Commentary on the economy, the markets, and business

The well-hedged wisdom of sometime socialist and Wall Street titan Alfred Winslow "Ribbie" Jones

As part of what I guess is now a continuing series of excerpts from ancient alumni publications, here's some stuff from Alfred Winslow Jones, the man generally credited with inventing the hedge fund. He didn't, really: In the 1920s, Benjamin Graham ran a limited investment partnership that bought some stocks and sold others short--the distinguishing characteristics of the fund Jones launched in 1949--and surely others did too.

Jones did invent the name, although he called his a "hedged fund" and thought "hedge fund" was a grammatical abomination. And he inspired a bunch of imitators in the 1960s, a handful of whom (Michael Steinhardt is the only name that springs to mind) survived the 1970s bear market and inspired the "industry" that brings such joy to so many people today (hey, if you're a Paulson & Co. investor you're pretty happy right now).

As a youth, Jones was known as "Ribbie" (or maybe "Ribby") because he was so skinny. That's not in any of the Harvard Class of 1923 publications I consulted; it's something Jones's high school and college classmate Al Gordon told me a couple of years ago. "When he got into an amount of money, he asked us to stop calling him Ribbie," said Gordon, who did a lot of fundraising for Harvard. "I'm sorry to say that after that we all called him Alfred, because we were hoping to get money from him."

Jones's post-college activities, culled from his entries in the Class of 1923's 25th and 50th reunion yearbooks, started with a job as purser on a tramp steamer making a round-the-world trip and continued with stints in the export-import and investment counseling businesses. Then he signed up with the Foreign Service, which posted him in Berlin in the early 1930s, where he "saw strange things happen."

In the 1920s he'd been a "moderate liberal" reader of The New Republic and newspaper columnist Heywood Broun. In Germany, “I became what my German Marxist friends would have called a rebellious liberal.” Then he decided he was a socialist, and went to Columbia University to get a Ph.D. in sociology (because that's what socialists study, I guess). His dissertation was a study of Akron, Ohio during the Depression that was later published as Life, Liberty and Property.

Fortune magazine published an excerpt from the book, and subsequently hired Jones as an editor. He spent the war years there, and then:

I gave up the high-powered, chromium-plated operations of Henry Luce to go as head of editorial research for Marshall Field's Project X, which was to have resulted in the publication of a magazine called U.S.A. But with a slump in magazine publishing the effort came to naught.

He then worked on a magazine project for Encyclopedia Brittanica, but that also didn't go anywhere.

So, in the late 1940s, with a wife and two children, I needed something more lucrative, and turned to Wall Street, where I shaped up what I called a hedged fund, mostly with the money of other people, for whose confidence I am eternally grateful.

That's all he wrote about his hedged fund, apart from this:

I suppose I am not, and never was, the Wall Street type that I should have been. In any case, I fairly soon began to slope away from full time for A.W. Jones & Company.

He and his wife traveled to a lot of exotic places, much of the time on behalf of the newly founded Peace Corps. He launched a charitable foundation. And he gave up on isms:

Decades ago I called myself a socialist and for a time I was a follower of Norman Thomas. Now not only have the ism's been dead or dying for many years but no one seems to be able to bring forth a valid, new program with hope for the future, the New Left being so arrogantly nihilist.

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  • 1

    Jeg er meget hisset opp om min upcoming reise til din bolig. jeg håper til å gå 25 engelske mil omkring byen når jeg faor der

  • 3

    I have always been confused by the term "hedge" fund. The word "hedge" implies lowering of risk, while allowing for maximum return. But, are "hedge" funds really "hedging" themselves by buying stocks and selling others short. At some point, in order to make a return on the investment, there must be a bet. It could be a bet that would be based on a very small beta or range of outcomes as a result of the hedge (i.e. short selling), but then the question is, how big was the bet? For example, was it leveraged, which could make a small bet, really, really big? In other words, at some point, every investor must pick a side or make a bet, weather they like it or not. At the end of the day there is no such thing as a pure investment "hedge" on a stand-alone investment, other than by using such portfolio investment strategies as diversification and dollar-cost averaging.

    The only way to truly hedge yourself or lower your risk while making any investment is through diversification (range of outcome hedge) and dollar-cost-averaging (a time hedge). In Graham and Dodd's book, Security Analysis, they write on p. 63, "An investment might be justified in any group of issues, which would not be sufficiently safe if made in any one of them singly. In other words, diversification might be necessary to reduce the risk involved in the separate issues to the minimum consonant with the requirements of investment. Benjamin Graham quoted Lucille Tomlinson (p. 57) in The Intelligent Investor "No one has yet discovered any other formula for investing which can be used with so much confidence of ultimate success, regardless of what may happen to security prices, as Dollar Cost Averaging."

    As far as "isms" go, it seems there may be one "ism" that Jones could be very interested in, it is called Pluralism. Webster defines the "ism": 3a."a theory that there are more than one or more than two kinds of ultimate reality. 4a. a state of society in which members of diverse ethnic, racial, religious, or social groups maintain an autonomous participation in and development of their traditional culture or special interest within the confines of a common civilization".

  • 4

    The term "hedge fund" is used to define any investment fund that brokerage firms or investment advisers can invest in more complex and more risky investments than a public fund might. Although there is no legal definition of "hedge fund" under U.S. securities laws and regulations.

  • 5

    He who is not a socialist at 19, has no heart. He who is still a socialist at 30, has no brain.

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