Hedge fund exit requests jump after lackluster year |
Date: Friday, December 21, 2012
Author: Laurence Fletcher, Reuters
Client demands to pull
money out of
hedge funds rose to their highest level in more than three years in
December, at the end of a year that has left many investors disappointed with
performance. Hedge fund administrator SS&C GlobeOp's forward redemption indicator, a
monthly snapshot of clients giving notice to withdraw their cash as a percentage
of assets under administration, measured 6.19 percent in December. This was the highest level since September 2009 and almost double the level
just two months ago. A year ago, the index measured 4.58 percent. After a tough time during the credit crisis,
hedge funds have managed to avoid a third year of losses in five in
2012, but their gains have lagged stock market indexes. The average hedge fund was up 4.89 percent in the first 11 months, according
to Hedge Fund Research's HFRI index, compared with a 14.94 percent total return
from the S&P 500. Bill Stone, chairman and chief executive of SS&C Technologies, said fears
that gains from hedge fund portfolios could be taxed at higher rates in the
United States may have driven the increase. "December is ... the final chance to change your tax liability. People are
generating the cash to be able to make their quarterly estimated tax payment. A
lot of people are going to make tax-influenced decisions," he said in an
interview. Stone said the numbers did not mark the end of inflows into the hedge fund
industry. "The structural problems of pension plans and retirement plans means
everyone is starving for yield." The demand for redemptions hit a high-water mark in 2008, with the GlobeOp
Forward Redemption Indicator hitting 19.27 percent in the wake of the collapse
of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers. Levels have not topped 10 percent since
September 2009. Around 10 percent of the global hedge fund industry, worth $187 billion of
hedge funds under administration, is covered by SS&C GlobeOp's data.
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