Fund Of Funds Business Is Still Dying

HFA Padded
Mark Melin
Published on
Updated on

The fund of hedge funds business – the manager of managers, hedge funds that invest in other hedge funds — has witnessed significant growth from 200 to 2008 as well as a leveling off of hedge fund inflows, a May Eurekahedge report notes. From its participation peak in 2007, when over 3,700 individual fund of funds shared over $800 billion in assets under management, the 2017 landscape sees near 1,800 fund of funds, with smaller funds bearing the brunt of the reduction. The overall Hedge Fund of funds business has seen significant asset declines while investments in the underlying managers has risen.

Asset declines: $46.4 billion pulled from Hedge Fund of funds

In 2016, investors pulled $46.4 billion from fund of funds investment structures as the Eurekahedge Fund of Funds Index lost -0.12% on the year, underperforming their hedge fund and long-only counterparts who gained 4.50% and 7.65% respectively.

“Recently investors have questioned the viability of investing into a funds of hedge funds given single digit returns from underlying hedge funds and the double fee structure inherent to the multi-manager model,” the Eurekahedge report noted, pointing to competition from liquid alternative products and hedge fund replication products, some of which are categorized as “smart beta.”

The fund withdrawal has hit smaller funds without significant negotiation power or advanced technical prowess the hardest. “Investors have increasingly shunned the smaller funds of hedge funds and sought direct exposure into hedge funds instead.” To wit, 98% of the fund of funds that closed their doors managed less than $500 million in assets.

 

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HFA Padded

Mark Melin is an alternative investment practitioner whose specialty is recognizing the impact of beta market environment on a technical trading strategy. A portfolio and industry consultant, wrote or edited three books including High Performance Managed Futures (Wiley 2010) and The Chicago Board of Trade’s Handbook of Futures and Options (McGraw-Hill 2008) and taught a course at Northwestern University's executive education program.

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