Managers pocket 28 percent of hedge fund profits - study |
Date: Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Author: Laurence Fletcher, Reuters
Hedge fund managers pocketed 28.1 percent of profits generated by their funds
over the past 18 years, new research from London's Imperial College found. The research, commissioned by KPMG and hedge fund industry body the
Alternative Investment Management Association, found investors' share of annual
profits delivered by hedge funds from 1994-2011 was 71.9 percent. It also found funds delivered an average annual return of 9.07 percent from
1994-2011, compared with 7.27 percent from global commodities, 7.18 percent from
stocks, and 6.25 percent from global bonds. "This research ... disproves common public misconceptions that hedge funds
are expensive and do not deliver," said Rob Mirsky, head of hedge funds at KPMG
in Britain. The study, which assumed average hedge fund fees of 1.75 percent and
performance fees of 17.5 percent, followed the publication in January of 'The
Hedge Fund Mirage' by fund manager Simon Lack. The book, which prompted a swift rebuttal from the hedge fund industry, said
hedge fund managers themselves had earned 84 percent of returns delivered by
their funds from 1998-2010. The study found a relatively high level of correlation between hedge funds
and global stocks, particularly during recessions. The findings come after a 2011 in which funds lost money as markets fell on
worries over the
euro zone debt crisis and a first quarter of 2012 in which a market rebound
has fuelled a resurgence in fund performance. Correlations between hedge funds and global stocks were 0.87 during
recessions and 0.77 outside recessions. A score of 1 indicates a perfect
correlation. The highest correlation was between equity hedge funds - one of the most
popular strategies - and global stocks during recessions at 0.91.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.