Commodity hedge funds suffer longest losing streak on record |
Date: Friday, July 19, 2013
Author: Tommy Wilkes, Reuters
* Average fund down 3.6 pct in H1 2013 * Follows losses in previous two years * Managers struggle to make money as
commodity prices fall LONDON, July 18 (Reuters) - Funds betting on
commodity price moves have lost money every month since January,
their joint longest losing streak on record, raising more doubts about their
ability to make money at a time when the commodity "supercycle" may be over. The average fund slid 3.58 percent in the first six months of the year,
according to a widely watched Newedge commodity index. Funds have only suffered
five consecutive losing months once before, in 2002-2003, the index shows.
Hedge funds market themselves as capable of making money in all
markets, yet funds trading
commodities as varied as gold,
grains and gas, have failed to turn an annual profit in the last
three years. The weak performance will put more pressure on the industry to lower fees and
introduce clawbacks, which enable investors to reclaim some performance perks
paid to hedge fund managers in boom times if the returns they hope to achieve
fail to continue. Worries about cooling demand in key
markets like
China, and a huge shift in the supply-side from shortage to glut, has sent
prices tumbling in recent years, and left many warning that the end of the
commodity "supercycle" - the long period of rising commodity prices - is here. "Historically most of these funds have been a levered beta play on the
commodity cycle, or in some cases arbitrageurs of commodity spreads," Michele
Gesualdi, portfolio manager at hedge fund investor Kairos, said. "The end of the supercycle has hurt the first area, while the volatility and
discrepancies that have arisen in forward markets have made life difficult for
the second." Adding to the sector's woes, hedge funds which trade other asset classes such
as equities have rebounded this year, including those that trade mining and
energy shares. The $1 billion fund of Clive Capital, a firm which trades oil and ran about
$5 billion at its peak, is down 3.5 percent to June 28, performance data shows.
Krom River's Commodity Fund has lost 4.4 percent to end-June, while Brevan
Howard's Commodities Strategies Fund is off 2.5 percent to June 28. Krom River's chief executive Itay Simkin said that despite falling prices,
commodities were still a very good investment due to production problems,
urbanisation, decent economic growth rates and a lack of forward investment in
mining. Other funds mentioned in this story either declined to comment or could not
immediately be reached for comment. Funds trading bullion are nursing some of the heaviest losses. Gold has
tumbled this year on expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve will cut back on its
money-printing programme, which had driven gold to record highs. John Paulson, the billionaire U.S. investor, has seen his gold fund, his
smallest with $300 million in assets, plunge 23 percent in June and is down 65
percent this year. Despite the losses, most managers are not down as much as commodity prices
this year - the 19-commodity Thomson Reuters-Jefferies CRB index fell 5.7
percent through end-June. Some have also shone. After losing 30 percent in 2011 and 7.6 percent and a
big chunk of his assets in 2012, Mike Coleman's Merchant Commodity Fund is up
24.2 percent this year. But the bigger concern for commodity funds is proving they can consistently
make money amid a sustained downward trend in prices. The problem, investors and managers say, is that the long, gradual trend of
rising prices has been replaced with shorter, more uncertain trends, in which
prices can plunge suddenly, making it difficult to profit from their slide. Commodity prices, down 22 percent from a 2011 peak, have entered bear market
territory, while volatility - which some funds thrive on - has also fallen,
challenging managers further.
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