Monday, August 31, 2009

Review of hedge fund launches, closures, trends, regulatory, and legal events - week 35

Citibank N.A.Image via Wikipedia

By Benedicte Gravrand, Opalesque London: A roundup of last week’s hedge fund launches, closures, index performance, trends, regulatory, legal and financial events pertaining to the alternative investments world.
Last week, we heard of fund launches or possible launches from Desert Shores (momentum trading); Allianz (European Ucits III); 613 Capital (global L/S); Aviva (UK Absolute Return); Noctua (global macro); and Spruce Point Capital (L/S value).
The HFN Hedge Fund Aggregate Average Index was up 2.56% in July, +12.03%YTD; and HFR reported that emerging markets hedge funds had gained 19% for the quarter, and that assets were up by $10bln, to $77bn.
It is not the smoothest time for funds of hedge funds; it was found that investors had pulled $200bn from Europe’s largest FoHFs since Sept-08; UBP confirmed it would reduce its staff by 10%; and Gottex cut fees for investors in its listed products.
Some ranking lists from Alpha had Sparx, Value Partners, Artradis, ADM on top of the Asia list and Brevan Howard, Man, BGI, BlueBay on top of the Europe list.
Some of the fund managers who hit the headlines last week were: Einhorn, who said that Greenlight had “no net long exposure to equities;” short-seller Jim Chanos, who was said to be looking at pharmaceuticals, accused the UK prime minister of ignoring the credit crunch alarm bell; and John Paulson, who is pushing into gold, bought a stake in Citigroup.
TCI's Chris Hohn is to let investors withdraw cash from its fund and introduce a more liquid share class; clients of Cerberus Capital Management's core hedge funds opted to withdraw the majority of money from the funds; and Goldman Sachs Asset Management became the latest manager to announce a levy on investors coming and going from its funds.
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Thursday, August 20, 2009

2009 African landscape (3) - The continent has been negatively impacted by the global crisis but is well equipped for recovery

By Benedicte Gravrand, Opalesque London:

MUSINA, SOUTH AFRICA - MAY 27:  Zimbabwaen imm...Image by Getty Images via Daylife


The chief economist and the currency strategist at South Africa's Rand Merchant Bank (RMB) gave Opalesque their views and outlook on the region's economics.
South Africa
South Africa (S.A.), an emerging country with a business cycle closely tied to the global cycle, has been negatively affected by the financial crisis, according to RMB's chief economist Ettienne le Roux.
The channels of contagion can be seen through its exports. S.A.'s exports of commodities and manufactured goods, which account for about 30% of GDP, are mainly to the developed world, which is has been buying less. So exports have come down significantly, impacting the economy at large.
"We've already seen this in typical industries, mining in particular," he said. "The mining output has contracted significantly as has manufacturing output. Here we are talking about gradual decline in the case of mining in the order -5% y-o-y and in the case of manufacturing, it is as much as -15% y-o-y."
Being labour-intensive, the mining and manufacturing sectors are shedding jobs and that will affect consumer expenditure.
Full story: http://www.opalesque.com/54218/2009_African_landscape_The_continent218.html
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Thursday, August 6, 2009

Man Investments: Hedge funds back on track as risk appetite comes back strongly, funds retain assets even after removing gates

From Matthias Knab, Opalesque Europe: Man Investment's Research and Analysis Group has published its Q2 Quarterly Review, which can be downloaded at the Source link below. We highlight some of relevant findings from report:
Hedge funds had their best quarter in nine years as risk appetite came back strongly. All styles except for managed futures made profits. Last year's laggards such as convertible bond arbitrage have been this year's biggest gainers and vice versa.
Overall, hedge funds are back on track. The liquidity situation has improved considerably and many gated or suspended funds could liquidate their holdings in an orderly fashion and, in some cases, lift redemption restrictions earlier than expected.
For a variety of reasons, many hedge funds are now less constrained by the de-leveraging process and are able to redeploy risk. When gating was in full swing the consensus was that gated money would melt away quickly when the gates were removed. In fact, this seems not to have happened.Hedge funds are back on track. Broad hedge fund indices enjoyed its best quarterly returns since Q1 2000 in the wake of much improved liquidity, higher risk appetite and tailwinds from credit, equity and commodity markets.
In Q2, the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index gained 4.85% (YTD 5.56%). Strong performance was recorded across all styles and strategies except for managed futures. Convertible bond arbitrage was the best performing strategy again, benefiting from further credit spread tightening and more normal liquidity. CTAs lagged due to frequent trend reversals in currencies and fixed income markets. Interestingly, the gains were led by strategies that have struggled in the recent past and vice versa.

For full story go here: http://www.opalesque.com/53896/Man_Investments_Hedge_funds_back_on896.html
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Monday, August 3, 2009

Bank of China (Suisse)-managed Heritage Fund up +3.45% in June, +39.19% YTD, seeks to focus on China related securities

Bank of China tower, Hong KongImage by thewamphyri via Flickr

From Komfie Manalo, Opalesque Asia:
The Heritage Fund-China Absolute Return was up 3.45% in June, and returned +39.19% YTD. In the fund’s June monthly report, the managers of HF China said they wanted to focus on long-term capital appreciation by investing primarily in China related securities (Hong Kong, H-shares, A-shares, B-shares, Taiwan, U.S., Singapore, and other listings) and in securities with significant exposure to economic developments in China.
The fund is managed by Bank of China (Suisse) Fund Management SA located in Geneva, Switzerland.
According to HF China’s managers, the fund fared well in June compared with the MSCI Golden Dragon Index which was down 1.1% for the month, and was up 34.5% YTD. By maintaining a high cash exposure in recent months (around 30% on average) to reduce volatility, HF China managed to keep its performance in line with the HSCEI Index and MSCI Golden Dragon Index. This shows that HF China’s stock-picking has been able to generate enough alpha to compensate for the 30% cash drag. As a stand alone equity portion, the fund’s stock-pick has substantially outperformed those indices.
China’s market reviewChinese economic fundamentals continue to steadily improve, as strong domestic demand offsets weak external demand. Industrial-output growth accelerated to 8.9% YoY in the first five months of the year compared with a collapse in output growth at 3.8% in January and February combined. Urban fixed-asset investment climbed +32.9% YoY in May, the highest surge in five years.

For full story: http://www.opalesque.com/53842/Bank_of_China_Heritage_Fund_up842.html
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