Hedge fund results mixed in October |
Date: Thursday, November 8, 2012
Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek
The HRFX Global Hedge Fund index lost 0.5 per cent, bringing its year-to-date performance to 2.1 per cent.
At the strategy level, event driven, global macro and relative value approaches all posted negative returns according to the HFRX strategy indices.
Equity hedge managers had a positive month, helped by gross and net
exposure levels well below long-term averages.
Anthony Lawler, portfolio manager at GAM, says: "Policy uncertainty on both
sides of the Atlantic was arguably a dominant factor influencing global
markets in October. Investors and corporates remain hesitant to invest and
hire when the policy, tax and regulatory framework is in flux. Europe is
debating its way toward a hoped 'muddle through' solution. However, there
are still numerous country-specific hurdles to clear. In the US, investors
face the dual uncertainties of the election and the fiscal cliff. Given
these unknowns, they generally remained cautious or de-risked their
portfolios by selling during October. Notably even sovereign bonds, that are
commonly perceived as safe havens, sold off with UK gilts, US treasuries and
German bunds all producing negative price moves for the month."
October was a challenging month for many managers and this included trend
following CTAs. These managers in aggregate held portfolio positions that
typically act balanced, as they were positioned long bonds, a bearish bet,
against long equities and long energy, bullish bets. In October all three of
these positions moved together and resulted in a negative month for CTAs.
Lawler says: "A number of hedge fund managers across strategies turned more
positive after the Fed's QE3 announcement in September. In October, these
managers' more bullish views proved generally unhelpful for those long risk
assets outside of structured credit. But constructive and risk-on
positioning did continue to help managers of structured credit positions and
some relative value managers, where we continue to see solid
out-performance. That said, at the end of October many hedge funds have
slightly reduced risk going into the US election, but they stand ready to
add risk back on once a clear result emerges."
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