Analysis-CTAs, other 'uncorrelated' investments boom in volatility ride
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[May 31, 2022] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK (Reuters) - This year's U.S. stock
and bond sell-offs have boosted demand for strategies aimed at
generating returns less dependent on upside in those asset classes
during an extended period of volatility.
Worries over a hawkish Federal Reserve have depressed both asset classes
for most of 2022, bruising investors who had counted on a blend of the
two to buffer portfolios from declines.
Though that trend has reversed in recent weeks, some investors doubt the
volatility in either asset class will subside soon, and are exploring
often-complex strategies to produce returns even if stocks and bonds
fall.
"There has been enormous demand for uncorrelated strategies," said
Charlie McElligott, an equities derivatives strategist at Nomura.
Beneficiaries include commodity trading advisors, or CTAs – funds that
use computer programs to exploit trends in asset classes, ranging from
interest rates to equities indexes.
The SG Trend Index, which tracks the daily rate of return for a pool of
CTAs, is up about 25.6% from Jan. 1 through May 26. This was its best
performance for the period since 2000 when BarclayHedge started
recording such data.
That has helped CTAs boost their assets to $360 billion as of March 31,
up from $319 billion a year ago, BarclayHedge data showed.
The S&P 500 is down about 14% year-to-date, while the Bloomberg U.S.
Aggregate Bond Index is down about 10%.
Nigol Koulajian, founder of Quest Partners, a New York-based systematic
CTA, uses a strategy that identifies assets with the potential to make
outsized moves during so-called "tail events" – low probability
occurrences that can drive big swings in asset prices.
"You can actually look for places where the volatility in the market is
cheap relative to historical norm ..., where the recent volatility has
been low, because those are the assets that will give you the most bang
for the buck when there's a tail event," Koulajian said.
Some fund managers have looked to take advantage of the often
directionally inverse relationship between the S&P 500 and the Cboe
Volatility Index, known as Wall Street's fear gauge, which expresses
traders' outlook on market fluctuations.
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A trader works on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., May 18, 2022.
REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
Chicago-based Thompson Capital Management offers an Alpha Seeker strategy that
goes long or short S&P 500 and the VIX based on signals from the VIX
marketplace.
The strategy has "worked pretty well as 'anti-volatility'" in portfolios this
year, said Matt Thompson, managing partner at Thompson Capital, which manages
about $420 million in assets.
Alpha Seeker has about $75 million, up from $48 million at the start of the
year. The strategy was up 4.7% for the year through April, compared with a 12.9%
decline for the S&P 500.
Millbank Dartmoor Portsmouth LLC, which has about $120 million under management
and is backed by billionaire investor Mike Novogratz, launched its MDP Low
Volatility Fund in March, which seeks to combine equity index ownership with
options.
The fund, which is down 6.2% through May 25 compared with the S&P 500's 12.2%
decline for the same period, actively rotates among four different options
strategies, depending on the volatility environment, said Dennis Davitt, the
firm's chief executive.
Investors' hunt for uncorrelated returns has its own risks. For instance, the
double-digit returns many trend followers have notched year-to-date have not
been the norm during less volatile times. The SG Trend index, for example, has
logged an average annual gain of 3% a year for over the last 10 years, a period
in which the S&P 500 scored average gains of 15% per year.
Still, asset mangers say demand for diversification remains high.
Erik Knutzen, chief investment officer of Multi-Asset Class at Neuberger Berman,
said the firm has fielded more queries about other types of assets aimed at
diversifying portfolios, from commodities and real estate to catastrophe bonds.
"We have seen an increase in interest across many types of diversifiers, from
inflation-sensitive to uncorrelated strategies," Knutzen said.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Richard Chang)
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