Hedge funds continue rising trend in solid market environment, says Lyxor |
Date: Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Author: Emily Perryman, HedgeWeek
They were led by the L/S Equity -
Long Bias (+3.08 per cent), the Event Driven - Special Situation Index
(+2.63 per cent) and the Event Driven - Distressed Index (+2.09 per cent).
The Lyxor Hedge Fund Index posted a positive performance of +1.32 per cent
in July (+3.19 per cent YTD).
Financial assets recovered after the painful sell-off in June and hedge
funds posted solid results in July. The robust performance was a welcome
reversal from the 3.6 per cent loss hedge funds suffered last month, which
marked one of the toughest months since 2011. Several factors contributed to
a more normalised trading environment, which helped performance. These
include a stabilisation of US rates, support for growth from China’s
authorities and solid earnings in the US vs. expectations. Hedge funds cut
beta to a year low of 18 end of June (median equity beta of the Lyxor
platform). As markets stabilised and hedge funds became more bullish, beta
increased to 22 by mid-July. Despite the increase, hedge fund beta is still
below the 36 per cent reached in May, suggesting a relative degree of
caution.
Long/Short Equity funds gained thanks to both positive beta exposure to the
market and increased dispersion among stocks and indexes. L/S Equity Long
Bias was the best category performer among Lyxor strategies in July, up 3.08
per cent while L/S Equity Variable funds gained 1.95 per cent. Market
Neutral and Statistical Arbitrage had more mixed performances with -1.02 per
cent and 0.92 per cent respectively. During the month, funds on the Lyxor
platform marginally decreased their net exposure to 55 per cent for long
biased funds and 45 per cent for variable biased ones. On a sector level, US
equity managers enlarged their exposures to Financials and Technology, but
reduced Consumer Staples and Communications weights. The increase in
Financials exposure follows strong 2Q results where the banks are benefiting
from solid trading activity and a continued rebound in housing prices. On
the other side of Atlantic, managers increased exposure only to Consumer
Cyclicals and Financials.
Event driven strategies did well with Special Situations up 2.63 per cent
and Distressed up 2.09 per cent. Merger Arbitrage strategy was also up 1.57
per cent. These strategies typically perform well when the risk environment
is calm and the reduction of risk premium in July helped to create a
backdrop to generate positive returns. Equity and Credit net exposure
remained stable for Special Situations.
L/S Credit Arbitrage reported a solid gain of 1.64 per cent. Credit
rebounded in July but lagged the rebound in equity markets. Outflows from
high yield funds and ETF’s last month reversed in July helping to provide a
bid to credit. Convertible Bond Arbitrage performed well with a 1.85 per
cent gain though bond issuance has disappointed the expectation of many
managers who have predicted a pick up.
CTA funds bounced back after a challenging June. Short term models advanced
0.66 per cent, while long term strategies registered slight losses of 0.72
per cent. The correlation of equities and bonds, which was a large headwind
for performance last month, eased in July. CTA managers cut the risk
allocation to bonds but kept their equity allocation roughly flat. Most
funds benefited from their long equity positions but suffered from their
generally long positions on the USD against EUR and JPY. Energy was also a
detractor to performance as the rise in oil prices hurt many CTAs.
Global macro managers had a positive month with an overall gain of 1.24 per
cent. Most funds benefited from the recovery in equity markets but gains
were eroded by short positions on JPY, AUD and EUR. Disparate positions in
the commodity space yielded diverse returns.
“Markets are faced with a changing monetary landscape. We view the Fed’s
shifting policy as part of a positive normalization process that should
reach dispersion and correlation levels, which means more opportunities to
monetize for hedge funds,” says Jeanne Asseraf-Bitton, head of global cross
asset research at Lyxor AM.