Alt Investments
Pre-Election Nerves Weighed On Hedge Fund Returns – HFR

We have seen that since the US election result, stocks have rallied as uncertainties – at least about the outcome – vanished. Hedge funds slipped in October, with performance dispersion widening in the month.
Investors’ caution in the weeks leading up to the November 5 US
elections dented hedge funds’ returns in October, according to
returns data issued yesterday.
The HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index (FWC)® fell 0.7 per cent
in October from September, while the HFRI Asset Weighted
Composite Index fell 0.6 per cent for the month, according to
data released today by Hedge Fund
Research, the Chicago-headquartered research firm.
The FWC Index is up 7.43 per cent since January; the Asset
Weighted Index is up 5.81 per cent.
“With clarity on the US election results, investors and managers
are actively adjusting exposures to their expectations for
priority policy shifts on international trade, manufacturing,
immigration, energy, security with these changes resulting in
significant impacts for monetary and fiscal policy, supply
chains, M&A and geopolitical risk,” Kenneth J Heinz,
president of HFR, said.
The hedge fund sector in general – which has waxed and waned in
its fortunes in recent years and seen a squeeze on its fees – has
lagged broad stock market indices so far this year. For example,
the S&P 500 Index of major US stocks is up 26 per cent,
gaining a particular boost in the first week of November with the
Trump victory ending uncertainties about the result. The MSCI
World Index of developed countries’ shares (in dollars) shows
total returns (capital growth plus reinvested dividends) of 21
per cent, as of November 7.
Nevertheless, hedge funds’ advocates say the sector justifies its
place in portfolios because of an ability to short-sell and
generate gains in a down-market, as well as capture opportunities
outside more normal channels.
The specifics
Performance gains of 0.6 per cent for the month in the HFRI
Relative Value Index were more than offset by declines in the
HFRI Macro (Total) Index, which fell 2.0 per cent in October
versus September.
Hedge fund performance dispersion narrowed in October, as the top
decile of the HFRI FWC constituents advanced by an average of 3.8
per cent, while the bottom decile fell by an average of 7.3 per
cent, representing a top/bottom dispersion of 11.1 per cent for
the month.
Fixed income-based, interest rate-sensitive strategies led
strategy performance in October, as US interest rates increased
and equities declined heading into the early November US
Presidential election, with the HFRI Relative Value (Total) Index
gaining an estimated 0.6 per cent for the month.
Event-Driven strategies, which often focus on out-of-favor, deep
value equity exposures and speculation on M&A situations,
reversed recent monthly gains with a decline in October, as the
HFRI Event-Driven (Total) Index fell 0.35 per cent.
Equity Hedge funds, which invest long and short across
specialized sub-strategies, also fell, with the HFRI Equity Hedge
(Total) Index falling an estimated 0.7 per cent for the month to
bring the year-to-date return to 9.6 per cent, which has
led all main strategy indices since the start of
2024.
Macro strategies led declines in October as US interest rates
increased and investors positioned for the US Presidential
election, with the HFRI Macro (Total) Index falling 2.0 per cent.