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Straits Times – Hedge fund assets fell by US$100 billion (S$151 billion) in October as investors withdrew their money and funds were forced to sell stock, exacerbating the severe volatility that pounded global markets during the month.
About US$60 billion of the US$100 billion in asset losses during the month came from investor redemptions, according to a report on Wednesday released by Eurekahedge, a data and research provider.
Hedge funds’ assets totalled US$2.497 trillion at the end of the third quarter, according to HedgeFund.net, a hedge fund data provider.
Hedge fund selling has widely cited as one of the reasons for the increase in volatility in equity and bond markets during October.
Bloomberg – The global hedge fund industry lost $100 billion of assets in October, according to an estimate from Eurekahedge Pte, as firms including Sparx Group Co. and Man Group Plc were hammered by investor redemptions.
Funds fell an average 3.3 percent, based on preliminary figures from the Singapore-based data provider, as measured by the Eurekahedge Hedge Fund Index, which tracks the performance of more than 2,000 funds that invest globally. That compares with a 19 percent slide in the MSCI World Index last month.
The biggest market losses since the Great Depression and investor withdrawals hurt the $1.7 trillion hedge funds industry that manages largely unregulated pools of capital. The index of global funds has lost 11 percent this year, set for the worst performance since 2000 when Eurekahedge began tracking the data.
Wealth Bulletin – Millionaire hedge fund manager Andrew Lahde might have got it right. The man whose valediction last month to his industry peers announced that “with all due respect, I am dropping out”, left the industry while the going was still relatively good.
, at the time of his speech, nine out of every 10 hedge funds were not able to take 20% of their profits as a performance fee, and the average hedge fund had lost about 19% of its value, reversing at least the two previous years’ gains. But hedge funds face withdrawals at year end that will match or exceed third-quarter record redemptions of $31bn (€24bn), according to data provider Hedge Fund Research.
Bloomberg – Komodo Capital Management Pte’s hedge fund outperformed rivals as Chief Investment Officer Angus Cameron employed strategies he developed during Japan’s slump in the 1990s to profit from the global financial turmoil.
The Singapore-based firm’s KC Asia Fund has gained 8.3 percent this year, Cameron said yesterday. Other macro hedge funds, which seek to profit from broad economic trends by trading currencies, bonds and stocks in the region, lost an average of 6.7 percent in the first nine months of the year, according to Eurekahedge, a Singapore-based data provider.
“We traded through Japan during the 1990s,” Cameron, 37, said in an interview. “The strategies that worked then will work now.”
Government bonds “should do well in most markets” as policy makers shift their focus to supporting growth from fighting inflation, Cameron said. Central banks from Australia to South Korea have joined a global effort to cut interest rates, following the year-long credit-market seizure that has toppled some of Wall Street’s biggest investment banks, including Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
Bloomberg – The Artradis AB2 fund, run by Singapore’s biggest hedge-fund firm, gained 4.96 percent in September, when Asian equities had their worst month in 18 years, two people with knowledge of its performance said.
The $2.2 billion hedge fund, managed by the firm’s co- founders Stephen Diggle and Richard Magides, returned 20.64 percent in the first nine months of the year, the people said, asking not to be identified because details are private. Asia’s hedge-fund average returns fell 16.2 percent this year, the region’s worst annual performance, according to Singapore-based data provider Eurekahedge.
Hedge funds such as those run by Artradis Fund Management Pte, which manages more than $4 billion, tend to outperform when markets are falling because they trade on volatility, which increases when prices decline. The 30-day volatility of the MSCI Asia-Pacific Index, a gauge of the average fluctuation of 990 stocks, has almost tripled to 55 percent, from 21 percent at the end of August.
Wall street Journal- U.K. hedge-fund manager London Diversified Fund Management recorded a loss of 17% on its global macro fund for the year to June 6, a rare loss under what generally has been a successful strategy.
Global macro funds make bets on global financial and economic trends, a strategy that has been the most successful so far this year, making 5.35% in the first five months, according to U.S. data provider Hedge Fund Research.