Hedge funds in black in March, but trail S&P for year |
Date: Friday, April 8, 2011
Author: Svea Herbst-Bayliss, Reuters
Hedge fund managers are up for the year but lag S&P Many managers caught off guard by events in early March (Reuters) - Hedge fund managers eked out tiny gains in March and are up for
the year, according to data released on Thursday but the asset class again
lagged the broader stock market. The average hedge fund inched up 0.31 percent in March and is now up 1.99
percent for the year, data from Hedge Fund Research show. The broader Standard &
Poor's 500 stock index ended the first three months up 5.43 percent even though
it slipped 0.10 percent last month. In the first two months of 2011, hedge funds climbed 2.08 percent, lagging
the Standard & Poor's 5.53 percent rise. Technology and healthcare-oriented funds were some of the strongest gains,
inching up 0.85 in March, HFR reported. But funds that concentrate on energy and
basic materials lost 2 percent, and so-called macro funds that make bets on
currencies and interest rates slipped 1.71 percent, the HFR numbers showed. Many hedge funds were caught off guard by the natural disasters in
Japan and the crisis in the Middle East at the start of the month, industry
experts said. "Many hedge funds were 'whipsawed' as they became more defensive mid-month as
risks increased, which resulted in less participation during the late month
rebound," Charles Gradante, co-founder of Hennessee Group, another firm that
tracks hedge fund performance, said on Thursday. For some of the industry's biggest stars, the first quarter was mixed as many
found their bets on banks and that the economy would rebound more swiftly lose
ground. Billionaire stock picker John Paulson's Advantage Fund, where the bulk of his
firm's assets are invested, lost 1.24 percent during the first quarter, pulled
down by a 3.10 percent loss in March. His Advantage Plus Fund lost 1.74 percent
during the first three months of 2011 after having dropped 4.4 percent in March.
Some of his other portfolios are up, including the arbitrage-oriented Paulson
Partners which gained 3.86 percent during the quarter, and the Paulson Enhanced
which rose 6.94 percent during the first three months. Meanwhile, activist investor William Ackman's Pershing Square International
Ltd Fund, which manages the bulk of the firm's $9 billion in assets, inched up
0.7 percent last month to be up 0.7 for the quarter. The Caxton Global Investment fund was off 2.37 percent through March 29 and
Paul Tudor Jones' Tudor BVI Global Fund was off 0.47 percent through March 25. Even Dan Loeb's Third Point Offshore fund was off a smidgen through March 23,
but that did little to dampen his 6.78 percent gain for the year, ranking it
among the industry's top performers for the year, according to data from HSBC
Private Bank.