High-flyer Quant, a top hedge fund house in China that uses
powerful computers and artificial intelligence (AI) to exploit
market opportunities, last week apologised to investors for a
record slump in performance. The fund house, which manages
roughly 100 billion yuan ($15.69 billion), blamed the crash on
wild shifts in investor sentiment and crowded trades in a sector
that is "growing too fast in size." High-flyer's public apology
echoes an earlier setback in 2021 at Shanghai Minghong
Investment Management Co, another quant heavyweight fund that
suffered losses following a surge in assets under management (AUM).
"When you're small, high-frequency, rapid-trading strategies
could create very beautiful performance charts," said Wang Li,
chairman of Hangzhou Liberty Fund Management Co. But after big
money gushes in, "the strategies no longer work."
While high-frequency traders, known colloquially as "flash
boys", typically ride on market momentum and gyrations, their
trades can become ineffective if there is too much money betting
the same way.
When such funds grow too large, they lose their ability to move
nimbly and exploit market inefficiencies.
A High-flyer Quant fund, designed to enhance returns on the
CSI500 Index, lost 13.1% during the last quarter, despite a 3.6%
gain in the underlying index, according to fund distributor
Simuwang.com. That wiped out most of the 21.9% gains from the
first nine months. Another High-flyer fund using hedging
strategies lost 12.1% during the final three months of 2021,
bringing the year's performance to an 8.1% loss. That fate could
befall other players in a sector that, according to Citic
Securities estimates, has jumped ten-fold over the past four
years to 1 trillion yuan. Daily turnover in China's A-shares
market crossed a trillion yuan on most days in 2021. Around 25
hedge fund managers that use such quantitative strategies each
saw their AUMs surpass 10 billion yuan last year, according to
Kaiyuan Securities. Several, including High-flyer, exceeded 100
billion yuan in AUM. Investors rushed into quant funds, which
seek to generate absolute, or enhanced returns, during a year in
which regulatory crackdowns on sectors including tech and
property roiled stock markets. China's blue-chip CSI300 Index
lost 5.2% in 2021, despite record annual turnover in local
stocks, fuelled in part by the rise of rapidly trading quant
funds. The problem with top quant players like High-flyer Quant
is that "their size is too big," said Shi Ke, partner at hedge
fund manager iFund Asset Management Co. "Another issue is that
AI can do a good job analysing historical data, but may not
react quickly when market swerves."
Last year, some clients made returns lower than the benchmark,
while some others suffered paper losses, and "we feel very
sorry," High-flyer Quant said in the letter, vowing to invest
more in research. SHQX Asset Management, a Shanghai-based hedge
fund manager, said many so-called CTA funds, which trade
commodities using quantitative strategies, suffered towards the
end of 2021 due to slump in commodity prices. There are signs of
growing caution in the industry. Several fund managers,
including High-flyer, Tianyan Capital and Evolution Asset
Management, have stopped taking new money for some or all
products.
Breakneck growth has increased regulatory scrutiny.
Top securities regulator Yi Huiman said in September growth in "quants"
was a challenge to stock exchanges. Meanwhile, the Securities
Association of China, a self-regulating industry body, is
demanding more disclosure from major quant players about their
operations. Yin Tianyuan, the Shanghai-based head of research at
data provider Suntime Information, says some quant managers are
voluntarily taking the heat out of their trading. "The largest
quants with 100 billion yuan in China have almost all lowered
the frequency of their algorithm to 'medium high'," she said.
(Editing by Vidya Ranganathan and Sam Holmes)
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