For Hedge Funds, 2002 Will Be Record Year for Failure Tue, 24 Dec 2002, 3:59am EST
London, Dec. 24 (Bloomberg) -- This year will be the worst for the hedge-fund business in almost a decade as slumping stock markets dented performance and sparked a record number of closures, consultants and academics said.
A fifth of the 1,797 hedge funds tracked by Tremont Advisers Inc. at the start of 2002 stopped reporting their results by the end of October, and most of those funds shut, the consultant said. In the past eight years, less than 4 percent of funds ceased providing returns to Tremont.
The increase in liquidations corresponds with a slowdown in new investments and deteriorating returns. The biggest funds to close include offerings from New York-based Lipper & Co. and Beacon Hill Asset Management LLC of Summit, New Jersey.
``This year shows the whole hedge fund story was a bit too good to be true,'' said Harry Kat, associate professor of finance at University of Reading in England. ``This may slow new investment in the industry or stop it completely.''
The $600 billion business pulled in a net $17 billion in the first nine months of this year, down from $31 billion in 2001, Tremont reported.
Dwindling Returns
The slowdown comes in part because hedge funds, which are designed to make money whether markets rise or fall, haven't managed to produce strong returns.
Through November, these portfolios for wealthy investors and institutions climbed 2.5 percent, on average, according to Morgan Stanley. While that's better than the Standard & Poor's 500 Index, which dropped 18.5 percent in the same period, the return was lower than a U.K. bank would have paid on a savings account.
The weak performance will likely make raising money from investors more difficult, increasing the number of funds that have to shut, said Kat.
More than 800 funds may close by the end of the year, said Oliver Schupp, president of CSFB/Tremont, a joint venture between the hedge fund consultant and Credit Suisse Group. The majority of closures have been small funds that didn't raise sufficient money or generate enough fees, Schupp said.
The funds that lost money this year have it particularly tough. Hedge funds generally charge about 20 percent of any profit they make, yet if they lose money, they don't charge clients until they earned back that cash.
The funds tracked by Tremont have to jump an average of 12 percent before they can start charging performance fees again. Without those fees, many funds can't survive, Schupp said.
Smaller Funds
The $14 million White Mountain European Fund Ltd. closed this month. Henderson Global Investors Ltd., Robeco Groep, Rourke Capital Management Ltd. and Bank Sarasin & Cie. also shut funds that failed to attract enough investors.
``We really couldn't afford to wait another year or two for better times,'' said Kevin Doyle, who ran White Mountain with Sarah Caygill from Geneva. ``There will always be room for small boutiques in the hedge-fund industry, but there will be a lot less of them.''
A few larger hedge funds also collapsed this year. Beacon Hill, which specializes in mortgage-backed securities, was sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission because it failed to disclose losses of $400 million between July and September.
Lipper & Co., an investment firm run by former New York City deputy mayor Kenneth Lipper, shut its convertible bond funds after losing 45 percent of assets in 2001. Lipper's firm had initially told investors the funds made a modest amount of money last year.
``These failures do the industry harm by showing potential investors very clearly what can happen,'' Kat said. ``Within 10 months this year, a lot of the stereotypes about hedge funds were proved right.''
Fewer Startups
The struggles of hedge-fund managers have begun to discourage others from joining the industry. Freeman & Co., a U.S. consultant, counted nine hedge-fund startups in the third quarter, down from a record 76 in the fourth quarter of 2001.
Fewer new entrants and more managers dropping out may improve the future performance of the industry as only the most talented investors will be left.
``There's a shake-out going on,'' said White Mountain's Doyle. ``That's good for the industry.''
The following is a table showing the number of funds that stopped reporting performance figures to Tremont's Tass database, the number of funds that were reporting at the beginning of each year and the percentage of funds that closed.
While the majority of funds that stop reporting to Tremont shut down, some managers stop supplying data because they've raised enough money and don't need publicity anymore, CSFB/Tremont's Schupp said.
Year// No. of Funds that stopped reporting at end of year// No. of funds reporting start of year// Percentage that stopped reporting at end of year
*2002 319 1,797 17.8%
2001 59 1,641 3.6%
2000 21 1,439 1.5%
1999 26 1,217 2.1%
1998 20 1,023 2.0%
1997 10 825 1.2%
1996 8 644 1.2%
1995 1 500 0.2%
1994 0 366 --
*For this year, the figures are for the 10-month period ended Oct. 31. Source: Tremont Advisers
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