Unbalanced

iPad? iDon’t, says Jack Gray Conexus Financial – the publisher of the bundle of dead trees you hold now in your hands – also has its finger on the pulse of cutting edge media technology. At last month’s Fiduciary Investors’ Symposium at the Manly Novotel, we thought we had a lucky door prize guaranteed to wow delegates – an Apple iPad, just two days after its release in Australia. Interestingly for us, however, the prize was won by Jack Gray, the former GMO contrarian for whom a phrase such as ‘finger on the pulse of cutting-edge media technology’ is a cue to stick his fingers in his ears. Unbalanced had caught up with Gray that morning, after he’d walked out of a presentation by digital consultant Anthony Bertini, entitled ‘What’s changing the world – technology and more technology!’. “What a load of crap,” the funds manager was heard to grumble, taking particular exception to Bertini’s evangelising of, ahem, the Apple iPad. Gray assured us he thinks the internet is wonderful, but hates the “hype and bullshit” that has become a hallmark of the online age, particularly when every “latest gizmo” is hailed as making all before it redundant.

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Super policy must rise above resources stoush

Across the developed world, pension systems face funding crises. This makes Australia’s aim to raise the superannuation guarantee to 12 per cent stand out as fine public policy and should not be derailed by the mining industry’s campaign against the tax on super profits of resources companies. GERARD NOONAN, president of the Australian Institute of Superannuation trustees and a former editor of The Australian Financial Review, lays out the argument.

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Hedge funds up in April but performances differ widely

Australian hedge funds (including offshore funds offered for sale in Australia) reported a positive 0.68 per cent return for the month of April, and a positive 1.67 per cent for the first four months of 2010. The top 10 funds, ranked by year-to-date performance, were offered by just six managers: London-based RAB Capital; Sydney’s Platinum AM; New York-based Ramius; and HCAP, a recently established Sydney-based manager. Each of these managers had two funds in the top 10. Ashton and FRM rounded out the list. The best performing strategies were fixed income with a 5.41 per cent return year-to-date, followed by multi-strategy with 3.27 per cent.

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