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Activist hedge fund TCI shuts shop in Asia

HONG KONG
Tue Nov 3, 2009 6:18am EST

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HONG KONG (Reuters) - Activist investor The Children's Investment fund (TCI), which famously launched an attack on ABN AMRO in 2007 that helped trigger the Dutch bank's sale, has closed down in Asia following the departure of its regional head earlier this year, sources familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

Japan

The fund had approached other global hedge funds with a regional presence to takeover its Asian portfolios, said another source close to the issue, and managed to sell most of its regional investments.

John Ho, who helmed TCI's Asian business, left the hedge fund in April after TCI lost its much-hyped tussle with Japan's largest electricity utility Electric Power Development (9513.T), better known as J-Power, in 2008. The fund is said to have lost $130 million (80 million pounds) on its investment in J-Power.

TCI closed its Asian office in Hong Kong in late October, sources said.

A spokesperson for the UK-based hedge fund manager, founded by Chris Hohn, could not immediately be reached for comment.

TCI's modus operandi of taking big, unhedged bets by investing in a handful of companies and lobbying for change backfired last year as the fund lost 40 percent, against the 19 percent fall in the average hedge fund.

The fund also saw other high profile exits, including by co-founders Snehal Amin and Patrick Degorce against the backdrop of its poor performance in the previous year.

TCI said in July that profit surged 73 percent in the year ended August 2008 but warned that 2009 would be tough. TCI's financial year only partly coincided with what was a difficult 2008 for hedge funds.

The hedge fund had cut its stake in Hong Kong-listed Link Real Estate Investment Trust (0823.HK) to under 10 percent from more than 16 percent early this year.



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