Family Office
Another Hedge Fund Tycoon Mulls Family Office Conversion

Some hedge fund bosses have converted their firms into family offices, avoiding some of the regulations that come with running third-party money.
John Paulson, the US-based hedge fund tycoon who made a fortune
by betting against the sub-prime mortgage market over a decade
ago, may follow the lead of other prominent industry figures by
turning his business into a family office, reports
said.
The investment luminary reportedly said he will probably decide
what to do over the next couple of years. He may run a hybrid
business, with one part managing his money and the other running
client capital with a profit-sharing arrangement with his
partners, Paulson said in an interview on Mike Samuels’
“According to Sources” podcast, according to
Bloomberg.
Paulson’s eponymous hedge fund managed about $8.7 billion at the
start of November last year and about three quarters of his money
belongs to Paulson personally.
Several hedge fund figures such as George Soros, Steven Cohen and
Scott Bommer have taken the route of converting their businesses
to family offices. They no longer manage money for outsiders. By
doing so, they don’t fall under the US regulatory net. This
publication spoke in August 2016 about the phenomenon of such
conversions to Citi Private Bank. (See
here.)