Boom time for the poor man's hedge funds as small investors flock to new-style trusts Read more: ht |
Date: Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Author: Jeff Prestridge, Daily Mail
Stock market euphoria returned last week with the FTSE 100 index of the
country's leading companies recording its longest sustained bull run for
five-and-a-half years. The last time the index recorded consecutive growth over
ten days was at the start of 2004.
But many private investors - and market analysts - remain unsure as to
whether the recent recovery can be sustained.
Such nervousness explains why many are shunning traditional equity-only
investment funds in favour of vehicles that aim to deliver positive returns in
all stock market conditions.
Sales of these new-style funds, commonly known as absolute return funds,
accounted for more than a third of sales of unit trusts to individual investors
last year, with only corporate bond funds proving more popular. And continuing
appetite for such defensive funds has prompted leading investment houses to get
in on the act by launching their own versions.
In recent weeks, Liontrust has launched the European Absolute Return fund,
which aims to deliver positive returns regardless of any major downturn in
European stock markets.
In September, investment bank Cazenove will launch its second absolute return
fund - Cazenove Absolute UK Dynamic - aiming for an annual return of more than
ten per cent. Already this year, Gartmore, Ignis (formed from the merged
Resolution and Axial) and SVM Asset Management have created new absolute return
funds.
'They're a welcome development,' says Mark Dampier, of independent financial
adviser Hargreaves Lansdown in Bristol.
'Over the past ten years, too many investors have accumulated wealth in
investment funds only to see it disappear before their very eyes as markets
tumble. It happened last year and it could well happen again. The beauty of
these
new funds is that small investors have a chance to earn half-decent returns irrespective of whether markets are in freefall or on the bounce --an opportunity that until recently was only available to high net worth individuals through hedge funds with prohibitively high minimum investment levels.
'Indeed, many of the investment managers now running absolute return funds
are the same people who have been running successful hedge funds for years.'
Among them, says Dampier, are Gartmore's Roger Guy, manager of Gartmore European
Absolute Return and long-standing manager of successful hedge fund AlphaGen
Capella Hedge, and Neil Pegrum, manager of the soon to be launched Cazenove
fund. Pegrum's hedge fund, called Cazenove UK Dynamic Absolute Returns, has
delivered positive returns in every calendar year since its launch in June 2005.
Like hedge funds, what distinguishes absolute return funds from traditional
investment funds is that they are not just dependent on rising share prices to
generate returns. They can also make money when prices fall by 'shorting' the
market.
They do this by selling shares that they have borrowed in the expectation of
buying them back at a lower price and pocketing the profit on return of the
shares. In last year's banking crisis, many leading hedge fund managers,
including Crispin Odey of Odey Asset Management, made millions of pounds from
shorting the shares of leading banks, most notably Bradford & Bingley, before it
was put into public ownership.
In May this year, Odey launched the CF Odey UK Absolute Return fund. Its
price is up by more than eight per cent. Most absolute funds run flexible
portfolios, which means they can be shorting shares they believe will fall, as
well as holding shares they think will rise. Some also invest up to 40 per cent
in cash. The result is that overall they under-perform when stock markets are
rising but crucially generate positive returns when markets fall.
Although most absolute return funds are still relatively young, some have
built up three-year records. Among those that have established creditable
performances are Black-Rock UK Absolute Alpha (up 28 per cent), Baring Absolute
Return Global Bond (up 21.2 per cent), Newton Real Return (up 14.3 per cent) and
Threadneedle Absolute Return Bond (up 25.4 per cent). Not all absolute return
funds have delivered. Over the past year, funds run by Marlborough, Skandia and
Swip (part of Lloyds Banking Group) have failed to produce positive returns.
Darius McDermott, managing director of independent adviser Chelsea Financial
Services in west London, says: 'Absolute return funds can make a great core
investment holding.
'But just because it has the word "absolute" in its name doesn't mean that it
will produce positive returns.
'The key is to select a fund where the underlying manager has a record of
delivering absolute returns.'
I don'twant to lose any more hard-earned cash
Like many investors, part-time model Natalie Wong is a recent convert to absolute return funds. Her reason for choosing them is simple - she is fed up with seeing her hard-earned savings hit by crashing stock markets.
'I don't want to lose any more money,' she says. 'My savings are too precious. The absolute return funds I am now investing in provide me with a comfort factor I haven't enjoyed before.'
Natalie, 26, who is single and lives in Maida Vale, west London, has been
putting away £250 a month into an Isa for the past three years - ever since she
started modelling part time to fund her way through a law degree at London
Metropolitan University. She is hoping to become a lawyer.
Natalie Wong: Opted for the safe bet with absolute
return funds last year
When she first took out an Isa, she mixed her investments between UK funds such as Aviva Blue Chip Tracking --which mirrors the performance of the FTSE 100 index - and more adventurous trusts such as BlackRock Gold & General, First State Asia Pacific Leaders and Allianz Bric Stars, which respectively invest in gold, mining and related shares, top Far Eastern companies and the fast growing economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China.
Last year, after her holdings fell sharply in value, she changed tack and invested new contributions into two absolute return funds - Threadneedle Absolute Return Bond and BlackRock UK Absolute Alpha.
Both funds have missed out on the strong market bounce, which has seen the FTSE 100 rally more than 20 per cent since its low this year in early March. But they have made steady returns, which is enough to keep Natalie happy. 'I'm more comfortable with these funds,' she says. In the past six months, the BlackRock fund has risen 5.5 per cent while Threadneedle has gone up 2.3 per cent.
These are two of the four funds recommended by Darius McDermott of financial adviser Chelsea Financial Services, with whom Natalie set up her Isa. The other two are Cazenove UK Absolute Return and Gartmore UK Absolute Return.