- Advertisement -

Related

Proxy P Trims Fund Range to Sharpen Focus

Powering Hedge Funds

Stockholm (HedgeNordic) – Energy specialist Proxy P Management has closed down its long-biased long/short fund focusing on oil and natural gas – Proxy Global Energy – as a result of limited investor interest in the oil and natural gas sector. Proxy P Management’s other long-biased fund focused on renewables – Proxy Renewable Long/Short Energy – currently ranks as this year’s best-performing member of the Nordic Hedge Index with a year-to-date return of 35.9 percent.

Proxy Global Energy’s remaining investors opted to switch their capital to Proxy Long/Short Energy, one of the three long/short equity funds the Swedish energy-focused asset manager launched in December of last year. Proxy Long/Short Energy – a blend of the two long-biased funds but with low net market exposure between plus and minus 25 percent – so far invested in the full spectrum of energy companies, including companies with business operations related to oil, natural gas, and renewable energy. Starting in September, the fund evolved into a low net market exposure version of Proxy Renewable Long/Short Energy, which focuses on the ongoing energy transition.

According to CEO Dan Lindström (pictured), Proxy P Management will “focus on the energy transition case” following the decision to close down the fund focusing on oil and natural gas. The decision will not translate into any changes for the strong-performing Proxy Renewable Long/Short Energy. However, the closure “will somewhat tilt the focus of Proxy Long/Short Energy, which previously had a mixed approach combining both renewables and oil and natural gas,” Lindström tells HedgeNordic.

“Any of the fund’s remaining positions exposed to fossil fuel will relate to the energy transition,” emphasizes Lindström, further adding that the changed focus stems from investors’ interest in renewables and the opportunities available in the quickly-changing energy space. The Proxy P team embraced the changes as “it is the energy transition case that delivers many of the alpha-generating opportunities.” Lindström also adds that the changes come following investor requests and incoming investors’ requirement to limit exposure to the fossil industry.

Proxy Global Energy was down 0.2 percent year-to-date through the end of July despite a strong start to the year. The fund gained 18 percent in the first quarter alone, but a 16.5 percent-loss in May erased most of the gains. The May performance was attributable to weak development in the oil and gas sector as a result of a decline in the price of oil. Proxy Renewable Long/Short Energy, on the other hand, gained 35.9 percent year-to-date through the end of August. The fund currently ranks as the best-performing member of the Nordic Hedge Index in 2019.

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

Our newsletter is sent once a week, every Friday.

Eugeniu Guzun
Eugeniu Guzun
Eugeniu Guzun serves as a data analyst responsible for maintaining and gatekeeping the Nordic Hedge Index, and as a journalist covering the Nordic hedge fund industry for HedgeNordic. Eugeniu completed his Master’s degree at the Stockholm School of Economics in 2018. Write to Eugeniu Guzun at eugene@hedgenordic.com

Latest Articles

AP3 Hires Lynx’s Mattias Sundbom as Head of Portfolio Strategy

After spending the past decade at some of Sweden’s largest systematic asset managers, most recently at Lynx Asset Management, Mattias Sundbom has now moved...

Colosseum’s Rollercoaster Start Gives Way to Strong Rebound

Early investors in the freshly launched Colosseum Global Alpha have experienced a rollercoaster ride in recent months, though the latest stretch has been largely...

Nordic CTAs Thrive in February’s Volatile Macro Landscape

February proved to be another favorable month for Nordic CTA managers, leaving CTAs as the best-performing sub-strategy in the Nordic Hedge Index so far...

Core, Satellite, and Structural Premiums: PensionDanmark’s Approach to Emerging Market Debt

Many institutional investors have gradually internalized mandates once awarded to external managers, seeking tighter cost control, greater transparency, and improved alignment. Emerging market debt...

PIMCO: Similar Yields, Better Risk Profile in European High Yield

The U.S. high yield market has long been regarded as the global benchmark: deeper, more liquid, and broader in sector composition. For many allocators,...

Avoiding the Echo Chamber: Kraft’s Playbook in Tighter High-Yield Market

Delivering strong returns during a market rebound is one thing. Preserving performance momentum once spreads tighten and dispersion fades is another. That was the...

Allocator Interviews

In-Depth: Diversification

- Advertisement -

Voices

Request for Proposal

- Advertisement -