Statistics
Hedge Fund Managers' Earnings Have Risen As Sector Inflows, AuM Gained - Data

While hedge funds are now reputed to be under more pressure to trim fees in the face of sometimes lacklustre performance, figures show that people working in this business made more money this year than in 2013.
While hedge funds are now reputed to be under more pressure to
trim fees in the face of sometimes lacklustre performance,
figures show that people working in this business made more money
this year than in 2013.
Compensation increased 5 to 10 per cent over 2013’s levels,
according to the 2015 Glocap Hedge Fund Compensation Report
(issued along with Hedge Fund Research), with front-office roles
including portfolio managers, traders and senior analysts seeing
increases, as well as professionals in marketing and IT at
top-performing funds.
The sector now holds a record amount of $2.82 trillion in assets
and net inflows at their highest level since 2007. As this
expansion has taken place, the industry finds itself in tight
competition for talent against other industries, as well as other
hedge funds, for top finance professionals, the report said.
The sector has been expanding, but performance hasn’t been
stellar. So far this year, the HFRI Weighted Composite Index is
up 2.90 per cent. The share of all hedge funds which reached
their high watermarks since the start of the year through
September also rose to 68 per cent, a sharp increase from the
48.4 per cent of funds, which had reached respective high
watermarks only two years prior (2012).
Compensation growth, including base salary and bonus (both fixed
payout and discretionary), were largely a function of fund
relative performance and firm size, with portfolio managers at
top performing funds approaching eight-figure compensation
levels.
Analysts at large hedge funds, managing greater than $4 billion
and performing near the industry average, experienced a base
salary increase of 6 per cent and a bonus increase of
approximately 5 per cent, for an average compensation increase of
5.4 per cent to a total compensation of $372,000.
Portfolio managers and other senior investment professionals at
large hedge funds saw less change in their base salaries, with
these typically earning an average base salary of $275,000,
although bonus increases ranged from 2 per cent to 15 per cent,
topping the average increase from 2013.
Overall, the average compensation for a portfolio manager of a
large fund with performance near industry average increased by
nearly 8 per cent to $2.4 million, the report said.