Alt Investments
How Hedge Fund Investors Keep Composed In Volatile World
This news service talks to Sussex Partners, a UK-based business that advises institutions about hedge fund allocations. With markets often volatile at times, and recovering after the selloffs of 2022, what approaches appear to work best?
The rise in interest rates means that bonds once again give
investors options and are in less of a hurry to deploy cash,
opening opportunities in segments of the market, a figure in the
hedge fund space says.
“We avoided equities last year and came into this year positioned
underweight equities. We are increasing short-term fixed income
[holdings] and equity allocations,” Patrick Ghali, co-founder of
Sussex
Partners, a UK-headquartered business focused on providing
institutional investors advice on their hedge fund allocations,
told this publication in a call.
Risks of a probable recession around the world and the weakening
state of the Chinese economy are factors weighing on minds, Ghali
continued.
Stocks and bonds were hit last year as rates rose, raising the
question of whether holders of these assets did not move quickly
enough to reallocate, or were holding fast to capture an eventual
rebound. “Are these managers suffering because they hadn’t seen
the market turning or just early into the move?” he asked,
rhetorically.
Across all strategies around the world, hedge funds haven't got
investors uncorking the champagne, although some individual
strategies have fared reasonably well. The HFRX Global Hedge Fund
Index, produced by Chicago-headquartered Hedge Fund Research, is
up 1.38 per cent since the start of this year (as of September);
the HFRX Equity Hedge Index shows a result of 3.18 per cent.
Sussex Partners was founded in 2003. Ghali is no stranger to
giving his views about investments, financial markets and the
place that hedge funds should take in HNW individuals’
portfolios. (See a guest commentary from him here.)
There’s been a lot for hedge fund firms to deal with in recent
years, such as markets turning choppier amid worsening
geopolitics, rising rates, Russia/Ukraine, and deteriorating
relations between the West and China.
Even so, the media coverage can sometimes imply that markets are
far more volatile than they were a few years ago, although over
five years to date, the VIX Index of US equity volatility, for
example, is around 16, up from 11.7 five years ago and way down
from the 30-plus level for most of the subsequent period, and far
down from the early 2020 spike when the pandemic went
global.
What’s Ghali’s take on volatility?
While volatility can be played as a strategy in its own via
options markets, for example, Ghali said he is wary: “Unless you
time this perfectly then you don’t make money.”
Macro strategies – which seek to profit from directional moves in
stocks, bonds, forex and interest rates and linked to
government/central bank policy, have performed better in recent
years than during the decade after 2008 when very low interest
rates pumped up asset values, he continued.
“We like macro and sometimes blend it with different perspectives
[of managers] from around the world,” he said, noting that a
macro hedge fund manager in Asia will have a different angle on
the world from one in, say, the US.
Areas to watch
Ghali said he likes strategies such as convertible arbitrage
strategies, because a number of issuers face refinancing. (With
convertible arbitrage, a fund will short-sell the equity option
of a convertible bond, take a long position on the debt portion,
and aim to profit on movements in the prices of both.) In credit
markets more broadly, yield spreads (between bonds and government
debt) are comparatively tight, which means holders of credit
aren’t getting much compensation for the risks, Ghali
continued.
China?
The Asian giant has been beaten up by investors in recent months,
alarmed about deteriorating real estate markets and associated
debt, cracks in the financial system, and a sense that Beijing’s
Communist Party leadership is putting ideology ahead of market
efficiency.
With Chinese markets on the back foot, there must be
opportunities to exploit, Ghali said. “I haven’t seen anything
like it for 20 years,” he continued.
“We can trade it and should be able to take advantage of
volatility – maybe that seems somewhat contrarian,” he
said.
Ghali agrees that Japan’s financial story has improved, on the
back of corporate governance reforms that unlock value from
cash-rich balance sheets. In general, however, Japan should be
interesting because it is a great “Alpha” story rather than
just one of more general growth. “There’s a lot of `tourist’
[foreign investor] money coming in. The risk is that some of
these inflows may reverse,” he said.
The Alpha opportunities in Japan stem from how only a small
number of firms have any analyst coverage, opening opportunities
for managers who can conduct primary research. Additionally, only
a very small part of the market capitalisation of the Japanese
stock market is represented by hedge funds, in contrast to the US
or Europe, he added.