Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Worst Hedge Fund Performance in Over 20 Years

Jul 9th, 2008 | By Contrarian Profits | Category: Financial News, Stock Market Investing

The bear market has taken its toll on hedge funds so far this year. In the first half of ‘08 average hedge fund performance was a negative .75%. This from Bloomberg:

Hedge funds declined by an average 0.7 percent in June, bringing the year-to-date loss to 0.75 percent, data compiled by Hedge Fund Research Inc. show. It’s the worst start to a year since the Chicago-based firm began tracking returns in 1990. The $1.9 trillion industry has posted one losing year, in 2002, when funds fell 1.45 percent amid the 23 percent decline by the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

With hedge funds producing such losses, investors forked over half as much to fund managers in the first quarter ‘08, $16.5 billion, as they did in the last quarter of ‘07, just over $30 billion.

So, the investment vehicle of the rich is also getting pinched in this global downturn. Though funds that invest based on views of the global economic outlook were able to hit double-digit returns this year. This from the Financial Times:

These so-called macro hedge funds, which attempt to identify extreme valuations in stock markets, interest rates, foreign exchange rates and commodities, have shown returns of more than 12 per cent this year, outperforming the S&P 500 index by about 17 per cen.

To identify extreme price valuations, macro hedge fund managers generally employ a global approach that concentrates on forecasting how global macroeconomic and political events affect the valuations of financial instruments.

Worries about the state of the US and world economy show few signs of easing. A recent survey of more than 70 US hedge fund managers and their advisers has found that most have a broadly pessimistic view on the prospects in 2008 for the country’s economy, which 80 per cent expect to be flat or in recession by the end of the year. Many expect the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates rather than lower them further.


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