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Gaining access to alternative investments can be difficult. Some non-traditional or alternative investments fall outside the realm of traditional investments because they involve separate niche markets. They involve strategies not available to traditional investment vehicles. These techniques can include futures, short-selling, leverage, options, overlays, arbitrage and private markets. Access to alternatives can be further limited by high investment minimums or closed/near-capacity funds, making many investment managers simply out of reach for the individual investor.
To help address these challenges, Hatteras partners with world-class alternative investment specialists to deliver institutional-quality investments in registered* funds. This structure makes many funds and managers available to investors at lower investment minimums, enabling a wider range of investors to reap the benefits of an allocation to alternatives. In addition, Hatteras strives to offer investors more favorable lockup and liquidity terms than are available through many hedge fund and private equity investment vehicles.
For most financial advisors and individual investors, access to the alternatives space is a very real barrier to implementing an alternatives allocation. Hatteras removes this barrier by offering solutions that afford financial advisors and their clients the same degree of access to top-quality managers as their large institutional counterparts.

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Alternative investments are subject to significant risks and therefore, are not suitable for all investors. Registration does not imply that the SEC or any other regulatory agency has approved or disapproved the securities or passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of the offering materials or the merits of an investment in the securities. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense. It should also be noted that the underlying managers in a registered fund of hedge funds are not necessarily registered with the SEC. See the Risks section for important information regarding risks of a lack of regulatory oversight of hedge funds. |
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