- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Related

Running in the Family

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 fund families – think of Julian Robertson’s Tiger Management and his dynasty of proteges running successful hedge funds of their own (the “Tiger Cubs”) – share overlapping trades that generate sizeable excess returns, recent research shows. The study finds evidence that “potentially coordinated trades” across the members of a hedge fund family predict stock returns.

Using a data set that identifies hedge fund families by tracing a manager’s employment history to a seminal hedge fund parent, two finance professors at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa find that a long-short portfolio made up of coordinated family trades delivers an annualized alpha of 7.3 percent. Nimesh Patel and Harold Spilker only consider unanimous buy trades – when no fund in a hedge fund family held a specific stock in the prior quarter and more than one fund in the family buys the same stock during the quarter – and unanimous exits.

The long-short portfolio that takes long positions in newly-entered stocks by multiple family members and short positions in unanimous exits – where all family members holding the stock exit – generates an annualized alpha of 7.3 percent. “The risk-adjusted returns are realized over the first two months after portfolio formation and do not fully reverse,” write Patel and Spilker. “This suggests hedge fund family trades may contain information on fundamentals rather than short-term price pressure.”

“Our results show that hedge fund families may share information or ideas, and that this manifests as family block trades that predict stock level alphas,” conclude the researchers. “This is surprising given the lack of formal connections between independent hedge funds.” This information is “likely not tradeable for other market participants,” emphasize the researchers, as returns are realized before most 13F filings are filed with the SEC. Most hedge fund managers are filing their 13F filings towards the end of the 45-day filing deadline.

On the question of “why would fund managers, each running legally independent funds and competing for flows, share investment information or ideas?,” Patel and Spilker suggest two reasons. First, hedge fund managers “talk their book” because they lack adequate capital to push market prices towards their estimates of intrinsic value. Second, managers share investment ideas to receive feedback.

 

Image by WikiImages from Pixabay

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

Alcur Caps Subscriptions, Prioritizes Efficient Management

On the back of consistent returns and heightened investor interest, stock-picking boutique Alcur Fonder will introduce a limited subscription mechanism for its flagship hedge...

Combining Expertise for Private Equity Sustainability and Energy Transition

HedgeNordic interviewed Federated Hermes Limited’s Head of Responsibility and EOS, Leon Kamhi, and Principal and Head of Portfolio Strategy and Solutions within Private Equity, Christian...

Hybrids: A Natural Extension of Norselab’s Credit Ambitions

New fund launches are often driven by a mix of market conditions and emerging opportunities, but for Norselab the introduction of its newest vehicle,...

Steady as an Icebreaker: Ymer Debuts Fund IV

Swedish alternative credit specialist Ymer SC AB has officially launched its fourth fund, the Ymer European Structured Credit Fund IV, which is now listed...

Lucerne Teams with Ex-Danske Derivatives Head on Covered-Call Fund

U.S.-based investment manager Lucerne Capital Management has announced the launch of the Lucerne European Income Select Fund (LEISF), an actively managed strategy aiming to...

Hedge Funds Catch the Attention of Swedbank’s Research Team

Although Swedbank Robur does not manage hedge funds in-house, Swedbank’s manager research team continues to find selective external hedge funds attractive for client portfolios....

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.