Digital Assets Report

Newsletter

Like this article?

Sign up to our free newsletter

Asia attracts USD500million in capital for Q4 with hedgies focused on Indian inflation posting highest 2010 gains

Related Topics

Asian hedge funds finished the year strongly, attracting USD500million in new capital for Q4 as global investors looked to strategies for protection against the region’s ever-growing inflatio

Asian hedge funds finished the year strongly, attracting USD500million in new capital for Q4 as global investors looked to strategies for protection against the region’s ever-growing inflationary pressures, reported US-based Hedge Fund Research in its latest quarterly update. Some USD4.4billion in assets (including performance gains) were added to Asian hedgies – representing the biggest quarterly gains since Q3 2009 – to bring overall assets under management to USD83.4billion. HFR reported that USD6.6billion had been allocated into Asia for 2010. Equity l/s funds, which represent roughly 44 per cent of Asian hedge funds, performed quite well in 2010, gaining 9.89 per cent (Asia ex-Japan). Investors turned to these, along with event driven strategies, for inflationary hedging purposes. Interestingly, however, only 35 per cent of inflows in Q4 went to equity l/s, with event-driven funds attracting USD765million for the full year. This is an encouraging sign that Asia’s relatively immature alternatives industry is starting to evolve into a more sophisticated beast. Asia ex-Japan event-driven strategies, according to Eurekahedge, gained 13.54 per cent in 2010.
 

With inflation beginning to trend upwards, investors were particularly keen to hedge their investments in India and China. The former saw its central bank recently hike up interest rate 25 basis points to 6.5 per cent to curb inflation which currently stands at 8.43 per cent, whilst China’s inflation rate, when last reported, reached a 28-month high of 5.1 per cent in November. The HFRX India Index was the best regional performer, gaining 15.47 per cent whilst the HFRX China Index gained 9.37 per cent. Commenting on the need from investors for Asian hedge funds to evolve and offer protection against inflation in the strategies they offer, HFR’s President Kenneth J Heinz (pictured) said: “To meet this demand, the Asian hedge fund industry has evolved to offer access to not only hedged equity strategies, but sophisticated currency, commodity, volatility, corporate transaction and fixed income exposures designed to appeal to inflation-sensitive investors in 2011.”

 

Like this article? Sign up to our free newsletter

Most Popular

Further Reading

Featured