Hedge funds faulted for not being short-term enough |
Date: Friday, February 17, 2012
Author: Laurence Fletcher, Reuters
Used to criticism for caring only about short-term profit, hedge funds are
now being faulted for a failure to think short-term enough after losing out
badly in last year's volatile markets. A series of bad bets by hedge funds which were not able to keep up with
markets roiled by the
euro zone debt crisis pushed the industry as a whole down 5.2 percent last
year, according to Hedge Fund Research. The second year of losses in four for an industry used to chasing rapid gains
from takeovers and restructurings looked especially bad because the benchmark
S&P 500 stock index was flat. Double-digit gains were the norm in the 1990s for firms that demand high fees
for their vaunted acumen. "Many hedge funds are too focused on the medium term and not enough on price
action," said hedge fund manager Philippe Gougenheim, the former head of hedge
funds at Swiss fund firm Unigestion, who is now launching his own firm. "For instance, some commodities funds that did not do well last year were too
focused on the fundamentals, even when the short-term macro environment was not
very good." Among those that fared the worst were long-short equity funds, which buy
shares they expect to rise and sell short those expected to do worse. They lost
8.3 percent last year. Market neutral funds were down 2.1 percent. Commodity
funds tumbled 17.3 percent. "If you make a good fundamental call but the timing is wrong then it could
potentially be a bad investment," said Sal Naro, founder of Coherence Capital
Partners. "Asset managers are not paid for making sound credit calls at the
wrong time." Peter Rigg, global head of the alternative investments group at HSBC
Alternative Investments, said that "with the benefit of hindsight" some funds
had not focused enough on short-term issues. "MORE PRAGMATIC" The criticism reflects in part the maturity of the $2 trillion industry,
which in its early days was characterized by small, start-up funds but which is
now dominated by huge, multi-billion dollar funds. These can be less nimble and can take longer to exit their positions, meaning
their bets are often longer-term. It also shows how some funds have changed their habits and shed their
maverick image to accommodate the pension funds and other institutional
investors who now dominate the industry. Funds were caught out last year putting on the so-called pairs trade, in
which they match a bet on a rising stock with a bet on a falling stock, often in
the same sector. Such bets rely on low correlations between stocks and only require a
manager's view on the differing worth of the stocks to be borne out over a
period of time, whichever direction the market moves in. But correlations between stocks rose sharply last year as they were all
caught in the maelstrom and markets flipped between fears over Europe's debts
and optimism the problems could be contained. Investors bought and sold almost
indiscriminately and pairs traders suffered. "Fundamentals were no longer relevant in driving performance in (some)
underlying asset classes," said Aureliano Gentilini, managing partner at
research firm Mathema, saying the same principle applied to commodities as to
stocks. He said some hedge funds had shifted to a "more pragmatic" approach to take
account of the changing environment. But even that cannot guarantee success. "It is hard," said one fund of funds manager who spoke on condition of
anonymity. "I do not think you won if you were short term. Fundamentalists who
went short term got whipsawed." So far in 2012, managers including stars Crispin Odey and Lansdowne Partners,
who stuck to their guns and suffered losses last year are among those to have
performed well. And John Paulson, whose Advantage Plus fund slumped 52 percent last year
after some big bets failed to pay off, was up 5 percent last month. Gentilini said he expects the U.S. and European economies to decouple this
year, presenting new challenges to hedge funds. "The U.S. will improve on the macro side, which will create a macro
environment where fundamental ideas will regain importance," he said. "In the
euro zone, I do not think it will be in a situation where fundamental drivers
are relevant."
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