Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Chris McGuire and Dan Farrell of Phalanx Capital Management Visted the FMA Students at Marquette on March 9, 2016


FMA Students Learned About Arbitrage-Based Hedge Funds Today from Chris McGuire of Phalanx Capital Management

Dr. David Krause, Chris McGuire and Dan Farrell
Phalanx Capital, a Chicago-based Asian Volatility Multi-Strategy Hedge Fund, was founded in 2004 by Chris McGuire (a 1991 Marquette University alumnus).
The fund has received numerous awards over the years and is considered to be one of the more creative (and non-correlated) hedge funds in existence.



Phalanx investors have received positive year-over-year returns in 10 out of 11 years since the fund was founded.
Chris McGuire talked with FMA students


Chris McGuire told the FMA students that Phalanx pioneered the enhancement of traditional Convertible Bond Arbitrage with Volatility and Credit strategies. He did an excellent job explaining how Phalanx gains its exposure through the buying of cheap or mispriced options in Japan and Asia. He noted that they deliver “alpha” through 3 main strategies: convertible bond arbitrage, volatility arbitrage, and equity opportunistic strategies.

Chris talked about his various experiences since graduating from Marquette – including time spent in London and Tokyo. He explained why their investment focus is on Japan and how they are able to exploit unique structural inefficiencies that do not exist in the rest of the world. The students were interested to learn about the firm’s use of asset swaps, convertible bonds and options.

Dr. David Krause, AIM program director stated, “It was great to have Chris and Dan address the students. Also we really appreciated them taking the time to meet with small groups of students for an hour after their presentation. With Chris having two decades of experience in trading international options and convertibles, it is clear that Phalanx provides the experience and analytical skills to identify pricing anomalies in the convertible bond and volatility markets. It was very interesting and we’re thankful they visited us for an afternoon.”