Hedge funds turn to "long-only" investing in bid to grow |
Date: Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Author: Tommy Wilkes, Reuters
Dec 2 (Reuters) - Half of
hedge funds now sell products traditionally the preserve of
mainstream asset managers such as "long-only" strategies, a study shows,
reflecting how conservative investors have come to dominate the industry's
client base.
Hedge funds have made their name wagering on asset prices both rising
and falling, and often increase the risk of their bets with borrowed cash. By
contrast, traditional long-only managers can only bet the price of a stock or
bond will go up. But many hedge funds are now branching out into long-only products in an
effort to diversify and expand their
business, putting them in direct competition with fund managers like
Schroders, Standard Life and Pimco. This shift underlines how more risk-averse investors, which tend to put most
of their money in traditional assets such as
bonds and
stocks, are seen as representing the industry's best source of future
growth, encouraging managers to curtail the free-wheeling ways of the past. According to the study, conducted by Deutsche Bank , half of hedge funds now
offer non-traditional hedge fund products such as long-only mandates and "liquid
alternatives", which restrict the size of fees funds can charge. Well-known firms including Lansdowne Partners, Egerton Capital and Winton
Capital are among those offering long-only funds, and according to the study it
is the larger managers that are leading the shift. More than four in five managers running more than $5 billion in assets have
launched at least one non-traditional hedge fund strategy, the survey said. The study polled 60 global hedge funds running $528 billion in assets and 200
investors managing more than $625 billion in hedge fund assets, Deutsche Bank
said.