Recent turmoil could leave hedge fund industry stronger: AIMA panel |
Date: Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Author: Megan Harman, Investment Executive
U.S. regulatory environment to change substantially in the next year, Clark says.
The collapse of many hedge funds in recent months has significantly
tarnished trust among investors, but could ultimately result in a
smaller and stronger hedge fund industry, a panel of fund managers said
on Tuesday.
Speaking at a Toronto event organized by the
Alternative Investment Management Association Canada, the managers said
challenging times facing hedge funds will weed out weaker funds and
result in a smaller industry that more effectively manages risk.
The
hedge funds that survived 2008 were those who practised the strongest
risk management, said Keith Balmer, manager of the Man AHL Diversified
Fund. “They’re the ones who are going to survive, and they’re going to
do very well in the years to come,” he said. “What you should be left
with is actually fewer participants, which is going to give you more
market opportunities, and more opportunities to play in a less crowded
space.”
Managers who are too focused on short-term gains are
also being separated from more successful industry players, according
to Nandu Narayanan, a fund manager at Trident Investment Management LLC.
“If
all you’re thinking about is yourself and not your investors, it is not
a hedge fund that is going to survive. A lot of hedge funds,
unfortunately, have demonstrated that that’s what they’re about,” said
Narayanan.
The existence of such players in the field has had a negative impact on the whole industry, he added.
“It’s
a very sad state of affairs in the whole business,” said Narayanan.
“This has probably struck an almost irreversible blow to the industry
overall. People are going to ask questions about what these managers
really are and what the industry really is.”
The panelists
agreed that more regulation for hedge funds is likely, which could help
to boost investor confidence. But in many ways, regulation is not to
blame for problems in the industry, the managers said.
For
instance, the exposure of the Bernard Madoff scheme has highlighted the
lack of due diligence being done by many managers and investors,
according to Narayanan.
“This was actually an abject failure of
the people that sold the fund, that invested in it, to do even the
basic due diligence,” he said. “It was not a failure of regulation.”
Furthermore,
regulation can only go so far in protecting investors. Narayanan said
most of the recent losses in the industry simply result from poor
investment decisions by managers with previously strong track records.
“You
can’t regulate morality or ethics or competence in management,” he
said. “There’s only so much that a regulator can do and there’s only so
much transparency can do.”
Balmer agreed that new requirements
for hedge fund transparency would not change the significant risks
involved with hedge fund investing, and would not necessarily make
investors feel safer.
But John Clark, CEO of alternative
investment firm JC Clark Ltd., argued that transparency would have
immediately exposed the scheme behind Bernard Madoff, and therefore
does have an important role to play.
Clark expects the
regulatory environment to change substantially in the United States in
the next year, including an entirely new regulatory body
“I
don’t think there’s any hope that you’re going to have an SEC in a
year’s time,” Clark said. “It will be a new body, it will have a new
mandate and it will be staffed differently.”
But if the
regulators act too quickly and too impulsively to impose new industry
rules, they could ultimately cause more harm than good, Balmer said.
“When
you’re very, very close to a problem or a crisis, it is exactly the
wrong time to start changing the rules,” he said. It would be more
effective to regulators to wait at least six months before assessing
the problems underlying the crisis, Balmer added.