After Strong Start to Year, Hedge Funds Fall in April |
Date: Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Author: Reuters
Hedge funds lost some ground in April, after the
industry stormed into 2012 with the best first-quarter of performance since
2006.
The HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index fell 0.36 percent last month,
according to data released Monday [May 7] by Hedge Fund Research, which tracks
industry performance and flows. Still, hedge funds narrowly beat the Standard & Poor's 500 index in April,
which fell 0.8 percent. After equity and credit markets rallied in the first few months of the year,
concerns about the health of the U.S economy and about prolonged economic tumult
in the euro zone pushed financial markets lower at the beginning of the second
quarter. Equity hedge funds lost 0.57 percent in April. Macro-focused funds also lost
ground, falling 0.35 percent. Relative Value Arbitrage funds had a better month,
but only slightly. Those funds edged up 0.21 percent last month. April's slim losses follow a quarter in which hedge funds on average climbed
4.79 percent. Those solid returns came as a relief to many money managers and their
investors, who struggled through whipsawing markets and poor fund performance
for much of 2011, when hedge funds on average sank 5 percent. "April hedge fund performance marked a transition from the equity beta driven
gains in the first quarter to an environment more similar to the risk-averse
environment which dominated 2011," said Kenneth J. Heinz, President of HFR.
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