Hedgies set for recovery |
Date: Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Author: Emma Keens, City.AM
THE HEDGE fund industry is close to recouping
the losses it suffered during the financial crisis, according to data
from Hedge Fund Research (HFR).
HFR’s indexes show that the
average fund needs to gain just two per cent to reach the high water
mark – or its value on 30 June 2007, the height of the last boom. At
this point, fund managers can start to bank performance fees once again.
The
HFR Fund Weighted Composite Index climbed 6.9 per cent in the third
quarter, pushing returns to 17.1 per cent for the nine months to the
end of September. This compares to a 19 per cent fall in the same
period in 2008.
Hedge funds pulled in $1.1bn (£675m) during the
third quarter, marking the first time investors added money after a
full year of heavy outflows, HFRI said. In the previous four
consecutive quarters clients pulled out $330bn from hedge funds.
Nearly
two-thirds of the hedge funds surveyed by HFRI reported inflows,
accounting for a total of $38bn in new assets in the quarter. But these
gains were largely offset by over $37bn in capital outflows from
investor redemptions and liquidations, resulting in a net inflow of
$1.1bn.
Hedge funds now manage $1.5 trillion, HFRI said, compared to the $1.9 trillion they managed at the end of 2007.
The
increase suggests that investors like pension funds and endowments are
slowly returning to these riskier funds just a year after the industry
delivered its worst-ever returns.