'Quant' Funds Headed For Worst Month Since August 2007 |
Date: Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Author: Reuters
Computer-driven hedge funds are headed for their worst
monthly performance since the start of the credit crunch after making losing
bets in dozens of markets including bonds, currencies and commodities.
Many of the funds, known as managed futures or commodity trading advisors (CTAs),
came into October with "risk on" trades, such as long positions on equities and
commodities, and a short position on the U.S. dollar. But the trends that these managers try to detect and profit from — using
ultra-complex algorithms designed by legions of astrophysicists and
mathematicians — have "reversed" and gone against them in multiple markets. The average fund is down 5.63 percent this month to Oct. 25, according to
Newedge's CTA Trend Sub-Index. If the index stays at or around that level at
month end, the performance will rank as their worst month since August 2007. "In and of themselves these moves weren't massive, it's just we've had so
many reversals everywhere,"
Alex Greyserman, chief investment officer at
ISAM, a roughly $900 million fund which is also down some 5 percent
in October. Mr. Greyserman said there was no single macro factor that caused so many of
the trends to reverse but instead market specific reasons. ISAM posted losses in
markets as diverse as equities, metals and agricultural commodities. "Statistically these things can happen, but they shouldn't happen very often.
It's just been one of those months when the trades went against you everywhere
for a number of reasons," he said. The biggest funds in the predominantly London-based community, such as
David Harding's $29 billion
Winton Capital and
Man Group's $16.3 billion
AHL, have not been immune either, and are also suffering significant
losses.
BlueCrest Capital, one of the world's biggest hedge funds, recently
overhauled the way it trades in one of its computer funds, a source said earlier
this month, sending a powerful signal that some "black box" programs may be
broken. CTAs have enjoyed explosive growth in recent years as investors look for
strategies less correlated to equities and bonds. While the big October losses
wipe out earlier gains made this year, the average CTA fund is still flat in
2012, the Newedge index shows. Top Fallers
Aspect Capital, headed by
Martin Lueck, has watched its main fund slump 5.28 percent in
October, bringing year-to-date falls to just shy of 11 percent, performance data
seen by Reuters shows. Other big fallers include $4 billion strong
Cantab Capital Partners' Aristarchus and Faraday funds, down 4.52
percent and 5.05 percent to Oct. 19 respectively, the data shows. However, both
funds are still up year-to-date. Winton Capital's flagship fund has fallen 3.28 percent to Oct. 26, leaving it
6.5 percent in the red this year, while AHL, part of troubled hedge fund firm
Man Group, is down around 4 percent year-to-date after a 3.5 percent fall this
month to Oct. 25. "Winton has been trading since 1997 and so far we've only had one down year
in 15, which is better than we expect," a Winton spokesperson said. AHL said it had fared better than most of its competitors, noting that its
performance was better than the Newedge index. "October has been a difficult month for CTAs, with reversals in trends for
many asset classes, such as bonds, interest rates, stocks, gold, and
currencies," AHL said in an e-mailed statement. Based on Newedge's Trend Indicator, calculated using a generic trend
following model, the worst positions in October are long Japanese yen and long
silver, said James Skeggs, global co-head of Advisory Group — Alternative
Investment Solutions. Currencies accounted for 80 basis points of the 3.4 percent fall in the Trend
Indicator this month to Oct. 26, commodities 140 basis points and bonds and
fixed income 90. "It hasn't been a great month for CTAs. But these strategies don't claim not
to have volatility," Mr. Skeggs said. CTA managers are quick to point out that monthly losses of this magnitude are
rare in the industry, but some investors worry that trendless or choppy markets
driven by the latest policymaker move is making life increasingly difficult. "These risk on risk off swings, caused by policy statements, have made it
difficult for systematic funds to adjust," said
Ben Funk, Head of Research at
Liongate Capital Management.