Hedge fund exits rose in stormy September - GlobeOp |
Date: Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Author: Sinead Cruise, Reuters
Investors pulled out around five times more cash from hedge funds in the
month to October 1 than in the prior period, during one of the most turbulent
few weeks for stock and bond prices since the 2008 financial crisis dampened
appetite for risk. Gross outflows, as measured by the GlobeOp Capital Movement Index, which
tracks monthly net subscriptions and redemptions from hedge funds running around
$170 billion (109 billion pounds) of assets, hit 3.17 percent last month, the
fourth time gross exits topped 3 percent in 2011. Withdrawals from hedge funds had fallen to 0.58 percent in the month to
September 1, the lowest level since before the credit crunch as investors
swapped traditional 'safe havens' like the Swiss franc and gold in favour of
portfolios expected to make money in all seasons. GlobeOp's index showed hedge fund inflows were still net positive, rising
0.31 percent in the month to October 1 on the back of a 3.48 percent gross
influx of capital. "Hedge fund investors remain committed," said Hans Hufschmid, chief executive
officer of GlobeOp Financial Services. "After a double-digit decline in equities
over the quarter, alternative investments continue to hold their attraction." The $2 trillion hedge funds industry faces an uphill struggle to deliver an
average positive annual return in 2011 against a backdrop of unprecedented
stress in euro zone sovereign debt
markets and equity market falls triggered by fears of a new global
recession. The average fund lost 2.8 percent in September, putting it down 4.7 percent
for the first nine months, according to Hedge Fund Research's HFRI index.