CompaniesPREMIUM

Hedge funds suffer biggest quarterly withdrawals since global financial crisis

Total industry capital declines to $2.96-trillion globally in the quarter

Ray Dalio.   Picture: REUTERS
Ray Dalio. Picture: REUTERS

New York —  Investors pulled a net $33bn from hedge funds in the first quarter, the most in more than a decade.

The total is about 1% of industry capital, and the largest quarterly outflow since investors yanked about $42bn in the second quarter of 2009, according to a report on Wednesday from Hedge Fund Research. In all of 2019, investors pulled $43.1bn.

Some of the industry’s largest names took a hit in March’s market tumult, including funds run by Bridgewater billionaire founder Ray Dalio, CQS’s Michael Hintze and Adam Levinson of Graticule Asset Management. The managers suffered losses as the coronavirus crisis brought much of the global economy to a standstill.

Still, a slew of firms are welcoming fresh money, hoping to buy the market dip and capitalise on those investors that may be ready to open their wallets to take advantage of the market dislocations.

“Investors reacted to the unprecedented surge in volatility and uncertainty driven by the global coronavirus pandemic with a historic collapse in investor risk tolerance and the largest capital redemption from the hedge fund industry since post-financial crisis,” HFR President Kenneth Heinz said in the report.

“While volatility and market dynamics remain fluid through early 2Q,” he said, “dislocations created by indiscriminate selling from traditional asset management have created significant opportunities for specialised long-short funds, which are likely to benefit both forward looking funds and institutional investors in coming quarters.”

Macro hedge funds led net outflows in the period, with $22bn leaving the strategy, HFR said. The redemptions from funds that bet on economic trends come even as they led performance among broader strategies in the quarter, down 7.3% on an asset-weighted basis. Redemptions also were concentrated in the industry’s largest firms, with clients pulling $20.6bn from managers with more than $5bn in assets.

Total industry capital declined to $2.96-trillion globally in the quarter, the first time assets dropped below the $3-trillion mark since 2016, HFR said. Hedge funds broadly fell 10% in the period.

Bloomberg

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