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HFRI 500 Relative gains in February as global equities plunge on Covid-19 fears

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Hedge funds posted mixed performance in February, led by fixed income-based Relative Value Arbitrage strategies, as global equities and commodities suffered steep declines on spreading coronavirus contagion fears. The investable HFRI 500 Relative Value Index gained +0.8 per cent for the month, led by arbitrage positions, primarily long fixed income and short equity exposures, as reported today by HFR®, the established global leader in the indexation, analysis and research of the global hedge fund industry.

The broad-based HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index declined -1.7 per cent for the month, topping the steep decline of the DJIA by over 800 basis points. Approximately 40 per cent of all hedge funds posted gains in February, with the top decile returning +6.5 percent, while the bottom decile fell -10.6 per cent. The investable HFRI 500 Hedge Fund Index posted a slightly smaller decline of -1.45 per cent for the month

Liquid Alternative hedge funds also fell in February, though still topped the DJIA decline by over 800 bps. The HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index declined -1.4 per cent, while the HFRI-I Liquid Alternative UCITS lost -1.9 per cent for the month.

Fixed income-based Relative Value Arbitrage (RVA) strategies led industry performance, with gains in Convertible Arbitrage and Volatility exposures offset by declines in Yield Alternative and Corporate fixed income strategies. The investable HFRI 500 Relative Value Arbitrage Index advanced +0.8 percent, while HFRI Relative Value (Total) Index posted a narrow decline of -0.1 per cent. RVA sub-strategy performance was led by the HFRI RV: Convertible Arbitrage Index, which gained +1.8 for the month, as well as the HFRI RV: Volatility Index and HFRI RV: FI-Sovereign Index, each of which advanced +0.3 per cent in February. Offsetting these gains, the HFRI RV: Yield Alternatives Index fell -3.0 per cent for the month.

Uncorrelated Macro strategies produced mixed performance across sub-strategies in February, with the investable HFRI 500 Macro Index posting a narrow decline of -0.3 percent, while the HFRI Macro (Total) Index fell -0.5 percent. Macro sub-strategy performance was led by fundamental discretionary managers, as the HFRI Macro: Discretionary Thematic Index surged +1.5 per cent for the month, while the HFRI Macro Currency Index added +1.2 per cent. Quantitative, trend-following CTA funds posted a wide dispersion of performance across strategies, as the HFRI Macro: Systematic Diversified Index declined -1.1 per cent in February.

Equity-sensitive Equity Hedge (EH) and Event-Driven (ED) strategies also posted declines for the month, though performance still topped the plunge in the DJIA by over 700 basis points. The HFRI Event-Driven (Total) Index fell -2.3 per cent, the worst monthly decline since December 2018, while the HFRI Equity Hedge (Total) Index dropped -2.8 per cent. Sub-strategy declines across ED and EH were led by the HFRI ED: Activist Index, which fell -9.4 percent, and the HFRI EH: Fundamental Value Index, which lost -4.1 percent. Partially offsetting these, the HFRI ED: Multi-Strategy Index advanced +2.2 per cent, while the HFRI EH: Healthcare Index posted a narrow gain of +0.3 per cent.

“Volatility surged throughout February as uncertainty and coronavirus contagion fears drove steep declines across equity and energy commodities, while gold spiked and treasury bonds rallied, driving US yields to record lows. Through this historic volatility spike, fundamental/discretionary Macro hedge funds led by industry performance, while large Credit Multi-Strategies in the Relative Value Arbitrage space also posted gains,” says Kenneth J Heinz, President of HFR. “HFRI performance indicates many hedge funds were well-positioned for this volatility environment, driving gains across short equity, long fixed income, and mixed, opportunistic gold and energy commodity exposures. Given the continuation and acceleration of contagion risk into March, it is likely that hedge funds which generated impressive, inversely-correlated gains in February will lead industry performance and growth through mid-2020.”

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