Alt Investments
Hedge Funds Gain During Stormy January

Much attention focused on how hedge funds shorting particular markets were attacked by retail investors via social media platforms such as Reddit. So how did funds actually perform in January? It turns out that overall, they gained some ground.
Hedge funds gained during January, a turbulent month for the
stock market that
saw drama around US games retailer GameStop, cinema and
entertainments chain AMC
and the silver market.
Chicago-based Hedge Fund
Research said that its HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index®
gained by 0.9 per cent in January; the investible HFRI 500 Fund
Weighted Composite Index advanced +0.35 per cent.
Kenneth Heinz, HFR president, said that while the saga of retail
investors targeting hedge fund short-sellers has grabbed the
media limelight, investors must put the situation in context.
“While significant financial market attention has been focused on
a handful of funds and small number of equities impacted by these
recent trading trends, the overall hedge fund industry is
comprised of over 9,100 funds managing nearly $3.6 trillion
across a highly diverse range of strategies, which include
significant capital exposure to out of favor, deep value
equites,” Heinz said.
As an example of the hit to some funds, Melvin
Capital Management, reportedly lost 53 per cent on its
investments in January, and has been financially supported by
Citadel and Point72 Asset
Management. The top decile of the HFRI gained 11.6 per cent,
while the bottom decile fell by 7.8 per cent for the month. As
reported previously, total hedge fund capital rose to $3.6
trillion to begin 2021, rising from $290 billion in the fourth
quarter - the largest asset growth in industry history.
Event-driven strategies, which often focus on unloved, deep value
equity strategies and situations, led strategy performance in
January, with the investible HFRI 500 Event-Driven Index rising
by 3.0 per cent for the month, while the HFRI Event-Driven
(Total) Index gained 2.8 per cent.
The fixed income-based HFRI Relative Value (Total) Index gained
1.3 per cent in January, while the HFRI 500 Relative Value Index
advanced by 1.2 per cent for the month, led by the investible
HFRI 500 RV: Fixed Income-Convertible Arbitrage Index, which
jumped 3.5 per cent, and the HFRI RV: Yield Alternatives Index,
which added 4.0 per cent.
Following the 2020 surge, blockchain and cryptocurrency exposures
continued to deliver strong performance as cryptocurrencies hit
record highs and as hedge funds increasingly incorporated related
exposures into new and existing fund strategies. The HFR
Blockchain Composite Index and HFR Cryptocurrency Index each
surged by 48.0 per cent in January. In recent weeks, bitcoin has
risen sharply, trading over $46,000 per coin as of today
(February 10).
Through intense stock volatility, the HFRI Equity Hedge (Total)
Index advanced by 0.8 per cent for the month.
Separately, figures from Preqin, the research firm, said
hedge fund returns came in at 16.3 per cent in 2020, edging ahead
of the 16.26 per cent gain in the S&P 500 PR Index (although
hedge fund returns and those of listed equities are not strictly
comparable).
Equity was the best performing hedge fund strategy with a +19.64
per cent return, Preqin said.
“For much of 2020, hedge funds paid a collective price for
underperformance in previous years. Investors took money out of
the industry and put it into lower-cost vehicles like UCITS or
ETFs. However, after nine consecutive quarters of outflows, Q3
2020 marked the first quarter of net inflows, bringing
much-needed optimism to the hedge fund industry,” David Lowery,
head of research insights at Preqin, said.