Brexit more heartburn
than heart attack for hedge funds
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[June 27, 2016]
By Lawrence Delevingne and Svea Herbst-Bayliss
NEW YORK/BOSTON (Reuters) - UK voters'
surprise decision to leave the European Union roiled markets on
Friday, but hedge funds appear to have avoided crippling losses,
according to market data and people familiar with fund performance.
Money managers were positioned relatively defensively coming into
the vote, meaning they had reduced the amount of capital exposed to
market turbulence, and even used the resulting sell-off as a buying
opportunity, according to a report from Credit Suisse's prime
brokerage division late on Friday. "I don’t want to say it’s a
non-event, but we’re not seeing panic,” said Eric Siegel, head of
hedge fund investments at Citi Private Bank. "It’s just a bad day in
the market."
Hedge funds that bet on or against European stocks were hit hardest
on Friday, with most losing between 2 and 4 percent, two investors
familiar with the numbers said.
For some the pain was even worse. The London-based Adelphi Capital's
$1.9 billion European fund was off 8 percent at one point on Friday,
a person familiar with the fund's performance said. The fund was
already down 9.5 percent for the year through late last week.
How the approximately 8,400-fund industry fared during the Brexit
turmoil will not be clear until early July when clients get their
monthly performance reports.
While funds were relatively well prepared for gains in U.S.
Treasuries and a fall in the pound, they remained exposed to the
steep declines that hit equity markets, according to weekly data
sent by traders to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
GAINING GROUND
Yet many funds appeared to have fared relatively well.
Money managers that use macroeconomic theories and computer-guided
"systematic" predictions to invest generally saw their funds remain
steady or turn a small profit following news of the "Leave" vote,
according to interviews with hedge funds and their clients.
Managers using such strategies can quickly adjust portfolios and
react to data, unlike so-called fundamental managers who are often
forced to stick with individual stocks and bonds.
For example, the main fund managed by Sweden-based $6.5 billion Lynx
Asset Management gained 5 percent as of Friday afternoon on the
British vote, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
The fund's computers recently positioned it in a short against the
British pound, a lucrative bet given the currency's record plunge
following the vote.
Alcova Asset Management, a small London-based quantitative firm,
benefited from its short stock bets, and its main fund gained about
1.5 percent following the referendum result, according to a person
familiar with the situation.
A larger London-based peer Winton Capital, said its main systematic
trading strategy produced a 3.1 percent gain early on Friday, driven
in part by "long-standing" short bets on the pound and euro,
according to a note to clients seen by Reuters.
Crispin Odey, a hedge fund manager who backed the "Leave" campaign,
could turn out to be one of the biggest financial winners of the
vote to quit the bloc.
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A woman exchanges English Pound notes for Euros notes at a money
exchange office in Gibraltar, June 24, 2016. REUTERS/Jon Nazca
The boss of Odey Asset Management had bet his $10.2 billion firm's assets on a
fall in financial markets, including a series of "short" trading positions and a
punt on gold.
Other winners, according to people familiar with the firms, included funds
managed by Millburn Ridgefield Corporation, which gained 2.6 percent before fees
as of Friday morning; Welton Global Directional Portfolio, which was up 2.3
percent on the day thanks to short selling the pound and euro and going long
U.S., German and UK government bonds; and volatility-focused Argentière Capital,
which had one of its funds rise 2 percent Friday.
"Given the volatility in the broader markets, hedge fund managers are holding up
quite well," said Raymond Nolte, chief investment officer at SkyBridge Capital.
None of the hedge funds mentioned would speak publicly on the returns or did not
respond to requests for comment.
FRUSTRATION EVIDENT
To be sure, many hedge fund clients headed into the weekend frustrated.
"Did anyone predict this correctly? Anytime the equity market moves 7 percent in
one day, the answer is no," said one investor in some of the world's biggest
hedge funds.
An executive at a Europe-focused stock picker said its fund was down about 2
percent despite holding hedges against steep stock and currency declines.
Other hedge fund investors welcomed the Brexit-induced volatility.
Arvin Soh, portfolio manager at GAM Alternative Investments Solutions, said he
was pleased that "something" finally happened in the market, giving hedge funds
the chance to benefit from dislocation.
"This," he said, "will wind up being a good thing for managers."
(Additional reporting from Dan Burns in New York and Maiya Keidan in London.
Editing by Carmel Crimmins and Tomasz Janowski)
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