Title: Hedge Funds
1 Hedge Funds
- The Indebted Society
- Economics 1813
- Harvard University
Michael Dubilier Dubilier Company Ronald W. Sellers Atlantic Asset Management, LLC
Stamford, Connecticut 203-351-2800 www.atlanticasset.com (research tab) November 22, 2004 Stamford, Connecticut 203-351-2800 www.atlanticasset.com (research tab) November 22, 2004
2Order of Topics
- What Is A Hedge Fund?
- Industry Overview
- Investment Strategies
- Case 1. Mortgage Derivative Hedge Fund
- Case 2. Macro Economics Hedge Fund
- Appendix Web Pages
3I. What is a Hedge Fund?
- Class questions
- How many have heard of hedge funds?
- How many think they know what they are?
4What is a Hedge Fund?
- Formal definition there is none
- Websters Dictionary has hedge between hector
and hedonism with three definitions - boundary
- means of protection
- a deliberately ambiguous statement
- Hedge funds have all these characteristics
5What is a Hedge Fund?
- Hedge funds in the U.S. investment
industrytypical characteristics - L.P. or L.L.C., or other corporate structure
- Formed onshore or offshore or both
- Unregistered investment vehicle for QPs only
- Both asset based and performance based
- Managers are small special purpose firms
- Operate a single investment strategy for absolute
total return - Hedging is used to reduce certain investment
risks - Leverage is used to enhance returns
6II. Industry Overview
- 875 billion assets in about 6,000 Hedge Funds
7Industry Overview
- Hedge Fund Asset Growth, Billions
8Industry Overview
- Hedge Fund Net Performance
- January 1998 June 2004
Net Compound Annual Return Standard Deviation
CSFB/Tremont Hedge Fund Index 7.8 7.6
MSCI World 6.2 16.2
SP 500 Index 12.3 15.3
Morningstar Average Equity Mutual Fund 9.8 15.8
LB Aggregate Bond Index 8.1 4.4
9Industry Overview
- Who invests in hedge funds?
- 1992 2002
- Institutions 19 52
- Individuals 81 48
Investors Include High
Net Worth Individuals Endowments Foundations
Family Officers Pension Plan Sponsors
(ERISA) Private Banks Retail Investors
10Industry Overview
- Hedge Fund Regulation
- Typically
- They are exempt from registration under the
Investment Company act of 1940, and therefore not
public mutual funds - They are exempt from registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, and therefore cannot make
public offerings - Their advisors are exempt from registration under
the Investment Advisors Act of 1940
11Industry Overview
- Exemption from Registration
- Is achieved by
- Have less than 100 investors or sell interests
only to qualified purchasers (with 5 million
of investments) - Do not offer securities publicly no public
solicitation - Have 14 clients or fewer hedge fund is one
12Industry Overview
- Investment Advantages
- Removes restrictions and requirements with
respect to - Use of leverage and short-selling
- Computation of NAV, the basis for determining
fees - Extensive reporting and disclaimer obligations,
including printed prospectus approved by the SEC - SEC examiners and fiduciary duties to clients -
disclosures, information requirements, fees
and marketing restrictions
13III. Investment Strategies
- Convertible Bond Arbitrage
- A typical arbitrage trade is holding a
convertible security long and its underlying
stock short. This is a relative value strategy
in which returns should be made as the underlying
stock and convertible bond move up or down in
price. - Dedicated Short Bias
- Commonly referred to as short sellers. Often
use intensive fundamental analysis to uncover
accounting problems or frauds that could cause
security price to fall. - Distressed
- Focuses upon the purchase of debt instruments
that are mispriced on an absolute or relative
basis. Distressed securities include the
securities of companies in trouble involved in
workouts, liquidations, reorganizations,
bankruptcies and similar situations. Requires
superior fundamental analysis and accurate
evaluation of the value of the company. A
relative value variant is capital structure
arbitrage where a manager is long senior debt and
short junior securities.
14Investment Strategies
- Emerging Markets
- A specialty area where there can be more
inefficiencies found in the valuation of
securities. Typically can invest in both
equities and debt. Sovereign risks and liquidity
are the key concerns in these markets. - Equity Market Neutral
- Trade generation is typically quantitative and
model-driven. An example is statistical
arbitrage where managers take advantage of small
equity pricing anomalies through the rapid
turnover of large portfolios. Another strategy
is pairs trading which employs the matching
purchase and sale of similar securities. - Fixed Income Arbitrage
- Can be divided into mortgage and fixed income
relative value sub-strategies. Mortgage
strategies involve the purchase of mortgage back
securities and hedging of risks including
interest rate risk or duration. Relative value
strategies involve the sale and purchase of fixed
income instruments where carry is an important
source of profits. Fixed income strategies in
general employ higher levels of leverage.
15Investment Strategies
- Global Macro
- Mangers seek opportunities in markets around the
world. The strategy is not typically restricted
to a given asset class and is therefore highly
opportunistic in nature. Global Macro managers
examine macroeconomic data in order to develop a
fundamental economic outlook or to identify a
developing trend. Positions are taken in
interest rate, credit, foreign exchange, or index
derivatives. - Long/Short Equity
- Equity alternative where managers invest long and
short in stocks. As with traditional equities,
managers often specialize by geography, industry,
style and capitalization. - Managed Futures
- A systematic strategy separated into
trend-following and mean-reverting models.
Trend-following systems model financial time
series over short, medium and long term looking
for price trends that can be exploited.
Mean-reverting strategies expect dislocations
from the mean to revert.
16Investment Strategies
- Risk Arbitrage
- Involves the purchase and sale of securities of
two companies involved in a merger with the
intent of going long or short the closure of the
transaction. May also invest in reorganizations
and spin-offs. - Note Descriptions were generally taken from
CSFB materials.
17IV. Case 1. Mortgage Derivative Hedge Fund
- Business History
- 1999 4 million managed, 1 investor, 5
employees,3-year return 35 per year net of
fees, for regulatory purposes losing financial
backer - 2004 1 billion managed, over 100 investors, 15
employees, 7 year return 30 /year net of fees,
owned by employees, Atlantic and the first large
investor - 2004 Projected to have 20-30 million profit
18Mortgage Derivative Hedge Fund
- Investment Strategy
- Core I/Os (interest only mortgage strips)
- assets High yield, but very large negative
duration - 500 exposed to prepayment risk
- Securities evaluated on a loan by loan basis
- Leveraged up to 2 to 1
- Hedge Interest rate exposure hedged to 0
duration with Treasuries and MPT purchased
forward - Prepayment risk hedged with P/Os and other, all
risk factors hedged dynamically
19Mortgage Derivative Hedge Fund
- Management Issues
- Liquidity 15 cash, 12 repo lines double dealer
haircut - Pricing Mark to market always vs. mark to model,
complete transparency of process - Professionals Avg. 15 year experience from
proprietary head trader positions, one-third
Phds - Success Storybook success so far
20V. Case 2. Macro Economics Hedge Fund
- Business History
- 1993 - 1999 Initial development of LAB Model at
Harvard - 1999 - 2003 LAB Account 1-2 million invested,
with average return near 40 annually - 2003 Started Atlantic Macro Economics Fund, 1.5
million invested - 2004 Returned 26 last 13 months, annual expenses
about 700,000
21Macro Economics Hedge Fund
22Macro Economics Hedge Fund
- Investment Strategy
- Equilibrium level for interest rates is
correlated historically with actual rates - Forecast is yield one month out for 10-yr. spot
and the yield difference between the 10-yr. and
1-yr. - Based on the forecast, cash portfolio duration is
increased or decreased each month - If correct, short-term gains accumulate
23Macro Economics Hedge Fund
- Management Issues
- Forecast Accuracy Statistically correct 65 of
the time - Volatility of Returns Take only measured bets,
use stop-loss trading - Start-up Marketing Seeking anchor investor,
prospective investors will watch and wait - Commitment Must have multi-year commitment to
have possibility of success
24Summary
Hedge Fund Industry Start-ups 1,000 annually
est. Terminations 10-25 annually
est. Reasons 50 caused by business operational
failures est. Winners A 1 billion fund earning
20 in one year has a performance fee of 40
million Failures Long Term Capital lost .5
billion in one day with a 3.6 billion bailout at
the end (1998)
25Summary
- Hedge funds are now a booming business
- Attracting the most talented managers
- Alternative for sophisticated investors seeking
better returns - Words of Wisdom Investing for consistently
good returns is very difficult. Hedge fund
business success is very very difficult.
26Appendix
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