Andy Kropa/Getty Images
"Really, it's befuddled me and I'm in the industry... how the industry's gotten away with the high fees for so long for what in effect is beta, market exposure," he said on Hard Pass, a podcast hosted by Business Insider's Josh Barro and me.
Hedge fund fees have been a hot topic of late as 2016 has not been kind to hedge funds. The idea is that these funds are compensated richly for delivering "alpha" - returns better than the market, no matter what the market is doing.
However, since this hasn't been the case lately, investors are starting to question whether the funds are worth the fees.
"There's a bigger problem here for Wall Street... the move to index funds," Chanos said.
"In effect, with the massive reduction in fees, more and more people can basically be the market and it increasingly becomes if you're not delivering alpha you're being compared to something that is an infinitesimal, small part of the fees you're charging, and that's a pretty tough competitor."
He explained that hedge funds do okay when the market goes up but really take a beating when it goes down.
"Where do I sign up for that bad deal?"
Listen to the 6 minute interview below: