Funds of funds finding UCITS to their liking |
Date: Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Author: UCITS Hedge
Just over a year ago, Italian hedge fund specialist Kairos Partners
became the first investment manager to launch a fund of funds entirely
dedicated to UCITS hedge funds. It was a brave move for the Milan-based
business, considering the available universe was still fairly limited.
But at the same time, the team at Kairos recognised the potential UCITS
III-compliant hedge funds offered to them.
At the time the
industry was recovering from the attrition caused by the liquidity
crisis post-Lehman, but Kairos recognised that the benefits inherent in
the UCITS directive, particularly transparency and liquidity, would suit
them very well. They were also traits that Kairos’ fairly cautious
investor base, primarily Italy-based, would buy into.
Kairos CEO
Paolo Basilico said last autumn that the arrival on the UCITS stage of
major names in the business, like AHL and Cheyne, were good indicators
that the UCITS structure would be embraced by the larger industry. In
addition, the strategies that would be able to cope with the directive
were those Kairos felt most comfortable committing to; those that would
find it difficult were not necessarily funds they would invest with,
UCITS or no UCITS.
It makes sense in many ways. The fund, Kairos
Long Short, has increased in size to over €350 million as money has
flowed in from institutional investors in not only Italy, but other
European markets like Switzerland, Germany and France. Kairos has also
been tapping retail distribution networks successfully. The success of
the fund has clearly demonstrated the potential UCITS represents for
funds of hedge funds.
For some fund managers, the ‘retailisation’
of the market was a thing of dread even two years ago: investors would
not understand the products, they argued. There were also the logistics
to consider: small asset management firms could not afford to operate
like a retail shop. But the deployment of UCITS products lets firms like
Kairos link into third party distribution networks that are already
licensing funds for cross-border sales and have been doing so in the
traditional long-only funds space for over a decade. Why do more work
when it is unnecessary?
“From the operations perspective we have
not found it too difficult,” admits Michele Gesualdi, a portfolio
manager with Kairos. In terms of portfolio management as well, Gesualdi
has not found the current universe of UCITS hedge funds too
constricting. The Kairos fund has a 20% concentration limit, with a
target of between 20 and 25 underlying managers. Gesualdi has been
finding that the quality of the firms entering the UCITS space is
higher, on average, than in the hedge fund universe globally. The
managers tend to hail from the serious shops, and the strategies are
those that are most easy to analyse. “In the end, we don’t have to see
as many funds to find the ones we like,” he says.
A more recent
launch has been that of HDF, which announced it was raising money for a
multi-strategy fund of funds called HDF Marlin. In this case, the
decision to launch came at the request of its customers, who wanted the
firm to apply its expertise within a structure that enjoyed the benefits
of flexibility and liquidity which the UCITS directive affords.
HDF
has an emphasis on diversification of investment style. This has meant
it has needed the universe of available hedge funds to reach a point
where such diversification becomes possible. According to Christophe
Jaubert, a fund manager at HDF, substantial diversification between
funds and strategies is an essential part of the firm’s risk management
procedure.
In addition, from the underlying managers themselves,
HDF is looking for a proper awareness of how to generate performance
while fully respecting the UCITS operating rules. Jaubert says they
would also need to demonstrate that they “can stick to the UCITS
liquidity requirement in any market environments,” not just when the sun
is shining.
“We’re not worried about capacity,” he adds. “There
are still enough funds to choose from out there.” And he is seeing some
interesting opportunities from new funds HDF has not invested with
before. The directive is bringing management talent to the notice of
European investors that might not have attracted the same attention
previously. This has got to be a major attraction for non-European funds
considering the UCITS approach.
Challenges and opportunities
Many
funds of funds managers are turning to UCITS as an opportunity to
re-established the model of the fund picker in the alternative
investment universe. With its liquidity requirements, the directive is
an opportunity to prove to investors that a fund of funds can provide
solid returns without recourse of a lock-up. Sometimes this requires
using a larger universe of funds.
The Iveagh Private Investment
House has also recently launched a UCITS funds of funds, this time with
Switzerland’s 47 Degrees North as the fund’s sub-advisor. In this case,
according to Iveagh’s head of portfolio management Christopher Wyllie, a
much broader universe of funds is being researched, including absolute
return funds and 130/30 funds. Indeed, Wyllie does not feel a fund
manager needs to have a short component to his strategy at all in order
to qualify for his portfolio. The key for investors, he says, is
liquidity. And this is reflected in the daily dealing offered by his
Iveagh Newcits Fund.
“Some investors are still locked up in funds
of funds,” says Wyllie. “They still want absolute returns, but many
people have been hurt by gating or even in some cases by outright
fraud.”
At HDF Jaubert and his colleagues are fully cognizant of
the fact that liquidity has a cost, and that some performance may have
to be given up for this. “We’re seeing two kinds of investors,” Jaubert
says. “Some are coming to UCITS for regulation and some for the
liquidity. After the 2008 crisis we have seen many insurance companies
shying away from funds of funds due to liquidity issues.”
Ultimately,
savvy funds of funds managers are aware that, in Jaubert’s words,
“UCITS is not a guarantee of performance and success.” Funds of funds
will still need to do their due diligence and keep a sharp eye on the
funds they invest with. Now is not the time to get lazy. All of the fund
managers we spoke to for this article demonstrated a degree of concern
that investors are already seeing the UCITS designation as some form of
safety standard, a low risk benchmark which it simply is not.
“There
will always be fund managers who will stretch a point,” says Chris
Wyllie at Iveagh. “Fund of funds managers will have to be very careful
that a fund is compliant, make sure that the leverage and liquidity
rules are being applied. There may be occasions when managers of UCITS
funds suddenly find they can’t provide the underlying liquidity, they
may have to gate investors. That would be unacceptable behaviour, but
investors have to be aware that funds may not always do what it says on
the tin.”
In HDF’s case, the firm has an almost obsessive
determination to ensure that managers will be able to meet the UCITS
liquidity requirements under a variety of tough market scenarios. This
is because there is no alternative to homework. Nobody else is carrying
out the level of detailed and ongoing oversight in the UCITS space that
funds of funds are providing; there is no large bureaucracy in a cellar
in Brussels carrying out detailed spot checks on funds. For Iveagh’s
Chris Wyllie, this is a major vindication of the ongoing funds of funds
model. The UCITS wrapper is not a short cut, he argues.
Alternative
approaches
The UCITS opportunity is also being utilised in other
ways by the fund of funds community, perhaps best illustrated by the
recent launch of the Active Trading Fund by Strategic Investments Group
(SIG) and Permal. This product is being sold as a UCITS III absolute
return multi-manager fund. With $250 million already under management
after a month of trading , it is rapidly gathering speed. But what makes
it different is that while the master fund is UCITS-compliant, the
underlying portfolio is composed of managed accounts.
To meet the
UCITS requirements, investment manager Permal is focusing on those
managers like TT International, QFS Asset Management and Apex Capital
that can generate absolute returns in liquid global markets. With no
commingling of investors, and with the accounts all being handled by
ATF’s custodian State Street, the fund can offer weekly liquidity and
full transparency. Not only that, but Deutsche Bank has been brought on
board to carry out independent risk monitoring.
Each underlying
managed account is still UCITS compliant, but the fund owns the
positions, not the manager. “ATF has weekly liquidity with no mismatch
across the platform,” explains SIG’s Thanos Ballos. “This is the result
of listening to our institutional and family office investors who wanted
a regulated, liquid, multi-advisor fund, offered within a UCITS
framework, and with the added safety of independent risk controls.”
It
is plain to see that this fund, which offers weekly liquidity with 48
hours notice and has a target volatility of between 5-7%, is a legacy of
the experience many investors had of the liquidity crunch in 2008-09.
It has been designed to address exactly those concerns that have driven
many former hedge fund investors away from the fund of funds sector.
To
our knowledge the ATF fund is the first UCITS fund of funds to go
exclusively down the managed account route rather than focus on a
portfolio of underlying UCITS funds. According to a poll of 30 funds of
funds groups in December carried out by KdK Asset Management, almost
twice as many fund of funds firms favour UCITS over managed accounts
(see Fig.1).
So what’s the catch?
Funds of funds
launching dedicated UCITS products will need to think hard about their
fee structures. At Kairos, Michele Gesualdi has noticed some managers
trying to levy what he calls “traditional” hedge fund fees, but believes
they are being short-sighted. Thus far, there has not been much in the
way of downward fee pressure in the UCITS space, but that may have to
change, particularly for those funds that wish to build a retail brand.
One option might be to issue a retail share class with palatable fees
for retail investors and financial advisers.
Even at the end of
last year, according to the results of the KdK survey, funds of funds
were assuming that the cost of managing a UCITS fund would be higher
than the offshore equivalent (see Fig.2). This means that investors will
be disappointed if they believe UCITS and the greater atmosphere of
transparency that it could promote in hedge fund investing will lead to
lower fees.
At Iveagh, Chris Wyllie sees higher fees for UCITS
funds being a means for offshore groups to protect their core
strategies. Yes, the UCITS fund will be available for those who want it,
yes the liquidity may be superior, but investors will have to give up
some performance and pay higher fees into the bargain. “It is a moveable
feast,” he says. “We’ll see where it settles. If people see the right
risk/return profile, they may be prepared to pay for it.”
Wyllie
predicts that the issue of fees will introduce a degree of competition
which was not there before. Many so-called absolute return funds are not
charging the 2 and 20 structure of the offshore funds universe, but
still meeting the requirements of the UCITS directive. In addition,
investors like Iveagh are avoiding the big UCITS hedge fund platforms
where they can because of the additional levels of fees they represent.
Where this is the only point of access to a fund in the UCITS zone, they
will still invest. The onus is therefore on the platforms to make sure
they have exclusive UCITS-compliant access to the big names.
Those
funds that have already launched products into this space are just the
tip of the iceberg, if the KdK research is to be trusted. We expect more
to appear over the next few months as the underlying universe of funds
continues to expand and capital raising efforts bear fruit. The fund of
funds is not dead yet: it is alive and well in UCITS-land.