Title: Betas, Options, and Portfolios of Hedge Funds
1Betas, Options, and Portfolios of Hedge Funds
- John H. Cochrane
- University of Chicago GSB
2Objectives
- Summarize academic hedge fund research.
- Use it how should one invest in hedge funds?
- Think about future and challenges posed by HF
- Three themes
- Betas are HF returns market neutral,
alternative asset class, diversification? - Options Option-like nature of HF returns.
Options and incentives in HF fee structure. - Portfolios HF is not a standalone investment.
How do you put HF in a portfolio?
3Spectacular growth in HF
4Strategy composition
- HF do lots of different things.
- Strategy gobbledygook. Who knows what any of this
means? - Obscure strategies seems an important part of HF
marketing
5What are hedge funds?
- Hedge funds are investment pools that are
relatively unconstrained in what they do. They
are relatively unregulated (for now), charge very
high fees, will not necessarily give you your
money back when you want it, and will generally
not tell you what they do. They are supposed to
make money all the time, and when they fail at
this, their investors redeem and go to someone
else who has recently been making money. Every
three or four years they deliver a
one-in-a-hundred year flood. They are generally
run for rich people in Geneva, Switzerland, by
rich people in Greenwich, Connecticut. - -Cliff Asness, Journal of Portfolio Management
2004.
6Returns
Not astronomical, but if beta really 0, these
arent bad returns! Is beta 0?
7Return issues
- Questions for all return statistics
- Survivors / backfill / self-reported.
- Everyone seems to have beat the average. All
alive have! 20 death rate. - Best guess average HF returns are overstated by
2-5 per year - Uncertainty about mean returns s/vT. If s 15
then uncertainty about 5 year mean returns is 2 x
15/ v5 13. (And 5 years is a lot!) - Dynamic strategies, options. With small
probabilities of large disasters, historical
averages are especially poor measures (more
coming). - Very little persistence. The strategy of buying
HF that did well in the past does not do well
going forward. - ? Evaluating average returns, alphas from return
history (track record) is nearly hopeless. - Historical data are still useful for measuring
risks, betas.
8Alphas and betas a reminder
- We often characterize returns for fund i by
- Beta tendency of return to rise if the market
rises - Beta times rm How much of the return can you get
in an index fund. (Style) - Alpha average return earned in excess of this.
(Selection) - Epsilon extra risk beyond index fund.
9Why do we care about beta so much?
- No point to paying fees for beta x rm that you
can get in an index fund. Hence, beta x rm is the
right benchmark only pay fees for alpha. - With beta, you can short beta x rm to remove
market risk (or the fund could do it and really
be market-neutral). - Risk management To form a portfolio, controlling
market (and other) risks, controlling correlation
between HF, you need to know the betas. - Example Invest in index futures as an
alternative asset to get diversification? Beta
tells you no! - In fact, you want to know betas corresponding to
all passive strategies!
10Hedge fund alphas and betas lags and stale
prices
Not zero!
Bigger with lags
Smaller with lags
Really not zero. Alternative asset?
Long-short doesnt mean zero beta!
- Lags are important stale prices or lookback
option - Betas are big!
Source my regressions using CFSB/Tremeont
indices at hedgeindex.com, idea from Asness et al
JPM
11- Correlation with the market is obvious.
- Getting out in 2000-2003 was smart! (Mostly due
to Global/Macro group)
12Monthly returns on Global Macro HF and US market
- Global macro yet you see the correlation with
US market - Lagged market effect is clear in 1998. Is Nov/Dec
1998 unrelated to Oct? - Dramatic stabilization / change of strategy in
mid 2000
13Monthly returns on Emerging Market HF and US
market
- Emerging markets diversify away from US
investments, give us access to a new asset
class? - Names yes. Betas no. Names dont mean much!
14Alphas and betas
- Betas are larger than you might have thought,
larger than market neutral absolute return
claim, and interest rate fee benchmark. - Alphas are correspondingly smaller than average
returns. Youre paying performance fees for
index-fund components. - Betas are hard to measure, especially for
illiquid securities. At least look longer than 1
month. - Even if some alpha remains, are HF really about a
few percent alpha (plus big risks?) - Q Sure, average alpha is low, but my alpha is
big. - A How to separate luck from skill? Only answer
form a portfolio of good-looking funds based on
ex-ante information, track them later. So far,
little alpha here.
15Option-like HF returns
Option reminder. For a fee (option price), you
can get the upside but not the downside. The
option value (fee) is higher if the stock is more
volatile.
16Writing put options reminder.
You collect a fee, only pay off if the market
goes down a lot. Providing disaster insurance
Most of the time, stock ends up here. You make a
small profit independent of stock price. Looks
like alpha, arbitrage.
Fee (put price)
Stock price
Todays price
Rarely, the stock ends up here. You lose a huge
amount
Writing put profit
17Option-like return example Merger arbitrage.
Price
- Cash offer. Borrow, buy target.
- Large chance of a small return if successful.
(Leverage a large return) - Small chance of a large loss if unsuccessful.
- The strategy seems unrelated to the overall
market, beta zero - Butoffer is more likely to be unsuccessful if
the market falls! - Payoff is like an index put!
18Merger arb returns
- Source Mark Mitchell and Todd Pulvino, Journal
of Finance - Line like the payoff of writing index puts!
19- Source Mitchell and Pulvino, using CFSB/Tremont
merger-arb index - News 1) occasional catastrophes 2)
catastrophes more likely in market declines
20Merger arb morals
- Even though its an all-equity strategy (no
option positions) dynamic trading gives an
option-like payoff. - Not necessarily a bad thing! Writing index puts
earns a premium. It provides disaster insurance
to the market. - But no need to pay 220 to write index puts!
- Alpha, beta, benchmark, performance
evaluation should be relative to the strategy of
writing index puts! - (Mitchell and Pulvino are now running a
merger-arb hedge fund, so at least they think
such alpha is there.)
21Hedge fund up/down betas
Example if the market goes up 10, the HF index
goes up 0.8. But if the market goes down 10,
the HF index goes down 7.7!
(Includes 3 lags)
- Many near, or above 1. These are big betas!
- Many HF styles are much more sensitive to down
markets write puts short volatility.
- Source my regressions using hegefundindex.com
data following Asness et al JPM
22Implications of option-like payoffs
- Need option-return benchmarks for risk management
(investing in HF) and compensation benchmarks.
23Option return benchmarks
SPPo return from rolling over out-of-the-money
puts Source Agarwal and Naik RFS, using HFR data
- Morals
- Including option benchmarks can reveal big betas.
- And hence alphas a lot less than average returns.
24Additional benchmarks matter too!
- Term long term govt bond return t bill rate
- Corp corporate bond return long term govt
- Big betas, especially on corp (default spread)
- Often much more for bad news than for good news
- Market up/down has moderated since 1998, but
term, corp up/down still strong - Most HF strategies amount to providing
liquidity, disaster insurance in some market
- Source my regressions using hegefundindex.com
data
25Option-like returns mean beware averages (even
more)
- Example. If the return is (1, 1, 1, 1, 1, -10, 1,
1, 1, -10, 1, 1, 1, 1,) you are very likely to
see many years with only 1, we consistently
outperform the market. - Actual mean return depends on how likely the
disaster -10 is. You need a long history to
figure that out based on statistics. - Like writing earthquake insurance in LA.
- Distribution of profits from writing puts is very
far from normal
26Implications
- Need lots of factors benchmarks.
- Market, value, size, momentum, term, default,
currency - Plus options on all of these.
- (Next mechanical timing strategies that change
all exposures.) - (Next 2 mechanical rules that update the
coefficients.) - Standard regression method is strained to the
limit. - More right hand variables than data points.
- HF styles shift betas not constant over time.
- HF style groups mean little. Small cap growth
vs. Global macro. - Beta is still the right question but we need
better ways of getting the answer.
27Implications II
- Whole standard style/selection concept is
outdated. - Does style (beta x E(f), passive, no fee) vs.
selection (alpha, active, fee) make any sense
in the post-CAPM 27 factor, dynamic world? - You could get HF return with xyz mechanical
strategy. (e.g. write put.) -- But most
investors dont. So what? - How many investors have thought through their
exposures to value, size, momentum, put options,
etc.? - The only beta, alpha that matter are those on the
investors portfolio. If the investor has not
optimized on the extra factors, its alpha! - Maybe style is selection, worth a fee!
- Program a computer vs. Need to hire a human
distinction doesnt make sense anymore.
28Fees
- Management performance.
- Often 2 20 of gains.
- Funds of funds charge 2 20 too!
- ? Massive number of new funds!
- ? How do they attract money, and maintain such
high fees?
29Fees, incentives, and options
Management fee
2 20
2
Portfolio value
30Fees, incentives, and options
- (0), 2, 20 a call option.
- Investor view Incentive for needless volatility.
- Examples. You are given 1000
- Do nothing Fee 20
- Bet 500 50/50 Expected Fee 70
- ½ x 0.02 x 500 ½ x (0.02 x 1500 0.20 x 500)
70 - Bet 99 1K,1 -100K Expected Fee 238
- Mean 0.99 x 2000 0.01 x (-99000) 990 ?
lose 10! - Fee 0.99(0.022000 0.201000)0.010
237.60 - Negative mean bet gets manager 238 with 99
prob.
31Real strategies to game 220
- Write put options.
- Synthesize options with dynamic trades.
- Example Double or nothing.
- Secret betas.
- Claim beta zero yet invest in index.
- Lots of other betas. Example Value-growth, is
market neutral yet a mechanical strategy that
gives a good average return.
32Solutions to the incentive problem
- General partners invest large fractions of their
own wealth. - Huge loss of diversification to GP. Really?
- Cannot apply to HF run by banks, institutions.
- GP want to preserve their reputations
- Effective?
- Clearly understood strategy, clear and honest
risk management and reporting. - Not yet, but I cant see any other way!
33Contracts II. Risk and Reward or Magic Alpha?
- Example Spring 2005 GM downgraded. HF (short
treasury, long corporate) have big losses. - Big losses lead to withdrawals. Funds have to
sell illiquid securities at the worst possible
time. - Why should losses lead to withdrawals? If
investors understood the risk and strategy they
would double up! - Answer 1 If investors understood it they
wouldnt pay 220! - Catch-22. Honest investors wont pay 220. Sell
alpha magic investors pull out at the worst
time. - Answer 2 High-water marks, losses mean the fund
will will lose managers. Also, slow marking to
market means early withdrawers get more. Its
rational to pull out, like a bank run - High water marks can be bad for investors,
lock-in can be good for investors! - General point. The fee and contract structure is
important. - (Future is there bounceback in HF returns, so
long term investors should ignore price drops?
Nobody has checked yet. If so, it changes
everything.)
34HF as part of a portfolio, not a standalone
investment Standard passive index plus
active including multiple HF
- The Absolute Return portion of the portfolio is
primarily invested in non-directional hedge
funds. That is, returns should be independent of
the direction of global equity, fixed income or
currency markets. Strategies include Global
Convertible Arbitrage, Global Merger Arbitrage,
Long/Short Equity and Blended Strategies.
35Hedge funds as part of a portfolio
- Problem 1 Risk management. Must know betas!
- How much are you overall short volatility?
- What is the chance that all HF investments go
down together? - Problem 2 Cost and fee explosion.
- Is HF shorting something you already own?
- Portfolio is (10 A, 10 B). HF is long A short B.
- Is (11A, 9 B) really worth short cost, 220 fee?
- Are HF offsetting each other?
- Is HF 1 long A, short B, HF 2 short A, long B?
- You pay ½ ( 2 20 ) for sure, plus short costs
for nothing. - Cost explosion portfolio of options ? option on
portfolio. - 100 mean zero stocks in one fund 2 for sure.
- 100 stocks in 100 funds 2 ½ (20) for sure!
36Silliness in HF investments
- Hedge funds give us diversification
- You cant be more diversified than the market
portfolio. If you have A and B, adding (long A,
short B) to the mix does not make you more
diversified it makes you less diversified. - We need to add alternative investments, new
asset classes to make our rate of return
targets. - Most HF are not a new asset class. They trade in
exactly the same stuff you already own. And you
cant wish returns. - We hold a lot of funds to diversify across
managers - And get back to the market portfolio. Why pay
fund 1 to long A short B and fund 2 to long B
short A? - HF are not taking idiosyncratic risk. (If so,
220 is a disaster!) - Hedge style betas with passive, not multiple
active investments!
37Bottom line
- Many large betas on a bewildering variety of new
styles Option-like returns with big tails. - Betas, risks are hard to measure with historical
data style drift, short samples, too many
styles. - Standard view of investor-manager relation.
- Both sides understand betas
- Clear style (no fee) vs. selection (fee)
separation. - Investor has already optimized style choice in
passive investments. - Our world
- HF sketchy on betas, investors have no clue.
- Most investors have not thought about multiple
betas, passive styles. - style vs. selection, alpha vs. beta is no
longer relevant in the post-CAPM, dynamic,
20-factor world. HF exist largely to collect
large premia for holding risks of unusual styles.
- Alpha based on track record, statistical
analysis is close to hopeless. - Yes, I have asked more questions than I have
answered. Large rewards for figuring out how to
answer these questions!
38A new communication model?
- HF communication
- HF must figure out and disclose betas and tail
probabilities, based on holdings not regressions.
(Compensation for accuracy?) - Intriguing alternative HF or intermediary
figures out beta (alpha?) to you. - Passive portfolios to hedge HF investments?
- Alpha claims need clear stories, clear risks.
- Investor education
- Its OK to shop for bargains (earn high risk
premia), and accept risk not just alpha,
arbitrage, magic. - Strategy honesty might also stop panicked
withdrawals. - Lockins are good for investors!
- HF Investor needs to understand huge variety of
styles, risks. - Test complain if your manager exceeds the
benchmark by 6 x tracking error? - Fees, costs
- Fees need to reflect at least the easy betas! (Or
HF need actually to hedge!) - How to control fees and trading costs in a
portfolio of HF?
39Another view
- Understanding HF A brilliant marketing success
in a marketing business. - Absolute Returns, Market-Neutral,
Alternative asset, Near-Arbitrage
Alternative beta, Entrepreneur - Whatever they mean, they separate rich people,
money. - 2 20 We only charge if we win.
- Makes sense for a single investment. Makes much
less sense in the light of day, thinking about
forming a portfolio that is part passive, part
active and spread over many funds.
40I dont mean to sound negative
- Complex products, trading strategies need expert
investors (HF). - There are rewards to new style risks.
- HF organizational form can be a useful way to
access these investments. - Once all the problems are overcome.
41The end