- Advertisement -

Related

Skin in the Game Isn’t Enough

- Advertisement -

Stockholm (HedgeNordic) – Capital commitment by fund managers is an effective way to align the interests of managers and investors. Hedge fund managers with more “skin in the game” do outperform those with less capital commitment, but the outperformance “comes at the cost of limited entry by outside investors,” recent research shows.

According to a study by Arpit Gupta and Kunal Sachdeva published in July this year, “funds with more insider investment outperform other funds within the same family.” However, the researchers argue that “this relationship is driven by managerial decisions to invest capital in their least-scalable strategies and restrict the entry of new outsider capital into these funds.” Whereas hedge fund managers contribute substantial personal capital into their funds, which can better align incentives between managers and investors, “managers may also strategically allocate their private capital in ways that negatively affect investors.”

In the study, Arpit Gupta and Kunal Sachdeva examine three hypotheses:

  • Hedge fund managers allocate their capital to less-scalable strategies;
  • Managers restrict access to outside investors in these funds;
  • Insider funds outperform on a risk-adjusted basis.

First, the authors find that managers invest capital in the least-scalable strategies. Second, they find that managers limit access to outside investors into these least-scalable funds, “sometimes closing access to outside investors completely.” And third, funds with higher internal investment deliver greater excess returns by taking on less leverage and less exposure to illiquid assets, which suggests that the outperformance is not attributable to hidden risks. Yet, these funds are offered on a limited basis to outside investors. According to the results, a fund with a one-standard-deviation increase in insider investment relative to the mean is associated with an additional 1.4-1.7 percent in excess return per year.

The authors also find evidence that greater “skin in the game” incentivizes managers to better manage the so-called size-performance trade-off by crowding out outside capital. Funds with higher insider investment are less likely to accept inflows following positive returns and are more likely to be closed to outside investors completely. The authors conclude that “the joint relationship between internal investment, fund flows, and performance suggests that funds better manage capacity constraints when managers have personal capital at stake, leading to superior returns at the expense of fewer managed investments.” These findings show that “hedge funds face capacity constraints in their operations, and differentially allocate capital across their funds to maximize profits, depending on the mix of inside and outside capital.”

Photo: YorkBerlin—shutterstock.com

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

Systematic Multi-Strategy as a Portfolio Diversifier

By Fredrik Langenskiöld – Union Bancaire Privée: Multi-strategy funds are those that allocate to more than one alternative strategy or portfolio manager (PM) in...

Visio Allocator Delivers Record Month on AI Chip Rally

After a more muted, albeit still challenging, first quarter, multi-strategy fund Visio Allocator regained momentum starting in April and delivered its strongest month on...

Colosseum’s Difficult Stretch Continues as Co-Portfolio Manager Departs

After a volatile journey since launching in mid-2025, Colosseum Global Alpha has suffered two consecutive months of steep losses, leaving the fund down more...

CABA Offers Another Roll Down the Curve

CABA Capital has launched the fourth iteration of its Flex strategy, a three-year closed-ended AAA-yield premium strategy designed to harvest roll-down and pull-to-par effects...

Even Steven for Nordic CTAs in Mediocre May

May was another month characterized by reversals and cross-asset volatility. Strong momentum in U.S. equities contrasted with directionless moves across other markets, creating a...

Rhenman Doubles Down on Smaller Healthcare Innovators with New Fund

Many of healthcare’s most transformative breakthroughs often originate not from established industry giants, but from smaller companies developing new technologies, therapies, and treatment approaches....

Allocator Interviews

In-Depth: Diversification

- Advertisement -

Voices

Request for Proposal

- Advertisement -