- Advertisement -

Related

Hedge Fund Managers Driving Minivans Outperform

- Advertisement -

Stockholm (HedgeNordic) – Allocators should consider adding another variable into their decision-making process when selecting hedge fund managers. According to a recent study, hedge fund managers who possess powerful sports cars make riskier investments and generate less alpha compared to managers owning more practical vehicles such as minivans.

The study titled “Sensation Seeking and Hedge Funds” was conducted by four university researchers using public records of vehicle purchases, which were used to match 1,774 cars to 1,144 hedge fund managers based in the United States. Relying on the premise that the purchase of a powerful sports car signals an inclination for sensation seeking (i.e. a personality trait characterized by the search for varied, novel, complex and intense sensations and experiences), the researchers find that sensation-seeking managers trade more frequently, load up on more non-index stocks, employ more distinctive strategies, as well as prefer lottery-like stocks.

After controlling for a number of factors driving fund performance, the study finds that hedge fund managers who own sports cars underperform managers without sports cars by 2.92 percent per year. Managers owning minivans, meanwhile, outperform non-minivan drivers by 3.22 percent per year. The researchers also show evidence that fund managers who drive sports cars take on more investment risk (two variables were used to define risk, one of which was the standard deviation of monthly returns) without being compensated with higher returns. In contrast, minivan drivers running hedge fund vehicles deliver less volatile returns than those generated by other drivers managing funds.

Overall, hedge funds managers in possession of cars with so-called pro-sensation attributes (sports car ownership, horsepower, and torque) are found to deliver lower Sharpe and information ratios than do managers who own cars with anti-sensation attributes (minivan ownership, passenger volume, and safety rating). For instance, managers who own sports cars generate annualized Sharpe and information ratios that are 0.39 and 0.29 lower on average than those generated by other managers.

In addition to underperforming managers who own more practical cars, money managers in possession of sports cars are more likely to terminate their funds, or disclose regulatory actions and criminal violations. “These results suggest that sensation-seeking managers may be more predisposed to fraud,” the researchers write. “Our results empirically validate the advice given by some hedge fund allocators to avoid managers who drive fancy sports cars,” the study concludes.

Hedge fund investors are susceptible to sensation seeking themselves, the researchers find, as managers of funds of hedge funds (FoFs) who own sports cars tend to invest in sensation-seeking hedge fund managers. Sensation-avoiding managers of FoFs, meanwhile, tend to avoid sensation-seeking hedge funds, with FoF managers who own minivans taking on less risk than other managers. The personality traits of hedge fund managers are indeed affecting their investment behavior.

 

Picture © abc7—shutterstock

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

The Illusion of Longevity: Why Averages Mislead in Hedge Fund Survival

Longevity is not a defining feature of the hedge fund industry. Wide performance dispersion, impatient capital, and a high fixed-cost base create a fragile...

Elo’s Slow-Moving Hedge Fund Portfolio Built Around Access

Soon after Kari Vatanen joined Finnish pension insurer Elo as Head of Asset Allocation and Alternatives, he praised the team behind the firm’s hedge...

The New Coda: From Intuition to a Unified Investment Process

Peter Andersland is best known in the Nordic hedge fund space as the co-founder of Sector Asset Management, where he remains a shareholder. While...

When Diversification Fails: Qblue’s Case for Alternative Risk Premia

The notion that a traditional 60/40 portfolio offers meaningful diversification has long been questioned by practitioners. When implementing the Total Portfolio Approach at Danish...

Tidan NOVA Profiting from Volatility Skew as Market Participants Seek Protection

Tidan Capital’s evolution into a multi-strategy platform reflects a broader effort to deliver complementary sources of alpha, with its NOVA strategy serving as a...

Extracting Alpha from the Factor Zoo Through Systematic Investing

There are multiple ways to approach equity investing and, ultimately, the pursuit of alpha. While many strategies rely on market direction or discretionary stock...

Allocator Interviews

In-Depth: Diversification

- Advertisement -

Voices

Request for Proposal

- Advertisement -