Robert Merton, the Nobel Prize winner who co-founded the failed hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management, said his new firm plans to start an asset management business and open new hedge funds.
Trinsum Group, the firm created when Merton's Integrated Finance Limited merged with Marakon Associates, will launch the new business before the end of the year, he said in an interview on August 23.
The firm, which already has an emerging markets fund, also plans to offer "specialty funds," he said without giving more details. "Asset management clearly is in our plan," Merton said on the sidelines of a financial derivatives conference in Brazil. "We will also have other funds."
Victoria, as the emerging markets fund is called, invests in fixed income, currencies and derivatives, and has "behaved better than expected," said Merton, a Harvard professor who won the 1997 Nobel Prize in economics with Myron Scholes for creating the Black-Scholes formula of pricing options. The emerging markets fund, run by Jose Luis Daza, started in October 2005 and has about $150 million in assets now.
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