Hedge funds shun risktaking practice as do their investors Investment Europe

Post on: 21 Июнь, 2015 No Comment

Hedge funds shun risktaking practice as do their investors Investment Europe

By: | 07 Sep 2012

The stereotype of a hedge fund manager is of a gambler on markets, a high risk taker. At the moment, however, the reality is flying in the face of that archetype.

Then you read industry biographies of years past, the picture is of managers betting big, all on Black 27 -or whatever number they chose at the time.

But there is ample evidence this bet-and-bet-big picture is very, very far from the truth.

Net long exposure for hedge funds is in the area of 43%, a level mentioned by Goldman Sachs analysis late last month. In other words, managers are not taking big directional bets on share markets.

If managers are cautious (even nervous ?) about which way markets will head, then it is also evident that they are not alone indeed, their clients seem to feel the same way.

Anthony Lawler, portfolio manager at allocator GAM, said: Hedge fund managers generally maintained low risk levels in August with upside risks remaining from policy interventions and central bank actions; these were balanced against the downside risks of a global growth slowdown and stubbornly high unemployment levels.

For some clients, who consider that flat is the new up, even if hedge funds weaken a little this half the final returns come Christmas might still look fine.

(For those clients who want more, hedge funds are at risk of disappointing. While the MSCI World made 5.18% gains by August, directional equities hedge funds made just 2.62%.)

For many investors, what happens to directional punters may not matters, as many investors are looking for other investment strategies entirely.

Equities strategies, which mainly punt on single securities directions, had $1.3bn drained from them last quarter. They lost nearly 20 times more than that on their investments.

At the same time, funds that try to predict which relative directions two related equities will make, took in $9.9bn. It was the only one of four major strategies to win new cash last quarter, according to Hedge Fund Research. Relative-value funds lost a modest $479m on their investments.

Relative-value strategies are poised to overtake equity hedge funds as the industrys most popular strategy, by assets. At the moment they are almost equal (26.43% of industry assets versus 27.13%).

Those equities strategies that reduce their directional bets by balancing assets in long positions with assets in short positions (so-called market-neutral strategies), have been seeking new ways to reduce directional risk.

Ian Heslop, manager of Old Mutual Asset Managers Global Equity Absolute Return hedge fund, said market-neutral hedge fund managers have reconsidered over past years the whole concept of market neutrality, and whether balancing long assets with shorts actually squeezes out market risks from a portfolio.

We as an industry used to think about that as being a portfolio construction conundrum, and it is true you must have effective portfolio construction processes being beta-market-neutral. But it is not just that that is important. Macro impacts or correlation can have huge impacts on your outcome.

You may think you have a market-neutral portfolio, but you invest heavily in value. You may not have market risk at the beta level so you may think you are market-neutral but fundamentally value is correlated to the market because of the risk appetite.


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