HF launches accelerate as support for bank regulation builds |
Date: Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Author: Wendy Chothia, HedgeWeek
New hedge fund launches in Q1 2012 increased to a level not reached since 2007 as hedge fund capital rose to a record level of USD2.13 trillion, according to the latest Market Microstructure Industry Report, released today by HFR (Hedge Fund Research)
New fund launches totalled 304 in the first quarter, narrowly eclipsing the
298 launches in 1Q11 for the highest quarterly total since Q4 07. Hedge fund
liquidations also increased during the first quarter, with 232 funds closing,
the highest quarterly liquidation total since 240 funds closed in 1Q10. Fund of
Hedge Funds (FOF) continued to experience a contraction in number of funds in
the first quarter, with 64 FOF’s closing while 34 launched; 1Q12 was the 4th
consecutive quarter of decline in number of FOF’s.
Hedge fund performance dispersion increased over the prior quarter, with the top
decile of all hedge funds averaging a gain of over 20 per cent in Q1 2012, while
the bottom decile of all funds declined by 28 per cent on average. Dispersion
over the trailing 12 months was essentially unchanged from the prior quarter.
Hedge fund fees rose slightly in Q1 2012 versus Q1 2011, with average management
fees of 1.63 per cent and average incentive fees of 17.75 per cent.
According to HFR’s research, service provider market share across prime broker,
administrator, legal advisory and audit firms continued to fluctuate over the
quarter, with JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs holding top PB shares with nearly half
of all hedge fund assets globally. Administrators which experienced market share
gains include BNY Mellon, GlobeOp and Citigroup.
“Innovative hedge funds are launching and finding opportunities as large
financial institutions look to deemphasise trading activities as a result of
anticipated regulation, realised trading losses and enhanced risk management
requirements,” says Kenneth J Heinz (pictured), President of HFR. “Execution and
risk control are integral components of successful hedge funds and these have
been greatly enhanced by the evolution of transparency in recent years. These
powerful trends will continue to support launches of new hedge funds designed to
monetize inefficiencies in capital markets as financial institutions adapt to
new reporting, risk and trading requirements.”
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