Family Office
Madoff scandal undoes the Fairfield-Hentsch tie-in

Swiss bank Hentsch buys itself back from Madoff-linked
alternatives manager. Geneva-based private bank Banque Benedict
Hentsch has undone its merger with Fairfield Greenwich Group, New
York-based alternatives manager with ties to Bernard L. Madoff
Investment Securities (BLMIS), a New York-based asset
manager at the heart of a multi-billion-dollar fraud scandal.
BLMIS' guiding light Bernard Madoff is supposed to have swindled
his clients out anywhere between $50 billion and $75 billion
-- the tally keeps growing. It now appears that Madoff
was running an elaborate pyramid scheme rather than an investment
firm. He is due to face charges in a U.S. federal court this
week.
Fairfield says that about half of its $14.1 billion in assets
under management was allocated to Madoff-run investments in early
November 2008.
On second thought
Hentsch and Fairfield joined forces three months ago. The idea
was to give Hentsch clients access to Fairfield Greenwich's fund
platform while Fairfield clients got access to Banque Benedict
Hentsch's wealth-management services, the firms said when they
merged. Banque Benedict Hentsch Fairfield (BBHF) was the
first-ever tie in between a U.S. alternatives manager and a Swiss
private bank.
Hentsch's founding shareholders "have concluded an agreement with
[Fairfield] whereby they have repurchased the total capital of
the bank [from Fairfield]," and so "have terminated their
partnership with [Fairfield]," Hentsch says in a 15 December
statement. "Thus the bank regains its complete independence as
well as its name Banque Bénédict Hentsch & Cie."
The Swiss bank says it has determined that its clients' exposure
to Madoff comes to around $52 million, which is less than 5% of
its total assets under management.
Hentsch adds that it is "carefully following the development" of
the Madoff case "in order to undertake any further steps,
particularly legal, judged necessary."
Shocked and appalled
On 12 December, Fairfield posted a notice on its website in which
it vows "to take all necessary steps to protect" those of its
investors with exposure to Madoff.
"We have worked with Madoff for nearly 20 years, investing
alongside our clients," says Fairfield founding partner Jeffrey
Tucker . "We had no indication that we and many other firms and
private investors were the victims of such a highly
sophisticated, massive fraudulent scheme."
Adds Tucker: "It is our intention to aggressively pursue the
recovery of all assets related to [Madoff]" and "we are committed
to the operation of our continuing funds."
Tucker, Walter Noel and Andrés Piedrahita founded Fairfield
Greenwich in 1983. It markets internally managed hedge funds and
a selection of non-proprietary alternatives, principally to
non-U.S. private banks, institutions, financial intermediaries
and high-net-worth individuals.
Benedict Hentsch co-founded the bank that bears his name in 2004.
Before that he was at Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch, a firm
founded by his ancestor Henri Hentsch in 1796.
BBHF had more than 150 employees in Geneva and Lugano in
Switzerland and in Greenwich, Conn., New York and Miami in the
U.S., and in Bermuda, Brazil, the U.K., Spain, Singapore and
China. -FWR
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