Fund Management
Hedge Funds Fall In H1, But Buck Grim Market Performance

In the current climate, recent data adds to the debate on whether hedge funds justify their costs when fees are stripped out.
Fresh data shows that although macro hedge fund strategies bucked
market trends in the first six months of 2022, the broad falls to
equity and bonds dragged the entire hedge fund industry lower.
And investors took $27.5 billion of money out of the sector.
A benchmark of returns, provided by research firm Preqin, showed a decline of
7.95 per cent during the three months to the end of June versus
the first quarter of 2022. Ranking historical Q2 returns since
1987 also shows that this decline was the second largest
quarterly decline since the 2008 financial crash.
But Preqin noted that hedge funds’ performance over the past 12
months (-8.15 per cent) was still superior when compared with
S&P 500’s return (-12.52 per cent) during the same
interval.
Dispersion in performance was significant among hedge fund top
level strategies. Relative value and macro hedge funds protected
investors during the quarter, declining -0.24 per cent and -1.24
per cent, respectively. Multi strategy (-4.87 per cent) and
credit (-4.53 per cent) fell but, given the level of volatility
in the markets, these two categories performed “reasonably
well,” Preqin said.
Equity and event-driven hedge funds did poorly, declining by 9.04
per cent and 7.61 per cent, respectively.
The market declines have reduced investors’ appetite to commit
new money. According to Preqin Pro, 79 per cent of investors plan
to invest less than $50 million (the smallest allocation size) of
fresh capital in hedge funds over the next 12 months, compared
with 74 per cent of investors taking that view in the first
three months of this year. Only 9 per cent of allocators are
planning to invest between $50 million to $99 million, 8 per
cent between $100 million to $299 million, and 4 per cent aim to
put more than $300 million to work over the next 12
months.
“Lack of attractive returns in 2022 has made investors nervous
and is influencing the way allocators think about their hedge
fund allocations,” Sam Monfared, vice president, Research
Insights at Preqin, said. “Market volatility has spiked up and is
unlikely to end in Q3. The positive is that plenty of
dislocations have formed over the past few months, and this
environment could create long-term opportunities for the industry
and patient investors.”
Such figures continue to drive debate on whether hedge funds,
which typically charge a higher annual management fee than
long-only funds, as well as charging a performance fee, justify
their costs when fees are stripped out. The past decade or so –
with interruptions – was generally a strong one for long-only
market-tracking funds such as exchange-traded funds, while hedge
funds, with some caveats, had to work harder to justify their
existence. With markets turning more volatile, some of those
considerations have flipped.
Macro gains
Separately, figures from Hedge Fund
Research, the Chicago-based firm, said its HFRI Macro (Total)
Index gained +14.2 per cent in the first half of this year,
beating the decline of the S&P 500 by 3300 basis points
and the Nasdaq Composite Index by almost 4400 bps.
Negatively correlated macro gains offset weakness in directional
and higher beta strategies, bringing the performance of the HFRI
500 Fund Weighted Composite Index to a decline of -4.1 per cent
in the first half of 2022, HFR said.
Fears of recession and the impact for inflation encouraged
institutional investors to remove an estimated $27.5 billion from
hedge funds in the second quarter of this year, the highest
quarterly outflow in more than two years. Total global hedge fund
industry capital fell to $3.82 trillion.