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Hedge Funds Had a Good Year, Just Not Good Enough

Hedge Funds Had a Good Year, Just Not Good Enough

(Bloomberg View) -- Attention hedge-fund investors: I have some good news for you. I also have some not so good news.

The good news is that 2017 saw hedge-fund managers generate the best annual returns in four years. According to a recent report from Hedge Fund Research, funds gained 8.5 percent in 2017. On an asset-weighted basis, the gains were 6.5 percent, still the best annual performance since 2013. Profits for the managers and general partners were also at four-year highs.

The not so good news? For investors (or limited partners), these funds on average are still lagging behind broader indexes. To cite just one example, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index had a total return of 21.8 percent last year -- more than double the average for hedge funds. And many overseas markets -- especially for investors using U.S. dollars -- did even better. The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets, for instance, had a return of 37.1 percent.

This matters a great deal. Hedge funds have assets under management of about $3.3 trillion, much of it in the U.S. Pensions, endowments, foundations and other large institutional public investors, along with many ultra-high net worth individuals, have put money in these alternative investments.

The HFR report inadvertently reveals how difficult it is to track performance relative to benchmarks within the hedge-fund industry. There are lots of different types of funds, and the list keeps getting longer: Start with the traditional long/short, arbitrage and macro hedge funds, as well as event-driven and activist funds. Don’t forget distressed and restructuring funds. Add to that the risk-parity strategies and relative value funds. I would be remiss if I omitted multistrategy, yield alternative or asset-backed funds. And this year, there is a new category: blockchain funds.

No wonder investors are confused. Each of these has different risk profiles, investment objectives, expected returns and benchmarks. Even worse, as we have noted many times before, the combination of high fees and underperformance means achieving real above-benchmark returns is rare.

Human cognitive foibles and behavioral economics explain the hedge-fund attraction, despite a track record during the past decade of significant underperformance -- at least on average. For reasons that have yet to be explained by methods other than self-delusion, the expectation for funds to deliver market-beating returns endures. There is something else at work. Public pension managers take the overstated anticipated returns of alternative investments and work them into calculations of how much state and local governments must contribute to the pension funds. They bigger the projected returns, the less money governments must allocate and the less taxpayers have to foot the bill.

It’s a deception of biblical proportions, leaving taxpayers on the hook for future shortfalls, while beneficiaries are misled into believing they will get more than the pension funds are able to deliver.

Other issues:

  • Performance: We don’t really know what the industry's returns actually are. Unlike for mutual funds, there is no performance reporting requirement mandated by securities regulators. Hence, we see lots of self-reporting by funds when they have a good quarter or year, and radio silence when they don't. That’s before we get to the survivorship issue, a serious concern given about a quarter of funds dissolve each year. In other words, those with the worst returns disappear and don't figure in calculations of total industry returns.
  • Benchmarks: As the list above shows, it is a challenge to create a meaningful benchmark for many fund categories. The S&P500 is rather arbitrary for many types of finds. Not having a credible benchmark for performance comparisons gives investment managers fits when trying to evaluate funds.
  • Fee pressure: The hedge fund industry isn't immune to a phenomenon visiting the rest of the financial industry. The old days of 2 and 20 -- that’s 2 percent of assets under management, plus 20 percent of gains -- is fading. Anecdotally, more and more funds seem to be moving toward 1 and 15.
  • Performance: It's feast or famine. Emerging managers seem to be in the pool that generates the best returns, but finding and evaluating them is a costly, time-consuming process. On the other end of the spectrum, many of the best performers are well established giants with long track records. Many of those are closed to new or smaller investors.

Hedge-fund investors today confront complex choices, reduced but still high fees, and improved but still underperforming returns. Unless you are fortunate enough to be in the top 5 percent of alpha generators -- those who deliver market-beating performance -- almost all investors are still better off with simple low-cost funds.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Barry Ritholtz is a Bloomberg View columnist. He founded Ritholtz Wealth Management and was chief executive and director of equity research at FusionIQ, a quantitative research firm. He blogs at the Big Picture and is the author of “Bailout Nation: How Greed and Easy Money Corrupted Wall Street and Shook the World Economy.”

To contact the author of this story: Barry Ritholtz at britholtz3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Greiff at jgreiff@bloomberg.net.

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