Interesting stuff.
Read More...John Farrell and Torey Lovullo looked down toward the Twins bullpen. They saw some stirring, as Minnesota lefty reliever Brian Duensing had grabbed a ball and tossed it a few times.
Then Duensing sat down. It was then the Red Sox manager and his bench coach knew they had put the right people in the right places.
“It’s a good feeling,” Lovullo said after the Red Sox’ 12-5 win over the Twins Saturday night, “when all the puzzle pieces fit perfectly.”
The puzzle Lovullo ...
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1. Ivan Grushenko of Hong Kong posted on November 10, 2012 at 01:29 AM # hit 0 | hit 0That is an important clarification I have been missing in these reports. Thanks
rich person gives gobs of money to a firm. rich person pays 1-2% of the amount he gives / yr to the firm.
firm tries to make a profit. assume they do. they keep 10-20% of the profits for themselves, rest go to the rich person.
once the firm has success and/or publicity, lots of other rich people put money in the firm. the firm then may have to change their strategy / alter their risk portfolio because they have to take on larger positions.
if the firm has one losing *quarter* (or below-average) , some people will pull money out of the firm. that's not too bad.
however, if the firm has one losing *year* (or below-average), more ppl will pull money out of the firm. and when word goes around that some people are pulling money out, most other people think "they're pulling money out, i better pull money out too."
that's what happened in this case.
a more individualized example (not relevant to henry's case, but he COULD have led the firm down this strategy) which can lead to disaster is as follows:
firm is down 8% three-quarters of the way through the year. the traders are mainly paid in bonuses, and the bonuses are based off of being + for the year. the traders and firm both believe that if they don't get +, people will pull their money (as talked about above).
the trader/firm then starts taking on huge outsized position (relative to what they'd normally take on) - positions which if they go right can get them back to positive territory, but also a position where, if it goes wrong, can mean the fund is now down 25-35% for the year. and this can result from a small position in the underlying price, because the firm has put on a position which is way too big.
if they lose money/close up shop, what happens? they wait a couple years and open up a new one. some of the most intelligent traders have blown up several times because they can't practice risk management in "unusual" times (ie. where the market doesn't go according to their project models), and then blame others/ the market / etc. for their failings.
That's not the way baseball works anymore.
Don't expect to see any big free agent signings or trades for top players; Henry needs the cash flow to support Liverpool and his expensive wife.
Sox need new ownership. Fast. And someone whose money is in a decently stable business.
They were losing money under Hicks and Gillette. Making money in soccer is the exception, not the rule.
firm is down 8% three-quarters of the way through the year. the traders are mainly paid in bonuses, and the bonuses are based off of being + for the year. the traders and firm both believe that if they don't get +, people will pull their money (as talked about above).
the trader/firm then starts taking on huge outsized position (relative to what they'd normally take on) - positions which if they go right can get them back to positive territory, but also a position where, if it goes wrong, can mean the fund is now down 25-35% for the year. and this can result from a small position in the underlying price, because the firm has put on a position which is way too big.
if they lose money/close up shop, what happens? they wait a couple years and open up a new one. some of the most intelligent traders have blown up several times because they can't practice risk management in "unusual" times (ie. where the market doesn't go according to their project models), and then blame others/ the market / etc. for their failings.
Henry's funds were black box and traded on some proprietary algorithm for the commodities markets.
His #### doesn't work in the post market meltdown market.
You have predicted literally every off-season since 2005 that the Sox were going to have a low payroll because of losses of John Henry's business and every single season you have been wrong. Given that every year for 6-7 years evidence has been building that you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about, maybe you should wait until the Sox actually play a season with a low payroll before you pat yourself on the back.
True, but with reduced income from his investment business, Henry may need more income from the Red Sox to maintain his lifestyle. Can't have him flying first class instead of using a private plane, after all. Since the current CBA makes it so attractive for teams to get below the luxury tax threshold, who knows what the actual motivation will be going forward. Might take a couple of off seasons to see if Henry's finances have impacted the Red Sox.
And Karl, if you predict something to happen every year for seven years and it finally happens all it means is you were wrong six out of seven years so I wouldn't be too impressed with yourself.
And you have been proven wrong, over and over and over again. But don't let that stop you. Someday, inevitably Henry will either spend less or sell the team, and then you can say you were a visionary!*
*Not really, but you'll probably try to anyway.
2008: Henry's broke, that's why we can't have Manny anymore!
2010: Henry's broke! No more spending on payroll!
I see no reason to believe Henry's finances are negatively affecting the Red Sox. They may be making a decision to spend less money, but I don't see that tied, specifically, to Henry being worth less.
65. karlmagnus Posted: December 16, 2005 at 07:10 PM (#1780359)
The combination of the Renteria trade and the Crisp/Marte trade suggests the Sox are in a financial bind and desperately trying to reduce payroll. It probably foots with Henry's poor year; you don't make much out of a hedge fund if it loses money. Sox may have just become a small market franchise, until we get new ownership.
Estimated payroll ranks since:
2006 - second
2007 - second
2008 - second
2009 - fourth
2010 - second
according to here.
Henry's funds were failing for many years. He went from a few billion under management in 2004 to $100 million in only eight years. It can be argued that he saw the end coming and reduced costs for the Red Sox. I don't think that is the case, but Henry's failing hedge fund business has been coming down the pike for a while.
You can argue that his funds started declining in the early 90s. If I remember correctly (it's been years since I've seen his year by year performance record) his original fund a huge run in the late 80s, then it's results became pretty mediocre for a long period. He opened new funds to diversify and some had big years, but overall the firms results weren't special, or even good. But the advantage of of having that huge run was that the long term results looked great for a while, then still good for a long while.
He really seems like the epitome of the lucky coinflipper. Build a huge fund off a huge lucky streak you had as a tiny fund, and do well enough for long enough to not lose customers and you can be become extremely wealthy before the inevitable underperformance.
The long term is the friend of the truly sklled investor, over time their results are more likely to demonstrate their skill, not unmask their luckiness.
Isn't the real factor size? As your fund gets larger, it gets harder and harder to beat the market because your purchases are making up a larger part of the market. Even Warren Buffett has been pretty damn ordinary since around 1990.
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