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8.30am |
Registration |
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8.50am |
Welcome and introductions, Colin Tate, executive director Conexus Financial |
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8.55am |
Kim Ivey, Chair, Alternative Investment Management Association, Australian Chapter |
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Session Chair |
Rob Goodlad, managing director, State Street Global Advisors |
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9.00am |
How the world’s most sophisticated investors are pursuing absolute returns – Greg Moessing, managing director, Cambridge Associates |
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9.35am |
A statistical snapshot of what’s working in the hedge fund industry – Meredith Jones, managing director, Pertrac |
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Panel Chair |
Jack Gray |
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10.05am |
Liquidity and fees – correlated at last? – Panel discussion featuring Simon Ibbetson, head of CPG Advisory, Ross Barry, Watson Wyatt and Con Michalakis, CIO of Statewide Super. |
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10.40am |
Q&A – Interaction Table Captains |
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11.00am |
Morning Tea |
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11.25am |
How hedge fund beta has fared in the last 12 months – Gregor Andrade, Principal, AQR Capital Management |
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11.50am |
Q&A |
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12.00pm |
Covering all your bases with a convergent-divergent approach – Ric Thomas, head of alternative investments, State Street Global Advisors |
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12.30pm |
Investing in Systematic Global Macro: Performance, Risk and Correlation Characteristics – Bob Murray, member of investment committee, Graham Capital |
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1.00pm -2.30pm |
Lunch – Special Keynote Speaker |
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1.45pm – 2.15pm |
Optimising your alternative beta portfolio – Lars Jaeger, partner and head of alternative beta strategies, Partners Group and author |
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Session Chair |
Rob Prugue, senior managing director, Lazard Asset Management Pacific Co. |
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2.30pm |
The end of Asset Allocation? Finding true diversity using alternative investments. – Panel session featuring Guy Stern,Standard Life head of multi-asset fund management; Jon Glass, CIO of Media Super and Sydney University Endowment; Ray King, director of Sovereign Investment Research |
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stern, q&a, featuring, vicis, panel, succo, alternative, allocation, liquidity, diversity, founder, finding Events
Over the past decade, private credit has become an important component of many asset owner portfolios, but a perception of the asset class as risky – or, in some isolated cases, fraudulent – means it is still treated with suspicion by some commentators and investors. A “little bit of a shakeout” might help. Sort content by |


















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