Fund of Hedge Fund Dis-intermediation |
Date: Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Author: Hedgetracker.com
Following up on the prospects for funds of hedge funds, which I have
covered earlier in the month, I neglected to mention dis-intermediation
by investing institutions. This is a natural phase of development for
institutional investors of scale.
First the institutions use small allocations as a percentage of assets
and tap into third party expertise to implement the strategic
allocation. This first toe-dipping willl typically utilise a fund of
hedge funds, or for the larger institutions, several funds of funds to
keep them all honest. A minority of new investors in hedge funds will
use a third party advisor, like Albourne Partners, and allocate directly
to single managers, or these days look to use replication, like USS of
the UK.
The investing institution then gets used to working with hedge funds,
gains experience and understanding, and they often move onto increased
strategic allocations and change to a new mode of implementation. This
may involve making strategic bets on particular hedge fund investment
strategies, say emerging managers, credit hedge funds, or directional
managers. Moving from diversified mandates to using more specialised
mandates (in addition) might also be implemented via specialist funds of
hedge funds, but is as likley to involve active selection of single
managers.
So it is natural for investing institutions of scale, with sufficient
in-house expertise, to progress to selecting hedge funds individually.
There is an extra incentive to do this, a negative motivation, when the
foundation exposure to hedge funds (via funds of funds) is seen as
disappointing. To a significant degree this has been the case for the
last two years, to the downside and then the upside, by turns. There are
good reasons for the significant under-performance of funds of hedge
funds, particularly in 2009, but it can have commmercial impacts through
changes in underlying investor attitudes. A recent example was the
change in approach of the South Carolina Retirement System. Formerly the
allocation to hedge fund strategies was 70% in funds of funds and 30%
directly in single manager funds: that split is to be reversed in
future. This trend to dis-intermediation is also being reflected in
Japan.
Japanese life companies have amongst the longest experience of exposure
to hedge funds amongst investing institutions. In the middle of the last
decade Japanese pension funds allocated to hedge funds too. The core of
the exposure has always been by fund of hedge funds. The status of
funds of hedge funds as the core means of obtaining exposure is under
threat. For the last five years Daiwa Institute of Research has surveyed
Japanese pension funds regularly on their hedge fund investment
intentions. Historically the most common intended allocations to hedge
funds were to funds of hedge funds in the surveys. In the lastest
survey, and for the first time, the most common intended allocations
were to a hedge fund strategy other than fund of funds, in fact more
pension funds of Japan intend to allocate to managed futures funds than
funds of funds.
There is some anecdotal evidence that Japanese investing institutions
intend to allocate more directly to single manager hedge funds, but the
key point is that the share of capital in the hedge fund industry that
has been routed via fund of funds will only continue to decline. Funds
of funds willl increasingly be dis-intermediated at the industry level,
though individual firms may grow through taking market share.
Contributed by Simon Kerr/Hedgetracker.com
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