London:  Investors able to provide seed capital for hedge funds are set to enjoy the most favourable conditions in years due to an abundance of talented start-ups and a lack of competing capital.

At a time when volatile markets, poor returns and scarcity of capital might be expected to discourage hedge fund start-ups, some managers are setting up on their own.

Some of these are traders coming out of troubled investment banks, or out of larger hedge funds that have run into difficulties, who see excellent opportunities thrown up by market volatility as a result of the credit crisis.

Hard

However, attracting assets is hard in an industry that is favouring larger hedge funds for their perceived security and where the bar below which some investors will not look at a fund can be between $100 million and $1 billion. Such a combination favours providers of seed capital.

"2008 throws up phen-omenal opportunities in the seed space, I mean extraordinary opportunities, because investment banks are shedding people," said Christian Benigni, partner at First Avenue Partners, a merchant bank focusing on alternatives that helps seed start-ups.

Seed investors - funds of funds, institutions or sovereign wealth funds - provide start-up assets, usually tens of millions of dollars, to small funds eager to get up and running.

They aim to make their returns by negotiating a share of the fund's revenue over a certain period, a model favoured by First Avenue.

Other seeders, such as Thames River Capital, may take a stake in the fund firm too, allowing it to share in its profits.