- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Related

Special Report: ETFs and Hedge Funds

Latest Report

This year’s Alternative Fixed Income report from HedgeNordic explores how institutional investors and asset managers are navigating this new reality, balancing yield and resilience amid shifting credit cycles, structural change, and evolving sources of return.

Stockholm (HedgeNordic) – Hedge funds and Exchange Traded Funds (ETF) at first sight may appear far apart and impossible to compare or even find common ground in the investment universe. It seems like comparing apples to oranges But this prejudice is being challenged.

When talking to hedge fund managers and allocators in the Nordics, it has become increasingly clear to us that ETFs have become a much more accepted way of gaining market exposure. This trend is likely to be enhanced by the proposed retrocession ban on fund distribution in Sweden, and put pricing pressure on both the mutual fund and hedge fund industry. The entire discussion on pricing practice of hedge funds took another dimension in the summer, when California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), the largest pension fund in the U.S., and one of the first pension funds to invest in hedge funds in 2002, announced that it would pull all US$4 billion invested in hedge funds, due to high cost.

In addition to that, passively following an index, what most early ETFs did, seemed to be a good idea. There are plenty of studies around suggesting that only a fraction of active fund managers manage to outperform “the market” i.e., the index regularly. As an example, the S&P Dow Jones team looked at 2,862 mutual funds that had been operating at least 12 months as of March 2010. Those funds were all broad, actively managed stock funds.

The team selected the 25 percent of funds with the best performance over the 12 month period through March 2010. Then the analysts asked how many of those funds in the top quarter for the original 12 month period — actually remained in the top quarter for the four succeeding 12 month periods through March 2014. The answer was a vanish- ingly small number: Just 0,07 percent, or two of the initial 2,862 funds managed to achieve top-quartile performance for that five successive year period.

It seemed pretty straight forward then that investors are pouring into tools that can provide market Beta at very low cost. There was also a convincing logic splitting investment pools into Alpha and Beta pots. Beta was achieved through ETFs in portfolios, while hedge funds and other alternative investments were used for excess returns, or Alpha. So, it all made sense: mutual funds will disappear, while hedge funds and ETFs will share the 80 trillion or so Dollars invested globally in investment vehicles. The borders were clearly drawn along lines such as active and passive, Alpha and Beta.

Or are they? There are many areas where hedge funds and ETFs meet. In this paper, we try to identify how hedge funds make use of ETFs and how ETFs in return can actually benefit the active investor and the fact that there is today an increased interest for active ETFs coming out of the US where for example hedge fund strategies are replicated through ETFs.

We invited industry experts like ETFGIs Deborah Fuhr, and PWC for an overview of the global perspective and discussed challenges and opportunities ETFs are facing with Fiona Moore, Northern Trust’s Head of ETF Fund Administration Europe, and show on two examples how ETFs make use of „hedge fund“ skill.

We also aimed at getting a Nordic skew into the paper, and had the opportunity to get insightful data and expertise from Nasdaq Stockholm, interviewed Swedish pension fund AP3s Hans Ericsson on how he uses ETF for efficient market exposure, and how the Swedish hedgefund eTurn uses ETF in their tactical asset allocation. With Deutsche Asset& Wealth Managements Erik Rotander and Geir Epeskog of iShares Blackrock we have the Nordic representatives of some of the world’s largest ETF providers discussing where hedge funds and ETFs meet and what the key drivers for institutional demand are.

To download the report free of charge, please click here: ETFs & Hedge Funds

banner_EFT_728x90

 

Picture: (c) PhotoGraphyca—shutterstock.com

Subscribe to HedgeBrev, HedgeNordic’s weekly newsletter, and never miss the latest news!

Our newsletter is sent once a week, every Friday.

Kamran Ghalitschi
Kamran Ghalitschi
Kamran has been working in the financial industry since 1994 and has specialized on client relations and marketing. Having worked with retail clients in asset management and brokerage the first ten years of his career for major European banks, he joined a CTA / Managed Futures fund with 1,5 Billion USD under management where he was responsible for sales, client relations and operations in the BeNeLux and Nordic countries. Kamran joined a multi-family office managing their own fund of hedgefunds with 400 million USD AuM in 2009. Kamran has worked and lived in Vienna, Frankfurt, Amsterdam and Stockholm. Born in 1974, Kamran today again lives in Vienna, Austria.

Latest Articles

CABA Flex: End of Lifespan, Promises Fulfilled

About three years ago, Copenhagen-based fixed-income boutique CABA Capital was preparing to launch what would later become the first fund in its Flex series:...

Nordic Hedge Funds Maintain Momentum Towards Year-End

Nordic hedge funds are heading toward year-end with strong momentum, advancing 0.8 percent in October to extend their winning streak that began in May....

Gradually, Then Suddenly: Proxy P Extends Rebound

As Ernest Hemingway once observed, change happens “gradually, then suddenly.” For the team at renewables-focused asset manager Proxy P, a period of weak performance...

Breaking the Mold: Gesda’s Concentrated and Thematic Approach

Few investors are surprised anymore that most actively managed equity funds underperform their passive benchmarks. Yet, that doesn’t mean active management has lost its...

Three-Year Anniversaries for Two PriorNilsson Funds

Two funds at stock-picking boutique PriorNilsson Fonder recently marked their three-year anniversaries, including the real estate-focused, long-biased long/short equity fund PriorNilsson Fastighet. Despite a...

Confluence Marks Next Step in Tidan Capital’s Evolution

Stockholm-based fund boutique Tidan Capital has officially launched its multi-strategy fund vehicle, Confluence, with the strategy now overseeing $265 million across fund and separately...

Allocator Interviews

In-Depth: High Yield

- Advertisement -

Voices

Request for Proposal

- Advertisement -
HedgeNordic
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.