Alt Investments
Hedge Funds' "2 And 20" Fee Model Vanishes - Survey

The survey's authors say managers are battling harder to show their own financial interests are in tune with those of clients.
A study of 118 hedge fund managers shows that the traditional “2
and 20” fee model (annual management charge and performance fee,
respectively) has been dead for some time.
On average, funds now have an average 1.3 per cent management
fee, with 80 per cent of them willing to sacrifice that fee if it
gives them a bigger slice of performance, according to a study
from the
Alternative Investment Management Association and RSM.
The $3.0 trillion-plus hedge fund industry, while it has had its
bright spots in recent years, has generally been on the defensive
since 2008, lagging in broad terms behind global equity markets
and hence raising questions about the fees earned. Legendary
investment figure Warren Buffett, for example, has criticised
hedge funds’ fees as not worth what they add in value.
“Discussions with managers and investors during the research
reveal a shared belief that managers’ share of profit should be
about one third,” the report said.
More than 75 per cent of managers see a mutual desire for a
long-term investment commitment or an exchange of knowledge with
investors as essential, the study, showing other details, found.
It also showed that it is crucial for firms to be aligned
financially with what investors want – some 76 per cent of
surveyed managers say that it is important for them to have their
own capital in the funds they run.
Nearly all respondents have a performance fee high-water mark
with their investors and almost 40 per cent use hurdle rates to
set a minimum return for client(s) before a performance fee can
be charged, the study showed.
The respondents together oversee about $440 billion in assets
under management.