Alt Investments
Hedge Fund Assets Rise In Q2, But At Slower Pace – Preqin
An important part of the private banking and wealth management toolbox, hedge funds’ performance have waxed and waned in recent years.
Hedge funds’ assets under management rose in the second quarter
of 2024 to an estimated $4.7 trillion, although the
quarter-on-quarter rise of 0.11 per cent, or $5.3 billion, was
less than the far larger figure – $186 billion – that funds added
in the first three months of the year.
The figures, from Preqin, the research firm that
tracks alternative assets, also showed that July was a month in
which niche strategies, such as those focused on
cryptocurrencies, set the highest gains. Crypto-linked strategies
and insurance-linked strategies outperformed the overall hedge
fund asset class.
An important part of the private banking and wealth management
toolbox, hedge funds’ performance have waxed and waned in recent
years. Hedge funds haven't always enjoyed strong returns – and
some strategies have hit trouble, prompting pushback against
their relatively high fees. However, despite certain naysayers
such as
Warren Buffett, they appear to be a fixture in the wealth
management landscape.
Preqin’s All Hedge Fund Index rose 1.61 per cent in July 2024,
only 17 basis points off the MSCI World Index, at 1.78 per cent –
the closest gap between the two indices since July
2019.
However, in a polarized month for hedge funds performance,
falling metal prices lowered commodity prices (excluding energy)
overall and so detracted from recent strong performance, while
tech stocks’ price growth flattened in July, Preqin
said.
“The wider hedge funds universe is expected to see continued
volatility as it moves into September. The Bank of Japan’s July
31 rate hike and its impact on the yen-funded carry trade is
likely to be felt in the August hedge funds data. Further, some
of the largest managers reduced major technology holdings as
second-quarter filings began to be released, which could leave
them on the outside should August’s rebound remain on track when
the month-end data comes out,” Charles McGrath, AVP, Research
Insights at Preqin, said.
Hedge funds that focus on cryptocurrencies have sometimes enjoyed
stellar returns.
See here.
Preqin’s All Hedge Funds Index rose 1.61 per cent in
July, a rebound from June’s 0.28 per cent decline
but trailing global public equities, as measured by the MSCI
World Index (1.8 per cent), by a modest amount. While hedge
funds can be expected to underperform in an up market, the
17-basis-point variance was the tightest gap between the two
indices since July 2019.