Alt Investments
How To Pick A Long/Short Equity Hedge Fund Manager?

If you are a funds buyer, asset allocator or investment officer thinking about the sort of hedge funds that should be in the client's portfolio, here is a guide charting the world of long/short hedge funds. It shows the most important characteristics to examine and take into account before signing on the dotted line.
Hedge funds that ride up on market gains and seek to offset
downside risks by shorting are, for rather obvious reasons,
getting fresh love from investors after the extraordinary market
gyrations of recent weeks. (It remains a source of astonishment
to some that while the underlying economy has been blasted by
COVID-19, major stock market indices are well off their spring
lows.) In such an environment, wealth managers, private banks and
family offices must scan the menu options for all the long/short
hedge funds out there. How to choose and avoid getting a bad case
of indigestion? To explain how investors can make a smart
choice is Don Steinbrugge, CFA, founder and CEO of Agecroft Partners
(more details about Don below). We hope these insights are
useful; readers are most welcome to jump into the conversation.
The usual editorial health warnings about views of outside
contributors apply; we are grateful to Don for his insights here.
Email the editors at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
and jackie.bennion@clearviewpublishing.com
There has recently been increased interest in long/short equity
strategies after strong relative performance in the first quarter
of 2020 relative to equity indices and the perception that the
recent sell-off and rebound in the marketplace have created an
environment for long/short equity managers to excel. This is
great news for approximately 25 per cent of the hedge fund
industry that focuses on the strategy after a decade-long decline
in the percentage of total hedge fund industry assets.
For investors looking to hire a long/short equity manager, it can
be a daunting task narrowing down the thousands of funds focused
on the strategy. Initially, investors focus on the typical
evaluation factors for a hedge fund which include the quality of
the organization, investment team, portfolio construction and
risk controls such as management of net exposures and position
sizes of longs and shorts, and quality of service providers. In
order to increase the odds of identifying a manager who will
outperform, investors should also focus on three high-level
areas:
-- The relative valuation of the segment of the equity
market in which the manager specializes;
-- The level of inefficiencies in these markets; and
-- The manager’s ability to gain an information advantage and
capture these inefficiencies.
Relative valuation of markets. Many long/short equity managers
specialize within the global equity markets in certain areas
ranging from geography, market capitalization, sectors, to value
versus growth styles. These areas may include a single country
like the US, China or Brazil, a region like North America, Europe
or Asia, developed markets versus emerging markets,
small/mid-capitalization versus large capitalization, or sectors
such as technology, healthcare, consumer and energy.
Most managers run a long-biased portfolio with the average net
exposure around 50 per cent long. This results in a high
correlation in performance to the area of stocks in which they
specialize, and a meaningful portion of their performance driven
by the beta to those stocks. Therefore, comparing performance
across long/short equity managers is not a good indication of
their relative quality. Instead, it is beneficial to consider the
following:
Create a custom benchmark for each manager. Various
components of the global equity markets perform differently
year-to-year. In order to determine if a long/short equity
manager is adding value, their exposure-adjusted performance
should be compared with a custom benchmark based on the part of
the equity market in which they specialize. For example, a
long/short equity manager focusing on small-cap US growth
companies with an average net exposure of +60 per cent should be
compared with 60 per cent of the Russell 2000 growth index. This
is something that long only investors have done for years, but
has been used much less frequently in the hedge fund
industry.
Determine whether managers are biased to outperform.
Investors should focus on long/short managers that are
concentrated in the most undervalued areas of the global equity
markets. This process begins with reviewing historical relative
price-to-earnings ratios for different parts of the market such
as small-cap versus large-cap growth versus value, developed
markets versus emerging markets, and the US versus China. These
ratios are then compared with their current levels to determine
which part of the equity market seems to be relatively
undervalued from an historical perspective. The next step is to
try to identify if there are any changes in relative expected
earnings growth rates across each of the areas evaluated that
would have caused changes to relative valuations.
Over long periods of time, temporary pricing distortions
develop among different areas of the market which eventually
reverse. This causes a rotation of outperformance for these
various areas. Over the past century, the market has consistently
overpaid for earnings growth and large-cap stocks, which has
resulted in long-term outperformance of value and small-cap
stocks. This performance trend has reversed itself over the past
decade. This reversal has created an environment where value and
small cap stocks are trading at valuations levels near their
all-time lows relative to growth and large-cap stocks. The
question is, has the world changed or will we see a huge snap
back in the performance of small-cap and value stocks?
Level of inefficiencies. Inefficiencies in security
pricing are highly correlated to the size of a company’s market
capitalization, the amount of Wall Street analyst coverage, the
percentage of stock owned by institutions, and the complexity of
the business. The greater the level of inefficiencies in security
prices, the higher the potential divergence between market price
and intrinsic value, and the more opportunity for investors to
generate alpha through security selection. Investors should
consider paying hedge fund fees to managers who are likely to
earn them by delivering alpha-driven returns to their investors.
This is most likely to come from managers who specialize in less
efficient areas of the market. For the parts of the market with
the most efficiently priced equities, investors would do best to
allocate through long-only, low fee investment vehicles.
Information advantage. Investors should only invest in
hedge funds where the manager can clearly state what inefficiency
in the market they are taking advantage of, and what their
differential advantage is in capturing this inefficiency through
their investment process. There are many ways that long/short
equity managers try to get an edge, with a few being much more
successful than others.
Some of these include:
1. Food chain analysis
2. Focusing on catalysts/events (corporate spin off, new
management)
3. Greater expertise in a sector or region
4. Pattern recognition
5. Big data and analytics “arms race” for alpha
6. Fundamental analysis
7. Quantitative
It is also important to understand what a manager is doing differently on the short side of their portfolio. Investors find managers with demonstrated skill in security selection and execution on the short side of the portfolio to be adding substantial value. Some managers do not actively short individual stocks, and may use cash or equity market indices to broadly hedge their portfolios. Other managers who are actively shorting individual equities may do so in a couple of ways: pair trades that directly hedge a portion of the portfolio, or alpha shorts where their main objective is to generate profits. Most managers tend to use a shorter time horizon for shorts, given the expense of shorting due to the high cost of borrowing some of the more crowded stocks. They also tend to have smaller positions, due to the inherent unlimited downside of short positions.
Summary
The long/short equity manager universe is highly fragmented.
Investors can increase the probability of achieving higher
returns if they focus on managers concentrating in the relative
undervalued segments of the equity markets, along with areas of
the market with greater inefficiencies. Managers should be
selected that can clearly articulate their ability to gain an
information advantage and capture market inefficiencies and whose
skill can be quantified by outperformance of a customized
benchmark.
About the author
Don Steinbrugge is the founder and CEO of Agecroft Partners, a
global hedge fund consulting and marketing firm.
He frequently writes white papers on trends he sees in the
hedge fund industry, has spoken at conferences and is regularly
quoted about the industry, appearing in print, and on TV and
radio. He is chairman of Gaining the Edge-Hedge Fund Leadership
Conference. All profits from the conference are donated to
charities that benefit children, which total over $2 million
since 2013. Steinbrugge was a founding principal of Andor
Capital Management where he was head of sales, marketing, and
client service and a member of the firm’s operating committee. He
was a managing director and head of institutional sales for
Merrill Lynch Investment Managers (now part of Blackrock). Prior
to this, Steinbrugge was head of institutional sales and on
the executive committee for NationsBank Investment Management
(now Bank of America).