US institutional investors favouring alternative mutual funds over hedge funds |
Date: Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek
"Alternative mutual funds and ETFs have grown in breadth and quality in
recent years," says Nadia Papagiannis, director of alternative funds
research for Morningstar. "Institutional investors are starting to see
alternative mutual funds as substitutes for hedge funds, and more financial
advisors are incorporating these liquid, transparent investments into their
client portfolios."
Morningstar and Barron's conducted the survey in March 2013 and received
responses from 235 institutions and 471 financial advisors. Among the major
trends in alternative investment usage and perception:
Mutual funds are becoming the dominant vehicle used by both advisors and
institutions to access the majority of alternative strategies. Alternative
mutual funds saw inflows of USD19.7bn in 2012, while Morningstar estimates
that among funds in its database, USD7.6bn flowed out of single-strategy
hedge funds.
While 61 per cent of institutions said they accessed long-short strategies
via hedge funds in 2010, only 26 per cent indicated that they used hedge
funds for that strategy this year. In contrast, more than 45 per cent of
institutions said they access long-short strategies via mutual funds versus
38 in 2010.
Among institutions, the number of "heavy users" of alternatives seems to be
growing. More than 20 per cent of institutions, compared with 17 per cent
last year, said they expect alternative investments to make up more than 40
per cent of holdings over the next five years.
Only four per cent of advisors said their typical client had no money in
alternative investments, down from 17 per cent in the 2008 survey.
In 2012, the long-short equity and non-traditional bond categories saw the
largest alternative mutual fund flows of USD6.1bn and USD5.9bn,
respectively.
For the second year in a row, institutions again flagged long-short equity
strategies as their top choice for increased allocation—the strategy ranked
second for advisors.
Advisors also expressed particular interest in yield-producing alternatives.
They cited private real estate as their top strategy for planned future
investment. In addition, advisors indicated that master limited partnerships
(MLPs) drove significant portfolio growth over the last five years.
Advisors shied away from managed futures in 2012 after citing them as their
top pick in the two previous surveys. Performance may have been a factor as
managed futures ETFs and mutual funds lost 15.6 per cent and 7.4 per cent,
respectively, in 2012, similar to their losses in 2011. Institutions and
advisors also expressed distaste for the undisclosed performance fees
managed futures funds frequently charge.
High fees have overtaken liquidity and transparency as the primary reasons
why advisors and institutions may choose to forego alternative investments.
Hedgeweek readers can monitor and research alternative investment funds using globalfunddata.com [1]
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