Hedge funds get bloody nose despite $9.5bn of new cash |
Date: Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Author: Helia Ebrahimi, Telegraph
The HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index posted a decline of 2.5pc, offsetting first quarter gains.
In 2009 hedge funds drew praise for their strong performance but in the first half of this year hedge funds declined by 0.21pc, as gains in credit sensitive strategies such as event driven and arbitrage were offset by losses in equity hedge and macro funds.
Money continued to flow out of fund of hedge funds, which saw investors withdraw $2bn in the second quarter.
Because hedge funds fees are based on a "high water mark" system with each investor, many firms have seen their fees get drowned out as they struggle to out do previous highs - which is why new money is so important.
Many small firms have struggled to maintain their cost base under these conditions and many believe the industry's much anticipated cull is still due.
Meanwhile, GLG Partners saw its own net inflows jump $1.5bn in the past three months ahead of its proposed takeover by Man Group.
However, inflows were dragged down by performance losses of $1.5bn and a $725m currency hit. Total AUM dropped by 3.1pc from $23.7bn at the end of March 2010 to just under $23bn at the end of June.