© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A view of a giant display of stock indexes in the wake of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Shanghai, China, October 24, 2022. REUTERS/Ally Song/FilePhoto
Written by Bhaturaja Murugapupathi and Samar Zain
(Reuters) – Global hedge funds are set to post their worst returns in 14 years in 2022 after sharp increases in US interest rates hit asset prices hard. However, their declines are generally smaller than the decline in stock and bond markets this year.
Some hedge fund strategies that put money into commodities and currencies using macro-focused strategies and exploit price differences between related securities outperformed in 2022, resulting in decent gains for investors.
Hedge fund annual price returns: https://www.reuters.com/graphics/GLOBAL-MARKETS/xmpjkozzavr/chart.png
“More than at any time in recent history, both stocks and bonds have been highly sensitive to macro events, particularly inflation editions,” said Maysan Lim, managing director of hedge fund research at Cambridge Associates.
According to investment data firm Preqin, hedge fund returns have fallen 6.5% this year, their biggest since a 13% drop in 2008.
Hedge Fund Flows by Basic Strategy: https://www.reuters.com/graphics/GLOBAL-MARKETS/klvygkyyyvg/chart.png
That compares with a drop of 18.7% and a decline in the ICE Index (NYSE: BofA US Treasury) of 11.9%.
In terms of strategy, macro funds gained 8.2% through November of this year, while equity-hedged and event-driven strategies lost 9.7% and 4.7%, respectively, according to HFR data.
“As a strategy, macroeconomics has historically been less correlated with movements in the broader stock market, which helps diversify portfolios,” UBS said in a note.
“We believe that continued monetary tightening and high volatility should be favorable for macro managers in 2023.”
Activist funds, which use minority stakes to push for strategic and management changes to unlock shareholder value, fell 13.8%, according to HFR data.
Andrew Hendry, head of Asia at Janus Henderson Investors, a global asset manager who also manages a 900 million euro ($955.17 million) global short-strategy multi-fund, said trend-following strategies worked in 2022 because of the inflationary environment.
“Trend following operates on the idea that markets process information inefficiently and at different speeds, and that markets that move in one direction to begin with are likely to continue moving in that direction,” Hendry said.
“This trend has had a great 2022 with things like strong commodity prices and weak bonds contributing significantly to performance.”
Hedge fund inflows by region https://www.reuters.com/graphics/GLOBAL-MARKETS/mopaknaekpa/chart.png
Combined with the decline in traditional assets from stocks to bonds, the net assets of global hedge funds fell 4.8% in the first three quarters of this year to $4.3 trillion. They saw combined outflows of $109.8 billion in that period, according to Breckin’ data.
Hedge fund assets under management by strategy: https://www.reuters.com/graphics/GLOBAL-MARKETS/zgpobmxgjvd/chart.png
The data showed that only 915 funds were launched this year, the lowest number in 10 years.
Global Hedge Fund Launch by Year of Incorporation: https://www.reuters.com/graphics/GLOBAL-MARKETS/zjpqjjaqovx/chart.png
($1 = 0.9422 euros)