping a good chunk of their personal wealth invested in their funds. In other words, the managers benefited directly from the rising value of their funds.

David Shaw, founder of D.E. Shaw Group, earned $275 million, even though the firm that bears his name had a difficult year. The firm's assets shrank by 40 percent to $14 billion over the past year, as investors pulled money from the fund. Many Shaw investors redeemed their money after being barred from doing so during the height of the financial crisis.

Calculating the earnings of top hedge fund managers involves a degree of guesswork and alchemy, since funds don't publicly disclose compensation. AR bases its estimates on the fees charged by funds and the percentage of capital a manager is believed to have in his fund.

Over the years, getting on AR's rich list has become a point of pride and vanity for top managers -- as the list is a proxy for measuring a managers success.

Conversely, falling off the rich list is something of a sore point for managers as well. This year, six managers who made the rich list in 2009 dropped off the chart, including Harbinger Capital Partners Phil Falcone and Viking Capital's Andreas Halvorsen.

(Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
greengirl208
03:09 PM on 04/04/2011
Every time we post something the prompt for Facebook comes up. Who else finds this annoying as all get out? Then we try to close the prompt and we get an advertisement for Kumon... whoever they are. Also VERY annoying.
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11:39 AM on 04/04/2011
Hedge fund managers can't be all bad. At least Barack Obama doesn't think so:

"Obama and the Hedge Fund Factor - by Andrew Ross Sorkin"
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2008/04/22/obama-and-the-hedge-fund-factor/

And why does George Soros' compensation seem to always escape similar scrutiny?
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08:46 AM on 04/04/2011
I don't know what a hedge fund is. This is the reason why these funds need to be illegal.
bcunnin679
Political Correctness, the enemy of free speech
09:02 AM on 04/04/2011
If you do not know what they are, research and learn. Not knowing is not a good reason for something to be illegal
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greengirl208
03:00 PM on 04/04/2011
The point he made went WAY over your head.
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07:49 AM on 04/04/2011
I remember reading the Forbes 400 when it first came out ( 15-20 yrs ago ? ) and the people on it for the most part had ' bricks and mortar ' type companies... oil wells, real estate companies or factories that made THINGS and employed many people. The past few years its these guys who make up a large part of the list and thought these men doing their M&As or downsizing or outsourcing of the new companies they finance are actually responsible for destroying thousands of US jobs as they get richer..
04:41 AM on 04/04/2011
Hey kids. Don't sell drugs.
Go to college, get a degree in finance, and work for these people.
Even if you do get caught, you won't go to jail.
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spkninglsh
'Poor' Fridge Owner
01:43 AM on 04/04/2011
As long as their not teachers or in some union or something bad like that.
12:07 AM on 04/04/2011
Raise their tax rates. They can afford it.
09:28 PM on 04/03/2011
Not a WASP among them..
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09:02 PM on 04/03/2011
When the American Spring hits the streets, don't be surprise. It won't be a musical. People are desperate and need jobs, while the fraudsters continue to sack the country
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Alex Damiani
07:40 PM on 04/03/2011
They destroy the economy, middle class & home ownership but will continue to make it big without anyone going to JAIL!
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08:01 PM on 04/03/2011
Bought and paid for..... Congress I mean
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whyus
San Francisco native
06:25 PM on 04/03/2011
Well, then, it's time to return some of it to the American taxpayers who bailed them out.
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rebt
a liberal in the bible belt. Oh the humanity.
04:30 PM on 04/03/2011
In my view, hedge funds should be illegal. It is legalized theft.
10:17 PM on 04/04/2011
How so?
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JustinP213
I dislike all political parties.
02:07 PM on 04/03/2011
7 percent return? That's it. I'm sure Paulson didn't return more than 25 percent. And, he gets almost 5 billion. Amazing.
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
01:43 PM on 04/03/2011
If they paid the top line marginal rate, that would be what, about 7 billion with the Bush/Obama tax cuts, but I would be able to live happily for a hundred years or so on the difference between that number and what they actually pay in taxes.