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Global hedge fund LMR to open office Dubai

Half of its staff in Dubai are new hires, while the rest will relocate from other offices



The emirate is seen as a more convenient time zone for some of its portfolio managers who trade globally.
Image Credit: Virendra Saklani/Gulf News

LMR Partners, a $9.8 billion hedge fund, is opening an office in Dubai, expanding into a country that has become the single biggest destination for expatriate millionaires.

The London-based firm secured a licence from Dubai International Financial Centre and will start with six people, according to a person familiar with the matter. LMR is taking space in the ICD Brookfield Place and its office has room for between 25 and 30 people, the person said, asking not to be identified because the details are private.

Half of its employees in Dubai are new hires, while the rest - including portfolio managers Iain Raskin and Sebastian Gorga who were based in Hong Kong - are relocating from other offices, the person said. The emirate is seen as a more convenient time zone for some of its portfolio managers who trade globally, the person said.

LMR, whose traders invest in various strategies and asset classes including equities and fixed income, joins Izzy Englander’s Millennium Management and Michael Gelband’s ExodusPoint Capital Management in expanding into Dubai. The emirate is emerging as a favoured destination for global financiers who are drawn by its ease of doing business, tax-free status and its allure as a global travel hub. It is also a more friendly time zone for portfolio managers who have global investments spanning North America to Asia.

4,000 millionaires

“More hedge fund managers are opting to relocate to Dubai, given the emirate’s good infrastructure, low taxes, and light regulation,” said Dominic Volek, the Dubai-based head of private clients at consultancy Henley & Partners, which expects the UAE to attract a net inflow of 4,000 millionaires this year, the most of any country globally.

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Higher oil prices are another draw. Crude hovering around $90 a barrel is buoying Gulf economies and markets, prompting the region’s sovereign wealth funds to invest the windfall at home and abroad.

New York-based investment firm Schonfeld Strategic Advisors expanded to Dubai last year, while All Blue Capital ditched its London headquarters to base itself in the city, where it now has almost half its global staff. Other prominent funds such as Brevan Howard and Squarepoint Capital LLP have also recently obtained licences to operate in Dubai, according to the finance center’s public register.

LMR, which already has a presence in London, Hong Kong, New York, Glasgow and Zurich, now has six offices globally with about 190 staff.

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