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Forbes – Man Group PLC, the world’s largest publicly traded hedge fund, said Thursday that funds under management declined in the first half despite a recent growth in private investor sales.
The group said it had $43.3 billion in funds under management on June 30, down from $44 billion at the end of May and $46.8 billion on March 31.
Private investor sales in the three months ending June 30, the company’s first quarter, were $3.4 billion, producing a net inflow of $1.9 billion. However, institutional sales amounted to just $300 million, with a net outflow of $3.3 billion.
Hedge funds and financial institutions based in the Cayman Islands have been pulling their money out of Britain as they are hit by the credit crunch, according to figures from the Bank of England.
The low-tax regime and limited regulation of the Cayman Islands – with a population of 52,000 – has attracted 80% of the world’s $1.3tn (£790bn) hedge fund industry.
Those institutions have almost halved their deposits in UK banks over the past 12 months, from $356bn at the end of the first quarter in 2008, to $173bn at the end of March, Bank of England data shows. The drop in Cayman Islands’ deposits comes as hedge funds are being forced to return money to investors who have made big losses from the financial crisis. It also reflects fund losses from falling markets.
The outflow of funds from Britain puts the spotlight on hedge fund threats to abandon the UK because of higher taxes, tighter regulation and potential caps on executive pay and bonuses.
Stuff – Mauled by the carnage on Wall Street, mutual funds are copying hedge fund strategies in an effort to regain some of the shine they have lost this decade.
Many investors have been burned investing in a single asset class and withdrew $234 billion (148 billion pounds) from U.S. stock funds last year as the deep bear market sparked the first annual outflow of long-term investment in mutual funds since 1988.
But as stocks sank, hedge funds soared. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, a benchmark for the broad U.S. stock market, returned a negative 40 percent this decade through the end of 2008. Hedge funds, meanwhile, gained 55 percent over the same period, Hedge Fund Research’s fund-weighted composite index shows.
Reuters UK – Mauled by the carnage on Wall Street, mutual funds are copying hedge fund strategies in an effort to regain some of the shine they have lost this decade.
Many investors have been burned investing in a single asset class and withdrew $234 billion (148 billion pounds) from U.S. stock funds last year as the deep bear market sparked the first annual outflow of long-term investment in mutual funds since 1988.
But as stocks sank, hedge funds soared. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX, a benchmark for the broad U.S. stock market, returned a negative 40 percent this decade through the end of 2008. Hedge funds, meanwhile, gained 55 percent over the same period, Hedge Fund Research’s fund-weighted composite index shows.
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – "Alpha" released the results of the 2009 Hedge Fund 100, the magazine’s eighth annual ranking of the world’s biggest single-manager hedge fund firms. Although most hedge fund managers in 2008 couldn’t escape the carnage from what many have called the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, their industry overall lost less money than did other investors. For their part, the firms in the Hedge Fund 100 managed a combined $1.03 trillion in assets at the beginning of this year, down from the record $1.35 trillion that the world’s 100 largest firms managed at the end of 2007.
Bridgewater Associates leads the Hedge Fund 100 with $38.6 billion in assets under management. The Westport, Connecticut-based firm, which was founded by Raymond Dalio more than 30 years ago, grew by more than $2 billion in assets last year, based on the strength of its Pure Alpha Strategy hedge fund, which was up 8.7 percent in 2008. New York-based JPMorgan — the world’s biggest hedge fund firm a year ago — saw its assets fall 26.4 percent, to $32.9 billion, in large part because of redemptions and poor investment performance at its Highbridge Capital Management group.
Redemptions have been a challenge for most hedge fund firms, even those that managed to deliver positive returns in 2008, as investors have looked to raise cash where they can. In the fourth quarter of last year, hedge funds saw a net outflow of $152 billion, with most of the assets coming out of bigger firms. In recognition of this new reality, "Alpha" changed the methodology for the Hedge Fund 100, using firm and fund asset totals as of January 1, 2009 (in the past the magazine collected December 31 data). To qualify for "Alpha’s" 2009 Hedge Fund 100, a firm needed at least $4 billion in assets under management, compared with the $6.25 billion minimum a year ago.
The ten biggest hedge funds managed a combined $264 billion at the start of 2009, down nearly 12 percent from year-end 2007.
"Alpha’s" Hedge Fund 100 Top 10
Rank Firm Total Capital ($ millions) 1 Bridgewater Associates 38,600 2 JPMorgan Asset Management 32,893 3 Paulson & Co. 29,000 4 D.E. Shaw & Co. 28,600 5 Brevan Howard Asset Management 26,840 6 Man Investments 24,400 7 Och-Ziff Capital Management Group 22,100 8 Soros Fund Management 21,000 9 Goldman Sachs Asset Management 20,585 10 Farallon Capital Management 20,000 10 Renaissance Technologies Corp. 20,000 To view the complete rankings for the Hedge Fund 100, visit www.alphamagazine.com
West Palm Beach (HedgeCo.net) – The top 10 hedge fund adminstraators reported $1.64 trillion in hedge fund assets under administration (AuA) in the Q4 2008, according to HFN, with Citco Fund Services, State Street Alternative Investment Solutions and Goldman Sachs Administration Services taking the top three positions.
HFN also released early estimates for February hedge fund asset flows which indicate the outflow from the industry continued during the month, but at a much slower rate than prior months. Early estimates show hedge fund assets fell an additional 2.2% in February 2009 to $1.746 trillion compared to a reduction of 7.6% in January 09.
The drop was largely due to net investor redemptions and fund liquidations of $35.9 billion during the month and combined with a reduction due to performance losses of $3.53 billion. Early estimates have the HFN Hedge Fund Aggregate Average -0.61% for February, but this figure will likely go lower as more funds report.
Taking into account internal estimates of where month end performance will likely settle, February 2009 should go down as the 5th highest level of hedge fund outperformance over equity markets in the last twenty years.
The Q4 2008 HFN Administrator Survey contains information on hedge fund and fund of funds assets under administration (AuA) from 60 administrators. Results detail total reported AuA, regional concentration, growth rates and top ten lists for more than 20 criteria.
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