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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.
Reuters – Prominent hedge fund investor Mark Yusko on Monday warned endowments against putting the bulk of their money into stocks, arguing that these assets perform only when economies are growing.
For years most investors ranging from big institutions to average Americans saving for college and retirement have bet mostly on the U.S. stock market.
But in the wake of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, Yusko, who worked with two large college endowments before founding his own firm, Morgan Creek Capital, said investors need to change their thinking.