Real alpha is hard to find
Can someone remind me why investors pay 2% and 20% fees?
This chart shows the weekly returns of the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index and the S&P 500. The HFRX Index is an investable index of hedge funds and returns are reported daily, net of fees.
Yes - you can choose other flavors of hedge fund indices but the results are going to be roughly the same. The correlation of most diversified hedge fund indices to the S&P 500 is 0.8 and up.
Bridgewater Associates did a study in 2004, updated in 2006, called Hedge Funds Selling Beta as Alpha showing that you can replicate the return patterns of many strategies with simple instruments. Some sample quotes:
emerging market hedge funds are over 80% correlated to a simple 50/50 mix of emerging market equities and bonds...
and
M&A arb funds...do no better than simply buying the top 10 announced targets and selling the top 10 acquirers.
A few years ago CALPERS noted that hedge funds fees were too high - a comment that the press seized on. They went on to say, however, something to the effect that they were not averse to paying for alpha, a comment that the press did not trumpet at the time.
Real alpha is hard to find. There are a lot of crowded trades and strategies out there. The real trick for a hedge fund investor is to find a differentiated alpha.
Friday, November 30, 2007
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