Emerging market equities suffered most in 2008, says Morningstar |
Date: Friday, January 23, 2009
Author: Morningstar.com
The Morningstar 1000 Hedge Fund Index lost 10.3 per cent in
the fourth quarter of 2008 and 22.2 per cent for the year, wiping out
the last two years of gains. The index bounced back slightly after
extreme market illiquidity and volatility in January and March, but
since May, hedge funds have been on a steady decline.
Massive losses in September and October of 7.9 per cent and 9.8 per
cent, respectively, quashed any hope of salvaging the year, although it
ended on a positive note with a 2.1 per cent gain in December.
The Morningstar/MSCI Asset Weighted Hedge Fund Composite index, which
hedges US dollar exposure, lost 12.9 per cent in 2008, while the
equally weighted version lost 16.4 per cent, reflecting the poorer
performance of smaller funds.
Investors lost their appetite for hedge funds in 2008, as vehicles
intended to deliver absolute returns were forced to resort to relative
claims of success, Morningstar says. Since the beginning of the credit
crunch in August 2007, hedge funds have effectively acted as muted
versions of equities, providing positive returns only twice when the
MSCI World Stock Index was negative. Still, the Morningstar 1000 Hedge
Fund Index did outperform the MSCI World Index by a sizeable 20
percentage points for 2008.
'In 2008, hedge fund managers generally failed to deliver,' says
Morningstar hedge fund analyst Nadia Papagiannis. 'The average hedge
fund may have lost less than the stock market, thanks in part to large
cash allocations, but this level of performance was not why investors
agreed to pay 2 per cent management fees and 20 per cent performance
fees.'
Investors redeemed assets aggressively in 2008. Hedge fund inflows
peaked in June 2007 and bottomed in October 2008, when more than
USD21bn left the industry. In November, another USD19.4bn flowed out of
hedge funds, bringing outflows for the first 11 months of the year to
more than USD44bn.
Hedge fund investors showed a strong tendency toward performance
chasing, investing more after positive months and withdrawing assets
after down months. Investors following this strategy ended up losing
less than the index, as the markets trended increasingly downward as
the year progressed.
High redemptions and little possibility of collecting performance fees
in the near future led to the closure of record number of hedge funds
in 2008. The number of funds dropping out of Morningstar's database
increased by more than 150 per cent, with 1,158 single-manager funds
and 490 funds of funds removed in 2008 compared to 434 single-manager
funds and 208 funds of funds the previous year. Funds are removed from
the database if the fund liquidates, if the manager wishes to stop
reporting returns, or if funds fail to report returns for six months.
Emerging market equities proved to be the worst strategy in 2008.
Effectively a market-return strategy, these funds are only able to
invest in stocks or hold cash, as shorting emerging markets holdings is
very difficult. Emerging stock markets performed worse than other
markets, as skittish investors pulled capital out of risky assets.
Although emerging markets bounced back in December, the MSCI Emerging
Markets Index lost almost 55 per cent in 2008 while the Morningstar
Emerging Market Equity Hedge Fund Index lost 45.6 per cent in 2008 and
20.7 per cent in the last quarter alone.
The ability to hedge helped the Morningstar/MSCI Developed Markets
Hedge Fund Index, which lost only 11.9 per cent last year. Of developed
market equities funds, Europe equity hedge funds fared the best on a
relative basis, with the Morningstar Europe Equity Hedge Fund Index
beating the MSCI Europe stock index by about 30 percentage points.
The Asian Equity Hedge Fund Index also outperformed the MSCI AC Asia
Index by more than 19 percentage points. Late in the year, European and
Asian hedge funds got some relief, as governments announced rate cuts
and stimulus packages, boosting the equity markets.
The best-performing strategy this year was global trend following, a
systematic strategy that tracks price trends in liquid derivatives such
as futures, options and currency forwards. The Morningstar Global Trend
Hedge Fund Index gained 7.4 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008 and
9.8 per cent for the year overall.
In the first half of the year, these funds profited from an upward
trend in commodities and a downward trend in the US dollar, as
uncertainty over the US economy led to increased investment in 'hard'
assets. The third quarter saw a sharp reversal in these trends,
catching global trend funds by surprise. But these funds recovered in
the fourth quarter, as the drop in oil and the rise of the dollar was
sustained.
Global non-trend following funds, which trade the same instruments as
global trend funds but in a more discretionary manner, gained 0.9 per
cent in the fourth quarter, ending the year down 1.2 per cent, less
than every other losing category. These funds benefited from the
liquidity of the instruments that they trade, enabling them to get in
and out of the market quickly.
Convertible arbitrage funds took a big hit in 2008. The Morningstar
Convertible Arbitrage Hedge Fund Index dropped 13.1 per cent over the
quarter and 24.9 per cent over the year. In May, convertible bond
issuance hit an all-time high as financial firms desperately sought
capital. But in September, when the financial firms' stocks suffered
major damage, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Financial
Services Authority banned the ability to short them.
This caused convertible arbitrage funds, which typically take long
positions in convertible bonds hedged with short positions in the
related stock, to plunge into the abyss. As convertible bonds continued
to be viewed as risky assets, and as yields on risky debt rose sharply,
these leveraged funds were subjected to margin calls and forced selling.
Plagued by a similar fate, funds in the Morningstar Debt Arbitrage and
Morningstar Global Debt Hedge Fund Indexes plunged 8.2 per cent and
18.7 per cent respectively in the last three months of the year, and by
16.7 per cent and 28.5 per cent over the year as a whole, as investors
fleeing to Treasuries caused credit spreads to widen to
near-Depression-era levels in even investment-grade corporate bonds.
Defaults on high-yield bonds rose to a record high in November,
squeezing the price of high-yield securities and sending the
Morningstar Distressed Securities Hedge Fund Index down 16.1 per cent
for the fourth quarter, and 25.3 per cent for the year. Hedge funds
buying distressed assets early in the credit crunch saw their
investments deteriorate even further alongside the economy.
Poor timing and illiquidity also took a toll on corporate actions
funds. The Morningstar Corporate Actions Hedge Fund Index dropped 28.9
per cent in 2008, including 13.2 per cent for the final quarter. These
value-seeking funds look for events such as privatisations, mergers and
acquisitions, share repurchases, IPOs and spin-offs to enhance share
value, but such events proved scarce during the steep bear market.
Tight credit, badly performing equity, and lack of
institutional-investor demand turned the leveraged buyout boom, which
peaked in mid-2007, to bust last year, which also saw the collapse of a
record number of merger and acquisition deals and a 50 per cent drop in
IPO activity. 'The easy credit bubble burst, and along with it a great
many hedge funds,' Papagiannis says.
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