Alt Investments
Family Offices Warming To Hedge Funds
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A network of family offices around the world say they are looking to increase allocations this year.
A network of family offices says that its members plan to boost
hedge fund allocations this year in a bet against expected rising
volatility and the threat of market drawdowns.
About 30 per cent of FOs polled by Family Office
Networks in recent months want to boost exposures the
sector.
“With the broader capital markets being down last year, family
offices are looking for preservation of capital,” Andrew
Schneider, founder and chief executive of Family Office Networks,
said.
Hedge funds fell into the red last year as markets sagged and
turned choppier, but their losses were not as bad as broader
market indices overall. The Preqin All-Strategies Hedge Fund
benchmark, issued by Preqin, the research firm
tracking the sector, returned -2.27 per cent, bringing the 2018
full-year losses to 3.42 per cent, the first negative year since
2011.
By comparison, the MSCI World Index of developed countries’
equities, measured in dollars, fell by 8.71 per cent (when
capital changes and reinvested dividends are combined). The MSCI
Emerging Markets Index, meanwhile, fared even worse as rising US
interest rates and US-China trade tensions rattled investors -
down by 14.6 per cent. With their traditional 2 per cent annual
management fee and 20 per cent performance haircut revenue model,
hedge funds have struggled to keep some investors’ faith in
recent years – that 2/20 pricing structure has eroded. According
to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research, another firm tracking the
sector, average management fees are around 1.43 per cent, while
the average incentive fee is just shy of 17 per cent.
The fact that funds managed to avoid losses as large as those
suffered by long-only traditional portfolios might give some
comfort to the sector, however. According to HFR, its HFRI Asset
Weighted Composite Index posted a narrow decline of just -0.8 per
cent for the full year of 2018, far better than the broader
market.
Family Office Networks is a network of 10,000 FOs with $15
trillion in assets.
The organization said that more capital is being allocated to
traditional long/short, global macro and managed futures
strategies. In addition, FON is seeing newer strategies grow in
popularity for investment such as blockchain, artificial
intelligence and cannabis funds.