Signs of Life |
Date: Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Author: Financial Advisor Mag.com
Optimism reigned throughout the second quarter as investor sentiment
thawed and many investors began reallocating capital to alternative
funds across the spectrum, according to Brighton House Associates, a
firm based in Marlborough, Mass., that researches alternative
investments.
“The second quarter proved to be a positive one given all that has gone
on in the past 12 months. Investors began to come out of their cash
positions and take advantage of the many new opportunities that have
arisen amidst the economic ash. Funds of hedge funds served as stepping
stones for many investors, giving them the ability to invest in the
alternative space and still maintain broad diversification among
strategies and geography,” according to BHA’s second quarter 2009
research report.
However, following the 2008 economic crisis and the Madoff scandal,
investors want more transparency. Gone are the days when investors did
not require disclosure of investment activities or proof of investment
returns. “The balance of power has shifted from fund managers to
investors and, during the second quarter, investors increasingly
demanded higher exposure and increasing details on position levels,”
the report mentions.
Investors also seemed to prefer smaller funds where they could develop
closer relationships with portfolio managers and get a better
understanding of portfolio details. “Portfolio directors at a
Connecticut‐based single‐family office and an Illinois‐based tax‐exempt
institution expressed interest in funds with smaller asset bases in
order to obtain a more in depth view of the portfolio holdings,” the
report says.
Heading into the third quarter, BHA sees hedge funds with under $200
million in assets under management—a substantial portion of which is
personal capital—in a strong position to capture investor interest.
“Funds that combine this with increased transparency have an even
greater opportunity to attract investors looking to distance themselves
from firms that are solely driven by raising as much capital as
possible,” the report continues.
The report observes that while many strategies realized increased
interest during the quarter, volatility arbitrage and fixed income were
two of the most intriguing. The push for liquidity focused investors on
highly liquid, short‐term trading‐oriented funds. Investors also
increasingly favored the relative stability and predictable returns
that fixed-income funds provide. In the private equity space, venture
capital showed signs of rebounding after a rough start to the year.
Investors and managers are hoping to build on the momentum created
during the second quarter and carry it forward into the second half of
the year, the report concludes.
BHA works with 150 alternative investment managers and acts as an
unbiased research liaison between these managers and its global network
of institutional investors.