MorningStar: Hedge Funds rose 1.9% in January |
Date: Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Author: HedgeCo.Net
New York (HedgeCo.Net) – The Morningstar MSCI Composite Hedge Fund Index, an asset-weighted composite of nearly 1,000 hedge funds in the Morningstar Hedge Fund database, rose 1.9% in January and advanced 6.3% for the trailing 12 months. Almost all Morningstar MSCI hedge fund indexes rose in January, and the trailing 12 months showed declines in only the Short Bias and Systematic Trading categories.
“Reduced global economic and political uncertainty during January fueled a
broad increase in appetite for risky
assets,” Philip Guziec, alternative investing strategist at Morningstar, said.
“Excluding the Short Biased category, all hedge fund strategies were up for the
month, and the most risk-sensitive strategies posted the strongest
performance.”
January started with a two-day rally in equity markets that accounted for
most of the 5.2% rise in the S&P 500 Index
for the month. The Morningstar MSCI North America Hedge Fund Index, which
primarily includes long-short equity
hedge funds, ended the month up 2.3%. Small-cap strategiesfaired even better.
The Russell 2000 Index jumped 6.3%,
while the Morningstar MSCI Small Cap Hedge Fund Index rose 3.9%.
The Morningstar MSCI Emerging Markets Hedge Fund Index also rose
substantially, up 3.0% in January, driven by
positive economic news from China about GDP and exports. These positive signals
also supported the performance of
the Morningstar MSCI Asia Pacific Hedge Fund Index and MSCI AC Asia Index, which
climbed 4.9% and 2.5%,
respectively. Short sellerswere caught short by the broad-based rally, however,
pushing the Morningstar MSCI Short
Bias Hedge Fund Index down 5.2%.
Widespread investor optimism also sent less risky fixed-income strategies,
such asthose involving Treasuries and
investment-grade corporate bonds, down during January, but high-yield and
relative-value hedge fund strategies posted gains. The Morningstar MSCI
Long-Short Credit and Fixed Income Arbitrage Hedge Fund Indexes increased 0.7
and 0.9%, respectively, in January. The month-long equity rally as well as
rising prices across the energy, agricultural, and metal commodity futures
markets also supported price-trend following managed futures strategies in
January, leading to a 2.8% rise in the Morningstar MSCI Systematic Trading Hedge
Fund Index. January’s uptick was not enough to offset previous losses, however,
and the Systematic Trading Hedge Fund Index was down 1.2% over the past 12
months.
In December 2012, single-manager funds in Morningstar’s Hedge Fund Database
saw outflows of $4.7 billion, marking
the fourth consecutive month of outflows, and representing more than half of the
$7.0 billion that investors pulled from hedge funds in the database during 2012.
This was a sharp reversal from investor behavior seen during 2011 and
2010, when funds in the Morningstar Hedge Fund Database received inflows of
$17.9 and $10.1 billion, respectively.
The largest redemptions came from multistrategy hedge funds, which gave up $1.7
billion, or 35% of the redemptions
in the Morningstar database for the month. Over the calendar year 2012, however,
multistrategy funds in the database
gathered more assets than any other category of $4.2 billion. Hedge funds in the
Systematic Futures category, which
trade futures contracts according to trend-following and momentum-based
strategies, also suffered in December,
losing $826 million, followed by U.S. long/short equity hedge funds, which lost
$500 million. Only the Distressed
Securities, Emerging Market Long-Only Equity, and Debt Arbitrage hedge fund
categories posted inflows of $46
million, $25 million, and $2 million, respectively, in December.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.