Andrew Lynch

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leverage was the very essence of the firm: The pricing anomalies it found were too small to be worth much without the multiplier of borrowed money. In 1995, for example, Long-Term’s return on assets, at 2.45 percent, was modest; but leverage transformed an indifferent return on assets into a spectacular return on capital—2.45 percent became 42.8 percent.
More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite
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