Alt Investments
Hedge Fund Launches Rose Sharply In Q1, Liquidations Flat

While their fortunes can wax and wane, the sector's performance remains an important focus for the wealth management sector.
New hedge fund launches rose and liquidations remained steady at the beginning of 2024, latest industry figures show. Across the whole sector, assets hit a record of $4.3 trillion, according to Chicago-headquartered Hedge Fund Research.
The estimated number of new hedge fund launches in the first
three months of 2024 surged to 146, rising by 70 per cent from
the prior quarter and the highest level since Q1 2022. In 2023,
an estimated 438 new funds were launched.
An estimated 106 funds closed during the quarter, on par with the
prior quarter estimate of 104 liquidations. For the full year
2023, an estimated 415 funds liquidated, the lowest level of
liquidations since 2004.
Equity Hedge strategies were the largest group of newbie funds:
an estimated 75 new funds opened in the first quarter, or more
than half of the quarterly total.
HFR said its HFRI Asset Weighted Composite Index® (AWC) gained by
5.7 per cent year-to-date through May, while the HFRI Fund
Weighted Composite advanced by 5.2 per cent, as large funds
outperformed small and mid-sized firms.
Macro strategies led year-to-date strategy performance through
May. The HFRI Macro (Total) Index rose 6.9 per cent over the
first five months of the year, while the HFRI Macro (Asset
Weighted) Index increased by 7.8 per cent.
Hedge funds haven't always enjoyed strong returns – and some
strategies have hit trouble, prompting pushback against their
relatively high fees. However, despite certain naysayers such as
Warren Buffett, they appear to be a fixture in the wealth
management landscape. At a briefing in May for journalists held
by Switzerland's Union
Bancaire Privée, reporters heard that recent shifts in
interest rates, for example, have been positive for macro funds.