Mon, Jul 22, 2024
A A A
Welcome Guest
Free Trial RSS pod
Get FREE trial access to our award winning publications
Industry Updates

Hedge funds redemptions surge to $39.1 billion in September, highest in more than 5 years

Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Opalesque Industry Update - Hedge funds endured their heaviest outflows in more than five years in September despite record highs in U.S. equity indexes and strong consumer sentiment, according to the Barclay Fund Flow Indicator.

Data from more than 5,000 hedge funds in the BarclayHedge database estimated that the hedge fund industry (excluding CTAs) shed $39.1 billion (-1.3% of assets) in September, reversing inflows of $21.5 billion (0.7% of assets) the month before.

Industry assets dipped to $3.06 trillion in September, down from August's all-time high. Weak demand for hedge funds contrasted with strong demand for equities in September, when U.S. stock indexes hit record heights, according to the Barclay Fund Flow Indicator, a monthly big-picture report on the health of the alternative investments industry.

Though U.S. stocks surged and oil prices rallied to a four-year high in September, other economic indicators underscored the gloomy outlook of the hedge fund industry.

"Hedge fund investors had cause for skepticism with rising interest rates, increasing U.S. deficits in spite of a booming economy, and a slowdown in China negatively impacting emerging economies worldwide," said Sol Waksman, founder and president of BarclayHedge.

Waksman noted that September's redemptions shrank year-to-date hedge fund inflows to $2.7 billion (0.1% of assets). By contrast, the industry raked in $94.8 billion (3.4% of assets) in the first nine months of 2017.

At the sector level, Sector Specific funds had the biggest 12-month inflows at $15.8 billion (11.6% of assets). Macro funds had the largest 12-month redemptions at $12.1 billion (-5.5% of assets).

At the regional level, hedge funds based in the U.S., the U.K. and their respective offshore islands suffered heavy outflows in September. Investors pulled $36.1 billion (-2.2% of assets) out of U.S. funds, while UK-based funds redeemed $11.6 billion (-2.0% of assets).

"Except for a trickle of inflows to Canadian hedge funds, all the global fund categories we track lost assets in September," Waksman said. "Continental Europe funds shed $2.8 billion (-0.4% of assets) in September, while Latin America funds gave up $2.9 billion (-21.8% of assets)."

In the managed futures sector, redemptions from Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) funds doubled to $300 million (-0.8% of assets) in September from $150 million (-0.04% of assets) the month before.

"CTA demand has been tepid since the U.S. dollar began a strong rally in March, though things look better over a wider time frame," Waksman said. "CTAs added $11.9 billion (3.4% of assets) year-to-date and $15.9 billion (4.6% of assets) over the trailing 12 months."

What do you think?

   Use "anonymous" as my name    |   Alert me via email on new comments   |   
Previous Opalesque Exclusives                                  
Previous Other Voices                                               
Access Alternative Market Briefing

 



  • Top Forwarded
  • Top Tracked
  • Top Searched
  1. The Big Picture: CTA focused on Chinese futures continues to shine[more]

    B. G., Opalesque Geneva: Many well-known CTA groups have been investing in the China onshore commodity futures market opportunity as soon as it was possible. And foreign fund participation in this market is growing anew. One among them is Eagle, which has been active in the field for over 30 yea

  2. Opalesque Roundup: Emerging market hedge fund gains accelerate as AUM reaches highest level since 2Q 2022: hedge fund news[more]

    In the week ending June 28th 2024, industry figures showed that emerging markets hedge funds gains accelerated through mid-2Q, leading industry-wide regional performance with c

  3. Opalesque Exclusive: New convertible arb fund aims to do without old-school investing[more]

    B. G., Opalesque Geneva for New Managers: A new fund is revamping convertible arbitrage, one of the oldest hedge fund strategies, by adding a systematic layer to the common discretionary approach - where investment

  4. Opalesque Exclusive: A global macro fund eyes opportunities in bonds[more]

    Bailey McCann, Opalesque New York for New Managers: Munich-based ThirdYear Capital rebounded in 2023, following a tough year for global macro. The firm's flagship ART Global Macro strategy finished the year up 1

  5. Other Voices: Will the tech boom feed the commodity cycle?[more]

    Reprinted with the permission of the author, Tim Pickering, founder and CIO of Canada-based quantitative investment manager Auspice Capital Advisors Ltd. Like many things within financial markets, the link between commodities and the overall economy and global stock markets is a bit o