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New HFR Report: Strong Inflows Drive Hedge Fund AUM To New Record
STRONG INFLOWS DRIVE HEDGE FUND CAPITAL
TO NEW RECORD IN 1Q14
Investors allocate largest amount of new capital to industry in nearly three years;
Equity Hedge and Shareholder Activist capital spikes, Macro falls on CTA weakness
CHICAGO (April 21, 2014) – Total hedge fund assets surged to set another record in the first quarter of 2014 as investors allocated the most new capital to the industry since 2Q11. Global hedge fund capital increased to $2.70 trillion, the seventh consecutive quarterly record, as investors allocated $26.3 billion of new capital to the industry, according to the latest HFR® Global Hedge Fund Industry Report, released today by HFR, the established global leader in the indexation, research and analysis of the global hedge fund industry. Inflows for the first quarter were the largest since investors allocated $32.5 billion in 2Q11; 1Q14 results also follow inflows of $63.7 billion for 2013. The HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index gained +1.1 percent in 1Q14, navigating an increase in volatility over calendar year (CY) 2013 with gains across Relative Value Arbitrage and Event Driven strategies.
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HFRU Indices Mid-April 2014 performance notes
Global financial markets posted declines through mid-April, as asset volatility increased, geopolitical tension over Ukraine and Russia continued to escalate and the NASDAQ Composite entered a market correction phase. US equity market declines were led by Technology, Biotechnology, Healthcare, Financials, Small Cap and Growth exposures, which were only partially offset by gains in Energy and Commodity related exposures. European equities also posted declines led by Russia, Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands, while Asian equities posted mixed performance with gains in China, Hong Kong and Emerging Asia partially offset by declines in Japan. US treasury yields fell through mid-April as the curve flattened led by gains longer dated maturities; yields also fell across most European bonds, as Greece was able to complete a 3 Billion Euro bonds offering. The US dollar fell against most currencies, declining against the British Pound Sterling, Euro and Japanese Yen, while also declining against the Brazilian Real and Korean Won, though Russian Ruble continued to slide against the Dollar. Energy & Metals Commodities posted gains through mid-April led by Oil, Natural Gas, Aluminum and Gold, while Agricultural Commodities declined as gains in Coffee and Soybeans were offset by Sugar, Cotton & Hogs. UCITS compliant Hedge funds posted declines with the HFRU Hedge Fund Composite Index declining -0.51% through mid-April.
HFRU Relative Value Arbitrage Index posted a narrow decline of -0.03% through mid-April, with positive contributions from exposure to Fixed-Income and Asset-Backed strategies offset by declines in Global Convertible and Multi-Strategy managers.
HFRU Macro Index posted a modest decline of -0.12% through mid-April, with positive contributions from commodity strategies offset by quantitative, trend following CTA and European equity strategies.
HFRU Event Driven Index posted a decline of -0.45% through mid-April, with negative contributions from European and US Equity Special Situations and Global Merger Arbitrage managers only partially offset by gains in hedged credit strategies.
HFRU Equity Hedge Index posted a decline of -1.13% through mid-April, with losses concentrated in exposure to European, Russian, Healthcare and Technology strategies only partially offset by exposure to Market Neutral, Turkey, Brazil and MENA strategies.
Comments reflect performance figures as of April 16, 2014.
Learn more at WWW.HFRU.EU
HFRX Indices Mid-April 2014 performance notes
Global financial markets posted declines through mid-April, as asset volatility increased , geopolitical tension over Ukraine and Russia continued to escalate and the NASDAQ Composite entered a market correction phase. US equity market declines were led by Technology, Biotechnology, Healthcare, Financials, Small Cap and Growth exposures, which were only partially offset by gains in Energy and Commodity related exposures. European equities also posted declines led by Russia, Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands, while Asian equities posted mixed performance with gains in China, Hong Kong and Emerging Asia partially offset by declines in Japan. US treasury yields fell through mid-April as the curve flattened led by gains longer dated maturities; yields also fell across most European bonds, as Greece was able to complete a 3 Billion Euro bonds offering. The US dollar fell against most currencies, declining against the British Pound Sterling, Euro and Japanese Yen, while also declining against the Brazilian Real and Korean Won, though Russian Ruble continued to slide against the Dollar. Energy & Metals Commodities posted gains through mid-April led by Oil, Natural Gas, Aluminum and Gold, while Agricultural Commodities declined as gains in Coffee and Soybeans were offset by Sugar, Cotton & Hogs. Hedge funds posted declines with the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index declining -0.91% through mid-month, while the HFRX Absolute Return Index posted a decline of -0.31%.
HFRX Relative Value Arbitrage Index posted a decline of -0.33% through mid-April, with mixed contributions from Multi-Strategy and Convertible Arbitrage managers. The HFRX Multi-Strategy Index posted a narrow decline of -0.12% with mixed contributions from Credit, Equity and Commodity strategies. HFRX Convertible Arbitrage Index declined -1.29% as gains in volatility positions were offset by exposure to Asian and Japanese convertibles. HFRX Fixed Income Credit Index posted a decline of -0.42% while the HFRX MLP Index gained +1.65% through mid-month on continued demand for yield generating energy infrastructure partnerships.
HFRX Event Driven Index posted a decline of -0.49% through mid-April, with positive contributions from Merger Arbitrage strategies offset by declines in Equity Special Situations and Distressed/Restructuring managers. HFRX Merger Arbitrage Index posted a gain of +0.10%, with positive contributions from transactions in Facebook/Oculus VR, Suntory/Beam, Actavis/Forest Labs, ATMI/Entegris, and Tower Financial/Old National Bancorp. HFRX Special Situations Index declined -0.54%, with contributions from core positioning in American Realty, Hertz, Lamar, McKesson, Sensient Technologies, Vivendi and Athabasca Oil. HFRX Distressed Index declined -0.38% from restructurings across Consumer and Communications sectors in the US.
HFRX Macro Index posted a decline of -0.56% through mid-April, as volatility in Emerging Markets and Commodities increased, Russian equities fell sharply and the Rubble continued to decline on uncertainty over Ukraine. HFRX Macro: Systematic Diversified Index and HFRX Emerging Markets Index declined -0.73% and -1.86%, respectively, with contributions from equities and currencies.
HFRX Equity Hedge Index posted a decline of -2.08% through mid-April, with gains in Equity Market Neutral only partially offsetting declines in directional strategies. HFRX Market Neutral Index posted a gain of +0.12%, with positive contributions across factor-based models as well as fundamental and trading oriented strategies. HFRX Fundamental Value Index declined -2.03% with declines concentrated in exposures to European and Financials equities. HFRX Fundamental Growth Index posted a decline of -2.53% from exposure to European, Emerging Asia and Global Healthcare small-cap equities.
Comments reference performance as published through April 16, 2014.
www.hfrx.com
HFRI Indices- March 2014 performance notes
HEDGE FUNDS CONCLUDE VOLATILE 1Q14 WITH MIXED PERFORMANCE IN MARCH
Macro losses offset Relative Value gains to end quarter; RVA, Event Driven top equity markets, lead all hedge fund strategies
through 1Q14
CHICAGO, (April 7, 2014) – Hedge funds
posted mixed performance in March as investor uncertainty over secular unrest
in Ukraine and Syria, as well as mixed macroeconomic outlooks for China, Europe
and the U.S., contributed to increased volatility across equity, currency,
commodity and fixed income markets. Hedge funds posted a narrow decline for the
month, with the HFRI Fund Weighted Composite (FWC) Index falling -0.3 percent,
as losses in Macro and CTA strategies offset gains in Relative Value Arbitrage
strategies, according to data released today by HFR®, the
established global leader in indexation, analysis and research for the global
hedge fund industry. For the first
quarter, the HFRI FWC gained +1.1 percent, with a strong February gain
offsetting declines in both January and March.
March
gains were led by fixed income based Relative Value Arbitrage strategies, with
the HFRI Relative Value Index gaining +0.6 percent for the month and +2.4
percent for 1Q14, leading all hedge fund strategies in the quarter. With positive
performance in each month of the quarter, Relative Value Arbitrage strategies
have posted gains in 55 of 63 months since January 2009, with an average
annualized gain of +10.7 percent over that period. While all sub-strategies
posted gains for March, gains were led by Sovereign and Asset Backed Strategies,
with the HFRI RV: Sovereign Index gaining +1.1 percent and the HFRI RV: Asset
Backed Index up +1.3 percent. HFRI RV: Yield Alternative Index gained +1.0
percent for the month and +3.7 percent for 1Q14, while HFRI RV: Volatility
Index gained +0.5 percent in March and +2.0 for 1Q14.
Event
Driven strategies extended strong 2013 performance through 1Q14, despite
posting a narrow decline for March. The HFRI Event Driven Index declined -0.1
percent in March but gained +1.8 percent for the quarter, led by a continuation
of the powerful M&A, IPO and shareholder activist trends that dominated
2013. The HFRI ED: Activist Index gained +2.1 percent in March and +3.3 percent
for 1Q14, the leading area of ED performance, while the HFRI ED: Distressed
Index and Credit Arbitrage strategies gained +2.3 and +2.7 percent,
respectively, for 1Q14. The HFRI: ED Special Situations Index gained +1.7
percent for 1Q14, despite posting a decline of -0.5 percent for March.
The
HFRI Equity Hedge Index posted gain of +1.4 percent for 1Q14 despite a decline
of -0.2 percent for March. Most Equity Hedge sub-strategies were narrowly
changed for March, led by a gain of +0.3 for the HFRI EH: Energy/Basic
Materials Index, while HFRI Quantitative Directional Index posted the weakest
performance with a decline of -0.8 percent. For the 1Q14, funds specializing in
Technology and Energy led EH performance, with the HFRI EH:
Technology/Healthcare Index gaining +5.7 percent, and the HFRI EH: Energy/Basic
Materials Index up +6.0 percent for the quarter.
Macro
strategies were the only area of hedge fund performance to post a decline for
1Q14, with a March drop of –1.1 percent for the HFRI Macro Index offsetting
February gains and bringing first quarter performance to a decline of -0.5
percent. The HFRI Macro: Currency Index gained +0.74 percent for March, leading
Macro sub-strategy performance for the month, while HFRI Macro: Commodity Index
led Macro sub-strats for the first quarter with a gain of +2.4 percent. Quantitative, trend following CTA strategies
led declines for both the month and the quarter, with the HFRI Macro:
Systematic Diversified/CTA Index falling -1.9 percent for March and -1.8
percent for 1Q14.
“Hedge
funds posted gains for the first quarter, effectively navigating volatility
from macroeconomic, geopolitical and corporate sources despite escalation of
international tension regarding Russia’s annexation of Crimea and continued
commitment by the US Federal Reserve to deliberate extraction of stimulus
measures, impacting not only the US but the global economy,” stated Kenneth J.
Heinz, President of HFR. “The choppy financial market environment of 1Q14
contrasts sharply with the equity beta driven gains for 2013, contributing to
an increased dispersion of performance and increased traction for hedge fund
strategies offering low correlation to equity markets, including not only Event
Driven and RV Arbitrage, but also Currency, Commodity, Volatility, and
Technology strategies. Hedge fund investors continue to actively position in
strategies offering positive optionality inherent in specialized, focused
exposures which allow them to participate in continued gains across these asset
classes, but also afford portfolio protection from rising yields, credit
deterioration and equity corrections which may occur through 2014.”
HFRU Indices: March 2014 Performance notes
Global financial markets posted mixed performance for the month of March, as investors discounted the impact of rising geopolitical tension and economic sanctions surrounding the annexation of Crimea by Russia. Global equity markets also posted mixed performance as US equities pulled back from record valuation levels on continued tapering of stimulus measures by US Federal Reserve and mixed forward guidance by corporations. US sector gains were led by Energy, Financials and Semiconductors, which offset declines in small cap, Biotechnology, Healthcare and Cyclical exposures. European equities were also mixed, with gains in Italy, Spain and the Netherlands offset by declines in the UK, Germany and Russia, while Asian equities were narrowly changed for the months, with declines in China and Hong Kong offset by gains in India and Singapore. US yields rose slightly as high yield credit tightened and the yield curve flattened, with shorter dated yields rising relative to longer dated; yields declined in Italy and Spain, though European yields were only modestly changed elsewhere. Energy and Metals commodities posted broad based declines led by Copper, Silver and Natural Gas, while Agricultural commodities gained, led by Corn, Hogs, Sugar and Wheat. The US dollar gained against the Euro, British Pound Sterling and Japanese Yen, though declined against the Australian Dollar, New Zealand dollar and Brazilian Real. UCITS compliant Hedge funds posted declines with the HFRU Hedge Fund Composite Index posting a modest decline of -0.15% in March.
HFRU Equity Hedge Index posted a decline of -0.21% in March, with positive contributions from regional exposures to Turkey and Latin American equities offset by declines concentrated in Russian, Chinese and Healthcare exposure.
HFRU Event Driven Index posted a decline of -0.59% in March, with contributions from Emerging Markets Fixed Income exposures which were offset by declines in Global Merger Arbitrage and European Equity Special Situations strategies.
HFRU Macro Index posted a decline of -0.28% in March as exposure to systematic trend-following managers and Commodity – Metals led to declines which were only partially offset by Multi-Strategy and Agricultural commodities strategies.
HFRU Relative Value Arbitrage Index posted a gain of +0.12% in March, with positive contributions from exposure to Emerging Markets Fixed Income and Asset-Backed managers.
Comments reference performance as posted on April 1, 2014
www.hfru.eu
HFRX Indices: March 2014 Performance Notes
Global
financial markets posted mixed performance for the month of March, as investors
discounted the impact of rising geopolitical tension and economic sanctions
surrounding the annexation of Crimea by Russia. Global equity markets also
posted mixed performance as US equities pulled back from record valuation levels
on continued tapering of stimulus measures by US Federal Reserve and mixed
forward guidance by corporations. US sector gains were led by Energy,
Financials and Semiconductors, which offset declines in small cap,
Biotechnology, Healthcare and Cyclical exposures. European equities were also
mixed, with gains in Italy, Spain and the Netherlands offset by declines in the
UK, Germany and Russia, while Asian equities were narrowly changed for the months,
with declines in China and Hong Kong offset by gains in India and Singapore. US
yields rose slightly as high yield credit tightened and the yield curve
flattened, with shorter dated yields rising relative to longer dated; yields
declined in Italy and Spain, though European yields were only modestly changed
elsewhere. Energy and Metals commodities posted broad based declines led by
Copper, Silver and Natural Gas, while Agricultural commodities gained, led by
Corn, Hogs, Sugar and Wheat. The US dollar gained against the Euro, British
Pound Sterling and Japanese Yen, though declined against the Australian Dollar,
New Zealand dollar and Brazilian Real. Hedge funds posted mixed performance
with the HFRX Market Directional Index posting a gain of +0.19% and the HFRX
Equal Weighted Strategies posting a gain of +0.03%,while the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index posted a decline
of -0.23%.
HFRX
Event Driven Index posted a decline of -0.13% in March,
with positive contributions from Distressed/Restructuring and Merger Arbitrage
strategies offset by Equity Special Situations managers. HFRX Distressed Index posted
a gain of +0.64% with contributions from restructurings across Technology,
Industrials and Consumer sectors in the US. HFRX Merger Arbitrage Index posted
a gain of +0.29%, with contributions from transactions in Facebook/Oculus VR, Suntory/Beam,
Actavis/Forest Labs, CapitalSource/PacWest Bancorp, Sterling Financial/Umpqua
Corp, Avago Technologies/LSI and Tower Financial/Old National Bancorp. HFRX
Special Situations Index declined -0.40%, with contributions from core
positioning in American Realty, Hertz, Sensient Technologies, McKesson, Apple,
Herbalife, eBay, Jos A. Bank, Ferro and American Airlines.
HFRX
Relative Value Arbitrage Index posted a decline of -0.18% in March with
mixed contributions from Convertible Arbitrage and Multi-Strategy managers. HFRX
Fixed Income Credit Index posted a gain of +0.43% on gains in European credit
and Distressed exposures, while the HFRX MLP Index gained +2.04% on continued
demand for yield generating energy infrastructure partnerships. HFRX
Convertible Arbitrage Index posted a modest decline of -0.02% as gains in
volatility positions were offset by exposure to Asian and Japanese
convertibles. HFRX Multi-Strategy Index declined -0.22%, as gains from
Corporate Credit managers was offset by Global Fixed Income strategies.
HFRX
Macro Index posted a decline of -0.22% in March with
contributions from discretionary Currency, Fixed Income and Emerging Markets
strategies offset by declines in systematic trend-following managers. HFRX
Emerging Markets Index -0.32% with declines in Asian and select Emerging
European equities; while discretionary fixed income exposure had a partially
offsetting gain. HFRX Macro: Systematic Diversified Index declined -1.75% from
exposure to Fixed Income, Commodity and Equity trend-following strategies.
HFRX
Equity Hedge Index posted a decline of -0.37% in March with
gains in market neutral strategies offset by mixed performance across
directional strategies. HFRX Market Neutral Index gained +0.63%, with gains across
both factor-based models and fundamental, trading oriented strategies. HFRX
Fundamental Value Index declined -0.25% with positive contributions from
exposures to large cap Financials and Consumer sectors offset by declines in
European equities. HFRX Fundamental Growth Index posted a decline of -0.88%
with positive contributions from Global Healthcare and Consumer sectors offset
by declines in Japanese and Emerging Asian exposure.
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