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Hedge Fund Risk Management is “A Work in Progress” |
Date: Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Author: Simon Kerr's Blog
For a
long period I was unable to carry on reading SEI’s fifth annual global
survey of institutional hedge fund investors beyond this summary point:
“RISK MANAGEMENT IS A WORK IN PROGRESS. Only one in five of those we polled
agreed that “most hedge funds do a good job of risk management.” ” The view
embedded is a strong challenge to the proposition offered by those who run
hedge funds.
In
concept hedge funds do what they are supposed to because the managers are
able to turn a fecund source of alpha into an attractive return series
through an appropriate risk management framework. It is feasible to have an
outstanding insight into companies/stocks/markets that enables a manager to
run with an okay risk framework to produce the required return, but is
extremely unusual, and, from experience, cannot be relied on to grind out
returns. Rather a good risk management approach and processes are sine qua
non for a successful hedge fund.
So the
respondents in the survey of 105 investors in hedge funds, across a range of
investor types, conducted by SEI are perhaps able to distinguish between the
typical and the best in this area. In answer to the question “Do hedge funds
generally do a good job of risk management?” One in five said yes, 28%
disagreed and the rest were not committed.
The
endowments, pension plans, family offices and consultants that completed the
survey may have had in mind that hedge funds have produced losses in two out
of the last four years so the recent evidence is that the typical hedge fund
does not do a good job in risk management if the point of the risk framework
is to produce the target return of absolute performance. However only a very
small minority of hedge funds invest in “the typical hedge fund”, that is
through replication or hedge fund index products. Rather there is a research
process and hedge funds are actively selected.
There
are around ten thousand active hedge funds today. An institutional
allocation to hedge funds might consist of as few as six funds*, but will
run via, say, three funds of funds plus a few individual selections to a
maximum of 100 single manager hedge funds for a large pension plan. The
survey question “Do hedge funds generally do a good job of risk management?”
addresses the 10,000. What if the question had been “Do the hedge fund
managers you selected and allocate capital to do a good job in risk
management?” Would the response have been the same?
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