Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Nine years ago today...

It was nine years ago today, Humble Student of the Markets was born. My first post at the time was entitled What exactly are hedge funds hedging? I went on to show that hedge fund returns were correlated with equity returns. That makes conceptual sense, because hedge funds are in the business of taking risk and equity risk is a major component of investing risk.




HFs are so 20th century...
Nine years later, hedge funds have done even worse than what I showed in 2007. Charlie Bilello showed that their returns have flattened out. They are no longer correlated with equity returns.


It could be argued that HFs are absolute return vehicles and therefore it is unfair to compare them against equities. Bloomberg showed that their performance against a balanced fund benchmark has been nothing to write home about either.


The market has reacted and the latest figures show that YTD hedge fund fund flows have turned negative. YTD redemptions are 77b as of October 2016.



Alpha is hard to find
My assertion back in 2007 that alpha is hard to find turned out to be correct. Many HF strategies, such as convertible arbitrage, long/short equity, event-driven, emerging markets, and so on, can be approximated by combinations of factors. In other words, you were paying for beta when you thought you were buying alpha. Since then, even those beta strategies have turned into...I don't know what as aggregate HFRX Indices have flattened out over the last few years.

The field is getting far too crowded to extract significant alpha. Back in the early 1990's, when swashbuckling managers like Julian Robertson and George Soros dominated the field, a billion dollar hedge fund was an enormous fund. Today, a fund with AUM that size just gets lost in the crowd.


Adding value to the investment process
I am not always right, but this is just an example of the value I have brought to the blogosphere and to the investment community.

We announced the Black Friday/Anniversary promotion nine days ago. We only have a handful of discounted annual subscriptions left at a price of US$199.99, which is US$50 off the regular price of US$249.99, for the first year. This offer is open to the first 100 subscribers, or until December 15, 2016, whichever comes first. Click on this link to subscribe and use the code anniversary2016 at checkout to get the discount.

Hurry before they're all gone!

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