Jennifer Eum

Jennifer Eum

Director

Jennifer is a Director within the client consulting team at bfinance Hong Kong office, focusing on developing relationships in Asia. Prior to joining bfinance, Jennifer was a Vice President at Goldman Sachs Prime Services Capital Introduction Team and was responsible for relationships with Asia allocators and Hedge Fund managers. She started her career with Lyxor Asset Management in Hong Kong where she was involved with Hedge Fund and ETF business. Jennifer also holds a bachelor's degree in business administration from The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST).


More insights from the team:

Asset owners are now grappling with fundamental tensions within equity portfolio design. The runaway performance of tech titans has led to fears of market over-concentration. At the same time,...

A new survey of more than 300 investors (Global Asset Owner Survey, November 2024) indicates that more than 40% believe ‘like-for-like’ fees for Private Equity managers have decreased in the past...

A secular macroeconomic transition has created an unenviable series of choices—and potential traps— for pension funds, insurers, endowments, foundations, family offices and other ‘asset owners’...

Private debt investors are eyeing apparently superior returns in healthcare lending, with funds’ net IRR targets suggesting a premium of more than 300bps versus conventional direct lending...

bfinance’s quarterly report in November 2024: read the team’s latest insights on institutional investor activity, risk appetite, market developments and asset manager performance across all major...

Conventional hedge fund classifications, as taught by bodies such as the CFA Institute and CAIA, are based on asset managers’ investment techniques, processes and instruments: equity hedge,...

Diversity (or the lack of) has been a hot topic across the asset management industry for decades. However, a growing number of investors are seeking managers who encourage and display high levels of...

‘Energy transition’ tailwinds should, it is often argued, boost the prices of particular commodities in the years ahead.