investment insights

    Hedge funds: a key to post-QE portfolio returns?

    Hedge funds: a key to post-QE portfolio returns?
    LOcom_AuthorsLO-Monier.png   By Stéphane Monier
    Chief Investment Officer
    Lombard Odier Private Bank


    In the aftermath of a positive investment year for hedge funds (HFs), I recently attended the sector's most-fabled annual gathering and came away with insights on a HF industry that is confident that both sentiment and the economic cycle are shifting in its favour.

    The 20th Annual Morgan Stanley Breakers Conference, in Palm Beach US, saw the world's leading hedge fund managers and investors gather to address key themes affecting an industry that, we can all agree, has had a difficult decade. However, after 2017's performance1 – the best in four years, with 12 straight months of positive returns – there was much debate about whether HFs are on the cusp of a turning point.

    While the arguments for and against such a sea change were equally compelling, the truth is that it's simply too early to say. However, there are clear trends unfolding in the industry's favour. Along with a marked improvement in performance, last year saw growth in overall AUM, meaningful progress on the restructuring of fees, and a rise in the number of new strategies entering the market. Following five consecutive quarters of net outflows, just under USD 50bn flowed into the industry in 2017. With most forum attendees looking tentatively forward to a new phase in the industry's lifecycle, there are still many lessons to be learned from the dizzying highs and lows of the last 20 years.


    The age of extremes

    In 1997, there were just 380 hedge funds in the market with a total of USD 375bn under management and an offering dominated by equity hedged and global macro strategies. Today, approximately 8000 hedge funds manage USD 3.5trn across a plethora of strategies that range from equity long/short and credit to distressed and event driven. Over these two decades, performance has swung between extremes with the HFRX Global HF index returning an average of 14.2% from 1990 to 2007 versus 6.3% between 2009 and 2017.

    The near-zero interest-rate environment that followed the global financial crisis triggered gravity-defying returns among general risky assets and favoured volatility compressing strategies across the board. 2014-16 represented some of the HF industry's toughest years – a period that coincided with compressed interest rates and the rise of passive investing.


    Passive aggressive

    Exchange-traded funds (ETFs), which are famed for being low cost, attracted a record USD 490bn of inflows in 2016. During the same period, HF investors withdrew USD 70bn – the largest annual outflow from the sector in seven years.

    Pitted in opposite corners of the active/passive debate, HFs and ETFs are often, and wrongly, in my view, pitched against one another. Passive investment enthusiasts will argue that a highly efficient global information network minimises asset pricing errors: the internet and the regulators ensure stock-sensitive information is made simultaneously available to all investors. In such an environment, they argue, there is little value that active investors can add. Proponents of active investing would argue that ETF flows have created markets divorced from underlying fundamentals and that move in lock-step. Large-cap stocks have become overvalued, systemic risk has risen and markets are more vulnerable to sell-offs.

    While investors are clearly drawn to the lower cost and perceived transparency of passive instruments, ETFs are not the HF industry's only problem. Structural challenges – including the crowded nature of the sector prompting more funds to chase the same opportunities – were key components of the perfect storm that blew hedge funds off course in the first place. In response, the majority of HF managers have begun to invest in talent, technology and innovation to help them address the next generation of disruption.

    Some of the rewards of this work were realised in 2017 as sentiment showed signs of turning around. According to Preqin2, the proportion of investors satisfied versus disappointed with HF returns improved markedly over the period, along with the number of investors intending to increase versus decrease their allocations over the course of the year to come.

    It is unsurprising that this trend appears to be unfolding at a time when the market faces a period of monetary policy normalisation, and investment fundamentals are poised to reassert themselves. Passive investing ultimately leads to the misallocation of capital, giving exposure to stocks based on their market capitalisation, rather than to the most deserving. Going forward, it is clear that investors will increasingly value being invested in companies selected on the basis of the quality of their managements, balance sheets, products, services, and valuations.

    If we accept that flows from active into passive investments have changed markets, then the cyclical 'normalisation' of such distortions could in future provide a great opportunity for active investors and HF managers, in particular. Meanwhile, given that the world remains a highly uncertain place, any meaningful market correction could see purely passive investors lose out the most.


    Hedge funds and interest rates

    The inability of investors to meet their yield objectives from fixed income markets has caused dividend-paying stocks in many cases to attract an otherwise unwarranted premium, as liability matchers and income investors rotate into equities as a substitute for fixed income. This valuation-insensitive buying has served to push up multiples on many low-growth companies, arguably beyond levels that could be justified under other circumstances.

    This scenario becomes self-perpetuating as the inability of active stock pickers to earn alpha prompts investors to switch into low-cost index and enhanced index products. This serves to push up cross-sectional correlations and drive dispersion down, further reducing alpha opportunities.

    An increase in interest rates should allow this phenomenon to begin to unwind. Rising capital costs force greater selectiveness in capital allocation and eventually prompt companies with the weakest balance sheets to rationalise and restructure. The worst excesses of capital expenditure are revealed and capital markets will gradually be closed to the least creditworthy issuers. Rising capital costs therefore increase the dispersion of corporate results and, consequently, of stock prices.


    A place in portfolios

    As well as structural inefficiencies, lacklustre hedge fund performance in recent years can be attributed to a combination of low interest rates, depressed volatility, high inter- and intra-market correlations and the impact of valuation-insensitive investors. Each of these cyclical headwinds is showing clear signs of easing, and HF performance has already improved across the board in step with this changing environment. As the monetary policy environment continues to normalise and volatility picks up, we see a stronger case for HF allocation.

    Within portfolios, HFs can act as a diversifier and alternative source of yield in a low and rising interest rate environment. By diversifying sources of returns and limiting risk of loss, we believe HFs can enhance portfolio robustness and improve risk-adjusted returns for investors keen to access this asset class. For these reasons, owning investments that present a convex return profile and that stand a chance of profiting from a bear market is, in our view, sensible portfolio construction.
     

    Investing in hedge funds may not be suitable for all types of investors. It may be necessary to obtain professional advice prior to making an investment.


    1 FY 2017 hedge fund performance was +8.5%, as measured by the HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index. This is the best calendar year performance since 2013, extending the record Index Value to 14,054, according to data released by Hedge Fund Research on 1 January 2018.
    2 2018 Preqin Global Hedge Fund Report

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