DigiLog Capital LLC
From MarketsWiki
| DigiLog Capital LLC | |
| Headquarters | Chicago, Illinois |
|---|---|
| Key People | Founders Steven Wolf, Steven Abraham and M. Blair Wellensiek |
| Products | Futures and equity alternative investments |
| Web site | http://www.tradelinkllc.com |
DigiLog Capital is the asset management arm of TradeLink Holdings. Established in 1995[1] as a personal investment vehicle for three of the principals of TradeLink, DigiLog's platform includes both futures and equity alternative investments, investment with a focus on systematic and quantitative trading.
Digilog's oldest fund is its DigiLog Full Portfolio, which is a futures-based fund. Next is DigiLog Global Equity, which is an equities-based long/short fund that trades in both the U.S. and internationally. Another is DigiLog Constellation, which also is an equities-based fund that focuses on U.S. domestic securities. Another fund is DigiLog Fourth Power, which is a very high-frequency, equity arbitrage fund. The Digilog Master Fund, invests in the company's other funds, and it provides investors with access to some of the firm’s proprietary trading. There is also an environmental fund called the DigiLog Global Environmental Fund.
DigiLog earned over 31% in four of its first five years, including 9.80% in 1999 when few CTAs were successful. The program uses four distinct trend-following models, two short-term and two medium- to long-term that trade up to 45 markets in Europe, Asia and the United States.
The program trades all market segments with the shorter-term models limited to the 30 most liquid markets. The models are mathematically based rather than technical. While the models only produce trade signals on futures, Digilog will trade options at times.
Contents |
History
Products and Services
Key People
Roughly 37% of the nearly $100 million under management belongs to the principals, which in addition to founders Steve Wolf, Steven Abraham and Blair Wellensiek, also include Walt Weissman, Keith D. Bronstein and Jay Twery.
References
- ↑ DigiLog: What are friends for?. All Business. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.


