New hedge funds struggle while established players raise fees to record
highs, Goldman says
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[February 12, 2024] By
Nell Mackenzie
LONDON (Reuters) - Investments to new hedge funds in 2023 fell to new
lows, while established hedge funds hiked fees to the highest on record,
said a client report by Goldman Sachs dated Friday and seen by Reuters
on Monday.
This illustrates a growing bias towards established and bigger hedge
funds that average higher returns for their investors, said Goldman
Sachs.
Hedge fund launches fell in Europe and the Asia Pacific region by 6% and
8% while rising 14% in the U.S. But Goldman Sachs still maintained that
2023 marked a second consecutive record low for new launches by hedge
funds that it tracks.
However, management fees, where the investor pays back a proportion of
the winnings a hedge fund makes, rose to their highest since 2012,
Goldman Sachs said.
Investors, less focused on fee reduction, have concentrated on agreeing
better terms with hedge funds, Goldman said, which based its findings on
358 interviews in December 2023 that accounted for over $1 trillion in
assets allocated to hedge funds.
One such suggestion was having fees fall as AUM rises.
Separately, around a quarter of those surveyed agreed with their hedge
funds that performance would have to surpass a certain threshold - or
hurdle rate - before the application of fees. Almost half said they
planned to ask for this in 2024.
Almost a fifth said they would try for a loyalty discount.
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People walk around the Financial District near the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., December 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
And 11% said in exchange for a fee reduction they would agree to
lock up their money with their hedge funds for longer, the report
said.
Despite this, hedge fund investors did not end 2023 consistently
happy with how their hedge funds performed.
The $3.9 trillion industry underperformed traditional stock and bond
portfolios by 9%, the worst result in nearly three decades.
This year, investors expect them to do better, the bank said.
If hedge funds can't manage a 7.5% positive result, what was the
point of taking fees, the complex investments and locked away money,
said one unnamed allocator quoted in the report.
At the end of 2023, 15% of allocators said they planned to decrease
their hedge fund holdings, while 31% said they would add more
exposure.
Despite any optimism expressed in 2022, the bank noted that over the
course of 2023, only 28% of allocators increased their money in
hedge funds versus 42% that said they would at the end of 2022.
(Reporting by Nell Mackenzie; Editing by Amanda Cooper and David
Evans)
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