Hedge funds are hedging against (sort of) specific bad things happening. To do this, they buy into an investment that (hopefully ;-) has a [edit] positive correlation to the "bad thing" they are hedging against so that, if the bad thing messes up your primary investment, the hedge investment gains compensate (some of) your losses.
Since winning the lottery is not correlated at all with something bad happening to an investment firm's investments, it is a very poor hedge against their investments failing to come through.
Example: http://money.stackexchange.com/questions/6473/where-should-i...
Since winning the lottery is not correlated at all with something bad happening to an investment firm's investments, it is a very poor hedge against their investments failing to come through.