August is another cruel month for hedge funds |
Date: Thursday, September 9, 2010
Author: Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Emily Chasan, Reuters
* Average hedge fund down 0.55 percent-survey * Stock market decline hurts, gold bets do well * Macro, relative value strategies show strength (Updates with Hedge Fund
Research numbers) Most hedge funds lost money again in August as hundreds of managers,
including some of the industry's best-known names, stumbled when stock markets
swooned anew. Funds, on average, lost 0.55 percent last month after gaining 1.9 percent in
July, according to data released on Wednesday by New York consulting firm
Hennessee Group. Hedge funds lost 1.29 percent in June and fell 3.21 percent in
May, reported Hennessee, one of a handful of groups that track performance and
asset flows in the secretive $1.5 trillion industry. Hedge funds again outperformed the broader market during the month, leaving
their wealthy investors with gains for the year as stock indices nurse losses,
but the new numbers still cast a pall over the industry. John Paulson, who earned some $15 billion with a bet that the U.S.
housing market would crumble in 2007, told investors that his flagship
Advantage Plus fund fell 4.3 percent last month, leaving it down 11 percent for
the year, said people who invest with him. [ID:nN07247495] He bet that the economy would rebound strongly, but fresh worries that the
recovery may be tepid, coupled with persistent fears about Europe's debt crisis,
hurt him and many others. "Managers remain cautious given the global economic uncertainty, though the
consensus is that we will likely avoid a double-dip recession," said Charles
Gradante, co-founder of Hennessee Group. The numbers are being released at a time when many pension funds are sitting
on piles of cash that some expect to invest with hedge funds to boost returns. The Hedge Fund Research Inc fund weighted composite index, which also tracks
hedge fund performance, was up 0.38 percent for August, boosted by strong
returns from funds with macro and relative value investing strategies. Some managers who remembered May's tumult played it safe and cut risky bets
to protect capital when stocks declined sharply in the month, leaving them with
better returns. The benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 index .SPX fell 4.7 percent
in August. Kenneth Griffin's flagship funds at Citadel inched up 0.75 percent during
August to be up 1.78 percent for the year, a person invested with the fund said. Steven Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors, one of the world's biggest hedge funds
with $12 billion of assets, gained 1 percent in August after a 3.7 percent gain
in July. For the year, the fund is up 6 percent. As of mid-August, the most recent date for which data is available, Phil
Falcone's flagship fund at Harbinger was down 14 percent for the year after
falling 2.3 percent in the first half of the month. However, some bets on broad macro investing strategies, distressed
situations, bonds and gold have been paying off for hedge fund managers. According to Hedge Fund Research, macro funds rose 2.16 percent in August and
short bias funds were up 3 percent, while fixed income funds were also strong
performers in August and are now up about 9.9 percent for the year. Equity
hedging was among the poorest performing strategies in the month, while event
driven funds were nearly flat in August, the firm said. Paul Singer's Elliott Management Corp, which specializes in distressed
investing, inched up 0.80 percent last month to be up 5.69 percent for the year. Big bets on gold also performed well for managers like Paulson and Greenlight
Capital's David Einhorn, as their gold-heavy funds saw strong returns in August
as investors' fled to safety in the yellow metal. Paulson's gold fund was up 8.96 percent in August, while Einhorn's fund
returned 4.1 percent net of all fees and expenses in August.
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