Boston Wants Low Beta Hedge Funds While HSBC List Tells Different Story

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Mark Melin
Published on
Updated on

Low beta? JPMorgan’s Capital Introduction Group needs to learn how to plan its road trips better. In December they traversed up to Boston to speak with hedge fund allocators when they might have chosen to make December a Florida and Texas trip with golf on the agenda. What the bank executives discovered was that institutional investment managers in perhaps the most Yankee of all cities are not seeking to change their line-up of hedge fund managers. Assumed Red Sox fans indicated a slightly more cautious stance on credit and event driven exposure, while human-led discretionary decision process are the strategy gaining traction along with low-beta approaches. Take these thoughts and connect dots with JPMorgan’s survey of Japanese institutional investors, who think 2016 will be challenging and they want to gain exposure to volatility strategies and minimize unnecessary beta risk, and overlay it with the recent HSBC performance report, to get a wider picture of market forces

HSBC JPM chart Beta

Boston wants low beta, but low beta to what?

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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.