Hedge funds tip-toe toward an uncertain future |
Date: Thursday, December 10, 2009
Author: Joseph A. Giannone, Reuters
It wasn't too long ago big-time hedge fund managers like James Pallotta were
erecting monuments to themselves. In Pallotta's case, it was a $21 million
Georgian-style mansion he built in 2007 in Weston, a leafy Boston suburb
uncomfortable with such displays of wealth. Yet Pallotta soon would become a symbol not of conspicuous consumption but of
the dramatic comedown of a once seemingly indomitable industry. In July,
Pallotta, a protege of hedge fund legend Paul Tudor Jones, said he was
liquidating Raptor Global Funds, a firm that once managed $9 billion but was hit
hard by losses and redemptions last year. He had plenty of company in that regard. After the worst performance in
decades, investors yanked $300 billion of cash over three quarters starting late
last year. And more than 2,100 funds were liquidated since the end of 2007,
according to Hedge Fund Research Inc. As if the market meltdown weren't enough, the hedge fund industry took a
beating over Bernie Madoff's $65 billion Ponzi scheme one year ago, followed by
the widening Galleon Group insider-trading case. The upshot is that an industry
never comfortable with scrutiny and second-guessing has come under the
microscope, with regulators and investors clamoring for change. "Because of what happened, people will be very, very cautious about who they
give their money to," said Joseph Perella, legendary dealmaker whose Perella
Weinberg Partners manages $5.2 billion in assets. "Institutional money will look
for places they view as secure, not just places that perform." So what will the post-crash, post-Madoff, post-Galleon hedge fund universe
look like? One way or another, the wild west of American capitalism is expected to
become just a little more civilized, humbler and almost certainly less
lucrative, according to interviews with many industry sources. A return to the golden age of fat fees -- usually 2 percent of assets and 20
percent of profits, though some stars charged much more -- and practically zero
oversight is considered extremely unlikely, these sources say. But will hedge funds resume their two-decades long dominance of the U.S.
investment scene? That depends on just how tough the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the Obama administration and their European counterparts intend to
get. In March, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner testified about plans to
tighten oversight of hedge funds. The betting is mandatory registration with the
SEC is inevitable. This is a requirement the industry has long resisted, fearing
it would compromise their trading strategies by forcing them to show their hand. Another proposal from U.S. President Barack Obama's administration would make
the largest hedge fund advisers -- the ones that could set off a crisis of
Long-Term Capital Management proportions -- subject to additional supervision by
the Federal Reserve. Although most analysts agree that the era of benign neglect is over, several
hedge fund executives expressed doubt that the new regulations, if they come at
all, will represent much of a threat. "There have always been calls for greater hedge fund regulation, even going
back to the early 1970s," said Robert Burch IV of A.W. Jones & Co, whose
grandfather, Alfred Winslow Jones, formed the very first "hedged fund" with
$100,000 of capital in 1949. Burch noted that the SEC tried to compel hedge fund registration about four
years ago, but that plan was dropped in the face of opposition from the
industry. "There will be a lot of noise and in the end not much action," said Marc
Faber, an investor and publisher of "The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report" out of Hong
Kong. "The financial lobby is so powerful. I don't think the government will
reform the industry that much." But it will certainly try, and that's part of what has fund managers
increasingly on edge these days. BALANCE OF POWER The other driver for change will come from customers, who expect to get
premium performance for the big, if shrinking, fees they pay. When times were good -- that is, for most of the past 20 years -- hedge fund
managers could do pretty much as they pleased. Fees crept ever higher. Managers
could impose multiple-year lock-ups on cash, tough "gate" terms to postpone
withdrawals and could keep their investors in the dark. And still investors lined up around the block for a piece of the action. As recently as 1990, the industry managed just $38 billion. That's roughly
what is handled today by just one fund -- Ray Dalio's Bridgewater Associates.
Then pensions and other big institutions began piling in, and assets worldwide
swelled to nearly $2 trillion at its 2007 peak. At that time, more than 10,000 funds were in business as Wall Street's top
traders left their banks to pursue even greater wealth. Five years earlier,
there were only 5,400 funds in existence. That spectacular growth led to industry changes long before the financial
crisis. Fund managers were forced to build solid operating companies to meet all
the compliance requirements of big investors. Some of the biggest outfits turned into institutions themselves. Highbridge
Capital Management became a unit of JPMorgan Chase & Co, Goldman Sachs built its
asset management arm into one of the biggest players in hedge funds. Och-Ziff
Capital Management and Fortress Investment Group became listed companies. Indeed Fortress' five founders, eager to focus on investing, recruited a
professional manager, Daniel Mudd, to deal with day to day corporate management. "The hedge fund business today is a business. It wasn't always a business.
Years ago it was a profession. It certainly wasn't an enterprise that required a
great deal of organizational skill," said Michael Steinhardt, legendary fund
manager famous for generating a 24 percent compound average annual return over
28 years beginning in 1967. CRISIS AND SCANDAL Hedge funds are private investment pools reserved for rich individuals,
pensions and endowments -- all of whom are in theory sophisticated investors
with pockets deep enough to absorb big losses. As the free-wheeling cousins of
mutual funds, they can and did pile on debt to amplify returns, take short
positions and place bets across many markets. For the most part, they also delivered. Since 1990, which is when Hedge Fund
Research began tracking the industry, its composite index of hedge funds
generated an average annual net return of 12.2 percent. That compares favorably
with the 7.99 percent returns of the S&P 500 Index (with dividends reinvested)
and the 8.14 percent annual returns of a benchmark Barclays Government/Credit
bond index. And while the industry got clobbered during the financial crisis, hedge fund
managers like to point out that the industry did not require a nickel of
taxpayer money to bail it out. Markets have bounced back, and so too have hedge funds. The average fund is
up 18.8 percent through November 30 and many of the hardest hit funds have
roared back, often recouping last year's losses. Even so, last year forced many investors to take a hard look at their
one-sided relationship with hedge funds. In particular, the Madoff revelations
cast a long shadow on funds-of-funds and drove demand for independent auditors
and bookkeepers. Hedge funds on average suffered losses of 19 percent in 2008, and the
reluctance of some managers to honor redemption requests sparked howls of
protest from investors. Lawmakers, meanwhile, were eager to put a leash on shadowy tycoons they
suspected of driving America's economy into the ground for personal gain. With funds depleted, and new money hard to raise, the balance of power
shifted. "After the last year, fund managers have to recover losses before they can
get incentive fees," said Meyer, who sold his Chicago-based Glenwood Capital to
Britain's Man Group in 2000. "They're all very hungry for fresh money, so
they're more likely to be investor friendly." Among other trends, more investors are demanding their money be kept in
separately managed accounts, which lets them monitor their portfolio and
insulates them in the event of heavy redemptions in a hedge fund. FUTURE TRENDS The near death experience for many investors last year reinforced forgotten
lessons about liquidity and leverage. Risk-taking, in general, will be more
muted than before the debt bubble finally popped, according to many experts. "You learn from an episode where you discovered that the capital markets can
be far more volatile than you ever thought and grossly illiquid," said Lewis
Sanders, who recently left Alliance Bernstein Holding as chairman and CEO after
32 years. "If you don't have really good risk analysis, the clients will be
reticent to invest." Prime brokers, for example, will keep a tighter rein on debt extended to
funds. "If you think about it, the sources of capital really had no regulatory
oversight. They were prime brokers in investment banks that were not regulated,"
said Sanders, who will soon launch Sanders Capital LLC with about $3 billion. Though hedge funds held up better than expected during last fall's market
turmoil, the extensive use of leverage by arbitrage and credit funds forced
waves of fire-sales last fall when markets began their downward spiral. "There's going to be fewer hedge funds and those that survive will be a lot
more disciplined. They will be macro funds or traditional funds that go long and
short and they don't use a lot of leverage," said Faber. Big changes are also coming in fees, as investors use their newfound clout to
strike better deals with managers. "Most investors out there cannot produce a return that is sufficient to
justify a 2 and 20 fee," said Brian Singer, who formerly helped oversee $258
billion for UBS Global Asset Management's investment solutions unit. Singer in July launched Singer Partners LLC with some progressive fee terms,
including provisions that defer performance fees for several years. Veteran manager Howard Marks of $67 billion Oaktree Capital Management in Los
Angeles said the past two years have revealed which managers really helped
clients and which ones were merely propelled by a bull market. Looking ahead, he added, "2 & 20" as an industry standard could come under
fire as investors push back. "Getting money with incentive fees should be special. The fact that everybody
could do it means something was wrong," said Marks, whose firm was among the few
winners last year. "The ones who did a bad job should get out of the business." Throughout 2009 large institutions like the California Public Employees'
Retirement System (Calpers) have lobbied their fund managers to revise their
terms. Some industry surveys showed the average cost of hedge funds may already
be drifting lower, closer to 1.5 percent management fees and 15 or 18 percent of
profit. A few industry veterans say the old fee structure bears some blame for
encouraging over-expansion of funds and for managers taking greater risks to
achieve target returns. "Incentives in the industry were very bad. They continue to be bad today,"
said Brian Singer. "Those incentives resulted in poor behavior on the part of
investment managers." As an example, he pointed to funds that would pursue low-probability,
high-risk bets like the yen-dollar carry trade. "In late 90s and earlier this
decade, we had a lot of hedge fund players that didn't have skills put on these
catastrophic risk trades and leveraging them. They worked until they all blew
up," Singer said. Firms like Oaktree that distinguished themselves during the crisis have been
seeing increased demand from investors. "Successful hedge funds will be entrepreneurial; it is the essence of the
craft," said Paul Singer (no relation of Brian), founder of $15 billion Elliott
Management and one of the most successful hedge fund managers of the past 30
years. "Given the typical fee structures of hedge funds, they need to do
something different to make money in a consistent way." CHANGES Ultimately, it will be the investors and their purse power that will weed out
the industry. Last year hedge funds did not make many friends if they lost money, halted
withdrawals and charged their usual high fees. Even so, Leon Cooperman, head of $4 billion-plus Omega Advisors since 1991,
predicts investors will come back to hedge funds but more tentatively and with a
greater focus on firms that inspire confidence. "Hedge funds will become larger, more professional. Fewer one-man and two-man
shops. There's a certain scale needed," said Cooperman, who had led Goldman
Sachs Asset Management during a 25-year career at the bank. "Investors will put
their money with a firm that's been around. It's all about process and controls
and reputation." Meyer, whose Glenwood seeded hundreds of firms over the years, observed that
some of the changes investors are seeking today were commonplace at hedge funds
in the seventies. Back then, short sellers were happy to discuss their
positions, he said, because shares were easy to borrow and it helped to drive
prices down. And in a world where there were only a few hundred managers and funds were
relatively small, investors were fully apprised of what was happening in their
portfolios. "You know how they talk about increasing transparency? When I started, every
manager would tell you about his portfolio," he said. "I've been involved in
hedge funds since the 1970s, and I can tell you the hedge fund industry has
changed constantly -- and it never repeats." The business is also not one that will just roll over and perish. The promise
of solid returns across every markets, come rain or come shine, by managers with
proven track records will be hard to resist. That brings us back Pallotta, who even as he closed his fund told clients he
would consider launching a new offering to take advantage of the bargains
created by the financial crisis. He made sure to keep his management firm open
and ready for whatever his next move may be.
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