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A 27-year-old raised $10 million from venture capitalists for an unusual hedge fund

Dec 23, 2016, 17:47 IST

Andrew Burton/Getty Images

A 27-year-old has raised $10 million for an unusual hedge fund - with support of venture capitalists like Andreessen Horowitz and Union Square Ventures.

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The 27-year-old in question is Olaf Carlson-Wee, and he's launching a strategy that invests in cryptocurrencies.

To be clear, the $10 million managed by Carlson-Wee's Polychain Capital is peanuts in the hedge fund world. But Polychain's strategy is rare, with few other funds trading in cryptocurrencies. Most hedge funds trade stocks, bonds, and currencies, with variations of different strategies.

So what is a cryptocurrency?

A cryptocurrency is basically a digital, encrypted currency that is decentralized, so no one single power oversees its value. Bitcoin is the most famous of cryptocurrencies - nobody knows who created it - and it's divorced from any government. It's considered a secure, private currency, drawing the attention of antigovernment and privacy-minded folks. But it's not the only one - several other cryptocurrencies exist and are being developed.

Transactions for these currencies are recorded in blockchain, a private (encrypted) ledger.

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Carlson-Wee is betting that he can choose the cryptocurrencies that will go up in value - and he expects hundreds of them to enter the market.

"The challenge for someone running a hedge fund is how to build a portfolio across that spectrum of risk and how to choose which of the new issues are going to become important, and which are not," said Brad Burnham, partner at Union Square Ventures, which is investing in the fund.

Courtesy of Olaf Carlson-WeeOlaf Carlson-WeePolychain, based in San Francisco, will be small, hiring only a handful of people - and Carlson-Wee is not looking for traditional Wall Street types.

"An amateur trader in the cryptocurrency market may have a more relevant background than someone who has had a traditional background on Wall Street," Carlson-Wee said.

Carlson-Wee, a Vassar College grad, wrote his undergrad thesis on bitcoin."I was immediately enamored and sort of obsessed," he said. "I thought the prospect of [bitcoin] had massive implications."

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He then went to Coinbase, a digital asset exchange, and headed risk, overseeing things like fraud prevention and account security, he said.

Not only is his background unusual for hedge funds - so is his strategy. For instance, the normal research avenues for common hedge fund trades are unavailable, though there are some parallels.

Qualitative research

Instead of talking with sell-side researchers or looking at credit agencies (there are none), Carlson-Wee spends his time reading through the white papers that describe the protocols, interviewing the lead developers, and looking at a protocol's machinations in the GitHub repository.

"This qualitative research is supplemented by market data such as price and trading volume as well as network data such as transactions per day, dollar value transacted per day, and the estimated cost of a network-scale attack," he said.

He also embeds himself within the groups that are using the protocols to get a sense of how they are interacting with them, he said. Patrick Lux/Getty Images

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That model is similar to other funds that have launched in the space. MetaStable, another small San Francisco-based hedge fund, launched in 2014 with a handful of employees. The firm manages a few million, said Lucas Ryan, one of MetaStable's staffers.

Its investors tend to be those that are already sold on blockchain, but "aren't necessary sold that bitcoin has solved all the problems," so they are seeking to invest in other cryptocurrencies, Ryan said.

Ryan, who has a programming background, says his job is to evaluate the protocols that people are developing and the problems they are trying to solve.

"The market is so immature, and requires a high degree of technical understanding to wade through the stuff that isn't bulls***," Ryan said. "A lot of stuff I couldn't do if I wasn't a programmer with a cryptography background. There's not like a ratings agency for any of these [currencies]."

Still, like with Polychain's strategy, there are parallels. Ryan meets with protocol developers and tries to get a sense of how serious they are, and whether their source coding is legit.

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To be sure, this world of funds is very young. Until recently, Ryan was working on the fund part-time, he said.

And it's unlikely for these kinds of funds to grow large. Bitcoin, the most popular coin, has about a $13.7 billion market cap.

"Bitcoin is like 80% of the total market of coins," Ryan said. "It would give someone pause to start a $50 million fund."

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