Hedge funds may take few months to restore mojo |
Date: Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Author: Matthew Goldstein, Reuters, Business 247
We're not quite there yet, but hedge fund managers may soon need to
start giving away toasters – or perhaps plasma TVs – to woo new
investors. Forcing the funds to eat a little humble pie now would
benefit hedge fund investors in the long run.
Most hedge funds
are off to a decent start this year – the average return to date is
9.43 per cent, says Hedge Fund Research. Yet it's a particularly tough
time for launching a new fund. In the first five months of 2009, just
40 new funds have begun reporting performance figures, BarclayHedge
reports.
That's a pittance compared with the same time last year, when 240 new funds started trading.
And
investors, who were badly burned last year, seem more interested in
pulling money out of hedge funds. This year the pace of redemptions is
down only slightly from the fourth-quarter of 2008 – when investors
pulled some $165 billion (Dh606bn) out of hedge funds.
Look for
redemptions to continue well into the summer, as temporary "gates" that
blocked investors from fleeing for the exits, start to get lifted at
some big funds.
Sol Waksman, BarclayHedge's president, says it
will probably take "some period of sustained positive performance"
before investors are willing to commit money to new funds. But it may
take more than a few "up" months for the hedge fund industry to get its
mojo back.
So-called funds of hedge funds, big pools of investor
capital which direct money to an array of funds, are fast disappearing.
The incredible shrinkage of funds of funds, which once accounted for 43
per cent of all the money raised by hedge funds, means fewer places for
managers to turn to for raising money. Banks, meanwhile, continue to
clamp down on financing for hedge funds.
After the easy credit
of the last decade – when starting a hedge fund was nearly as easy as
opening a lemonade stand – a period of anaemic growth should be welcome.
As managers go begging for money, investors will get a lot more leverage in negotiating deals on the managers' fees.
Investors
should also seek their freedom from capital lockup requirements.
Forcing investors to lock up their money for anything longer than a
quarter at a time only makes sense for strategies that take a while to
generate results, such as a fund that invests in distressed assets or
agitates for management shakeups. Investors stand to gain if the great
hedge fund debacle of 2008 leads to a lasting rollback in hedge fund
fees and culture that has emboldened managers to do as they please.
- Matthew Goldstein is a Reuters columnist. The views expressed are his own.
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