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Investor sentiment divided over alternative assets

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The Preqin Investor Outlook: Alternative Assets, H1 2016 finds that investors are mixed in their attitudes to the alternative assets industry. The majority (65 per cent) of investors holds a positive general perception of private equity, and only 6 per cent have a negative perception.

However, more hedge fund investors hold a negative view of the asset class (38 per cent) than have a positive perception (32 per cent), and almost twice as many natural resources investors currently have a negative perception (33 per cent) compared to those who are positive about the asset class (17 per cent).
 
This reflects the differing performance between the asset classes. Private equity and real estate have returned record amounts of capital to investors in recent years, and accordingly 39 per cent of real estate investors and 30 per cent of private equity investors feel their expectations have been exceeded, while only 11 per cent and 6 per cent respectively feel their expectations have not been met. By contrast, natural resources and hedge funds have faced challenging performance conditions over the past year, and 62 per cent and 49 per cent of investors respectively in these asset classes feel that their performance expectations have not been met.
 
Over the next 12 months, 32  per cent of hedge fund investors and 41 per cent of natural resources investors plan to allocate less capital to those asset classes. A smaller proportion (25 per cent and 24 per cent respectively) plan to allocate more, making them the only asset classes to see a net decrease. 

In the longer term, investors to all asset classes plan to increase their allocations. However, a significant 23 per cent of natural resources investors and 26 per cent of hedge fund investors plan to decrease their allocations, more than in any other asset class. 

An increasing proportion of investors across all asset classes now hold significant target allocations. Forty-two  per cent of private equity investors, 48 per cent of real estate investors, and 66 per cent of hedge fund investors have target allocations to the asset class of more than 10 per cent. 

Investor Engagement: Seventy-nine  per cent of institutional investors now invest in alternative assets, with 42 per cent investing in three or more different asset classes. However, only 5 per cent of institutional investors currently invest in all alternative asset classes. 

Two-thirds (66 per cent) of institutional investors currently allocate to real estate, the highest proportion of any asset class. This is up from 59 per cent of investors that held an allocation to the asset class at the start of H2 2015.
 
“The alternative assets industry continued to grow in 2015, with fund managers now managing an all-time record USD7.4 trillion,” says Mark O’Hare – Chief Executive, Preqin. “This increase in assets has been driven by expanding investor demand, as institutions globally look to further diversify their portfolios with an ever wider range of asset classes to generate strong returns, reduce volatility, act as an inflation hedge and deliver reliable income.

“However, investor sentiment is not uniformly positive about alternative assets. Although many investors plan to increase the amount of capital they invest in asset classes like private equity or infrastructure, a significant proportion plan to limit their commitments to natural resources and hedge funds. In this challenging fundraising environment, fund managers will have to be able to respond to investor concerns in order to attract fresh capital.” 


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