Alt Investments
Hedge Fund Capital Surpasses $4 Trillion Mark

Part of an investment and risk management toolkit for wealth managers, private banks and family offices for some time, hedge funds' capital moved higher in the latest quarter.
The hedge fund industry held more than $4 trillion of assets at
the end of September, and performance rose, highlighting how this
sometimes-embattled sector has managed to push ahead in testing
market conditions, figures show.
Assets rose for the fourth straight quarter in a row, with
“event-driven” and “relative value arbitrage” strategies gaining
fans, although investors cut allocations to the “equity hedge”
area, figures from Hedge Fund
Research said yesterday.
The sector’s fortunes have waxed and waned since before the 2008
financial crash. Sometimes, figures in the asset management
sector, such as investment guru Warren Buffett, say these funds,
which typically charge an annual fee and performance fee that is
higher than for traditional funds, don’t justify the cost. On the
other hand, they can profit from market swings and eke out gains
during down markets, their defenders say. They remain an element
of private banks’, family offices’ and wealth managers’
portfolios.
Event-driven strategies seek to profit from price movements
from mergers, acquisitions, and other corporate events;
relative value arbitrage strategies try to exploit mispricing in
securities, and equity hedge strategies aim to offset risks of
loss in stock markets.
Funds rose by almost $53 billion in the latest quarter. Investors
allocated an estimated $2.3 billion in new capital to the hedge
fund industry in 3Q23.
HFR said its investible HFRI Institutional Fund Weighted Composite Index has gained 4.0 per cent since the start of 2023 through the third quarter.
Event-driven (ED) strategies, which categorically focus on out of
favor, often heavily shorted, deep value equity and credit
positions, saw their assets rise by nearly $25 billion in the
third quarter, taking total ED capital to $1.096
trillion.
Capital managed by equity hedge strategies fell slightly, amid a
more volatile stock market. Total EH capital fell by an estimated
$5.1 billion to end 3Q23 reaching $1.13 trillion.
Capital that is managed by credit and interest
rate-sensitive fixed income-based relative value arbitrage
strategies rose as interest rates continued to rise, increasing
by an estimated $17.5 billion in the the quarter, raising total
RV capital to $1.08 trillion.
Following a small drop in the first half of this year, macro
hedge fund strategies gained in performance, rising 1.4 per cent,
HFR said. Total macro capital recovered from the early 2023 asset
declines to increase by an estimated $15.5 billion in 3Q,
bringing total macro strategy capital to $693 billion. Macro
funds try to profit from broad market swings caused by political
or economic events.
“Hedge funds have again navigated a powerful shift and negative reversal in risk tolerance and sentiment, as positive correlation between equities and bonds rose sharply throughout 3Q, presenting risks to classic, traditional long-biased strategies, as well as opportunities for funds tactically positioned for these trends,” Kenneth J Heinz, president of HFR, said.