UK’s SFO probes Cayman hedge fund Dynamic Decisions

LONDON, (Reuters) – The founder of hedge fund manager  Dynamic Decisions denied its main fund has been involved in any  wrongdoing as Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) opened an  investigation following investor complaints.

The SFO said yesterday it had begun a criminal  investigation into the Cayman-based Growth Premium Master Fund  Ltd hedge fund following a referral by the Financial Services  Authority and complaints from investors.

However, the firm’s founder and Chief Executive Alberto  Micalizzi, a lecturer at Bocconi university in Milan, told  Reuters there was no fraud in the fund.

He said it would pay back investors the approximately $550  million it was valued at in December last year.
“It’s unfounded,” he said. “The fund is liquidating all its  assets at a value in line with net asset value from December  2008. There is absolutely no fraud. The FSA has not taken any  action after several months.”

The SFO’s probe, which follows an investigation into  Weavering Capital, comes as a further blow to the Cayman  Islands, home to most of the world’s hedge funds but facing  questions over transparency and regulation.

Micalizzi said the Growth Premium Master fund was invested  in corporate bonds, which were “very solid but not liquid”. The  fund’s directors valued the fund at the lower end of a range  provided by an external valuer, he said.

“There is an interesting opportunity to sell all the assets  to one buyer. I think it’s at a good stage,” he added. “I want  to settle this and clarify this.”