Folger Hill hedge fund stumbles after pedigreed start

By Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Lawrence Delevingne

BOSTON/NEW YORK, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Folger Hill Asset Management has suffered through investor redemptions and losses that have cut the hedge fund firm's assets by nearly one-third from its 2015 peak, people familiar with the situation told Reuters.

Launched in 2014 by an acolyte of SAC Capital Advisors founder Steven A. Cohen, Folger Hill was one of the most prominent hedge funds to come on the scene. Its founder, Solomon Kumin wanted it to be similar to SAC in that it would have many portfolio managers pursuing a variety of strategies for high returns.

Kumin raised about $1.1 billion by telling investors its diverse array of stock market bets through talented managers meant Folger Hill would perform well in good markets and bad.

But through mid-August, its main fund was down about 5 percent, having recovered from more severe losses earlier in the year, said the sources. They were not authorized to publicly disclose performance information, which is closely guarded in the secretive $3 trillion hedge fund industry.

Recent declines have occurred after a 3.2 percent drop in 2015. As of mid-August, Folger Hill's assets had fallen to about $750 million from its post-funding peak as some investors who were able to redeem their funds lost patience.

Brad Balter, managing partner at hedge fund investment firm Balter Capital, said the drop was consistent in the industry with people leaving funds with high fees that do not perform quickly.

"That's not a plus for high-fee models," Balter said.

Folger Hill is far from being the only struggling hedge fund.

The industry's performance has suffered in recent years, because of factors ranging from low interest rates to subdued volatility to bad bets on individual stocks. Hedge funds have also taken a reputational hit as a small but highly publicized group of big investors have abandoned them.

But Folger Hill's decline is notable because of the high hopes that accompanied its launch.

Kumin had been chief operating officer at Cohen's SAC, which generated annual returns of 30 percent, on average.

SAC pleaded guilty in 2013 to civil charges of insider trading, agreed to stop managing funds for outside investors and paid a $1.8 billion fine. Cohen settled with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission this year and was barred from managing outside investor money until 2018.

Soon after SAC's plea deal, Kumin started raising money for his own fund.

Kumin told potential investors he expected to deliver strong returns in all markets and that there would be tight risk controls, according to marketing material viewed by Reuters.