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Hedge Funds Brace for Worst After a Terrible October 

The last time the industry careened toward annual losses was in 2015.

Hedge Funds Brace for Worst After a Terrible October 

(Bloomberg) -- After beleaguered hedge fund managers had their worst month in seven years, many are bracing for an industry day of reckoning: Nov. 15.

That’s the deadline for investors to put managers on notice to get some -- or all -- of their money at year end.

If history is any guide, the rush for the exits will be swift and accelerate. Clients have already pulled $11.1 billion even before funds fell into the red for the year.

The last time the industry careened toward annual losses was in 2015, when managers were tripped up by events including the unexpected surge in the Swiss franc and the devaluation of the Chinese yuan. The fallout: clients withdrew $77.2 billion between the fourth quarter of that year and the first quarter of 2017 -- the biggest withdrawals since the global financial crisis.

Hedge Funds Brace for Worst After a Terrible October 

Still, it may not be all doom and gloom. What’s different this year from 2015 is that some investors are preparing for the end of the years-long bull market and may instead add money to funds whose managers tout an ability to better navigate downturns.

Investors can cash out of most hedge funds quarterly after giving 45 days notice. Withdrawal schedules can vary, as do notice periods. Firms can also levy penalties on clients who want to bail outside of agreed schedules, while investors can cancel redemption plans if they change their minds.

Redemptions are yet another blow for the $3 trillion industry, which has been blighted by years of mediocre performance and fund closures. Several managers have announced plans to shutter in anticipation of year-end withdrawals.

The industry lost 3 percent in October and is down 1.7 percent this year as stock pickers to macro traders faltered, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc. U.S. equities had their worst month since 2011.

Despite the current woes, withdrawals during 2008 were much more acute. They amounted to 11 percent of the industry’s assets at the time, according to calculations based on HFR data. By contrast, in 2016 redemptions were just 2.3 percent and so far this year it’s less than 1 percent.

Still, that may be no solace to fund managers on Nov. 15.

READ MORE:
  • Technology Stock Hedge Funds Post October Losses
  • Equity and Quant Hedge Funds Hit Hardest by Stock Market Rout
  • Stock Hedge Funds Slump Harder Than Market in October Reversal

To contact the reporter on this story: Saijel Kishan in New York at skishan@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Margaret Collins at mcollins45@bloomberg.net, Alan Mirabella, Katherine Burton

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.