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Hedge Funds That Returned 20% Show All Is Not Lost

As the dust settles on a troubled year for hedge funds, some managers escaped the wreckage and even thrived.

Hedge Funds That Returned 20% Show All Is Not Lost
A person holds a briefcase covered in U.S. dollar notes in London, U.K. (Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- As the dust settles on a troubled year for hedge funds, some managers escaped the wreckage and even thrived.

SoMa Equity Partners, a $1.2 billion long-short equity fund, rose about 20 percent in 2018, according to an investor document seen by Bloomberg. The $1.5 billion Cadian Capital Management notched a similar gain, according to a person familiar with the matter. And Luxor Capital Group, a $3.2 billion event-driven fund, posted a robust return as well, another person said.

These funds were bright spots in an otherwise bleak year for the industry. Hedge funds on average lost 6.7 percent, according to the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index, more than the S&P 500 Index with reinvested dividends. The managers who came out on top made smart bets on media, technology and energy companies and benefited from short positions in Europe and Asia.

SoMa Equity made money on small-cap firms like Coupa Software Inc. and CyberArk Software Ltd. At mid-year, SoMa reduced its exposure to high-growth names in software and pivoted toward media and telecom. Cadian Capital benefited from long wagers on IAC/InterActiveCorp, Tableau Software Inc. and Palo Alto Networks Inc., while Luxor Capital won in December with short positions in European and Japanese credit as well as tech stocks.

Read more about a Renaissance fund’s gain in 2018

Hedge Funds That Returned 20% Show All Is Not Lost

While some of the biggest names in the business like David Einhorn and Dan Loeb posted their worst performance in many years, a number of nimble smaller funds had cause to celebrate. The $53 million Crescat Capital climbed 40.5 percent in its global macro hedge fund and 32 percent in its long-short hedge fund as its short China wager came to fruition, according to an investor document. And Riposte Capital, a $100 million equity long-short firm, jumped 15 percent in its global opportunity fund, benefiting from positions in the energy sector.

“Chinese equity shorts in both funds and our China currency short in the global macro fund were big contributors to performance in 2018,” said Kevin Smith, founder of Crescat. “We also profited significantly from short positions in overvalued U.S. equities and from a nascent rise in deeply undervalued precious metals in the fourth quarter.”

Representatives for the hedge funds declined to comment or didn’t return emails.

Here’s a list of some winners and losers in 2018:

Fund Name

2018 Return (%)

Strategy

Odey European53Macro
Crescat Global Macro 40.5Macro
Crescat Long/Short32.1L/S Equity
SoMa Partners20L/S Equity
Cadian19.8L/S Equity
Mudrick Capital16.2Distressed
Riposte Global Opportunity15L/S Equity
Totem Point Master14.2L/S Equity
Luxor Capital Partners Offshore13.6Event-driven
Renaissance Institutional Equities8.5Equity
Heard Opportunity8L/S Equity
KL Special Opportunities6.7Event-driven
CIAM Opportunities6.5Event-driven
Voce Capital6Activist
Honeycomb Master5.2L/S Equity
Brahman Capital2.4L/S Equity
Marshall Wace Eureka0.6L/S Equity
Pershing Square Holdings-0.7Activist
Coatue Qualified-1.2L/S Equity
OZ Master-1.3Multi-strategy
Third Point Offshore-11Event-driven
Greenlight Capital-34L/S Equity

Sources: Bloomberg reporting

--With assistance from Simone Foxman, Katherine Burton, Nishant Kumar and Hema Parmar.

To contact the reporters on this story: Shelly Hagan in New York at shagan9@bloomberg.net;Melissa Karsh in New York at mkarsh@bloomberg.net

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

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.