Digital Assets Report

Newsletter

Like this article?

Sign up to our free newsletter

Investors’ commitment to hedge funds comes with rising expectations

Related Topics

In the wake of the investment scandals, market dislocations and regulatory scrutiny of the past year, transparency and liquidity risk have surpassed poor performance as the top concerns for institutional investors investing in hedge funds, according to a survey from SEI in collaboration with Greenwich Associates.

The survey report, entitled "The Era of the Investor: New Rules of Institutional Hedge Fund Investing," points to a need for hedge fund managers to institutionalise responses to transparency demands and to demonstrate clear sources of alpha to retain and gain assets among an increasingly demanding institutional investor base.

The survey revealed a continued commitment to hedge fund investing among institutions as nearly 80 per cent of all survey respondents said they have no plans to change their hedge fund allocations in the next 12 months, while 15 per cent expect to increase their allocations.

What will change is their demand for transparency. Over 70 per cent of respondents reported requesting more detailed information from managers than they did a year ago. While the type of information sought ranged from counterparty and leverage exposure data to sector and position-level detail, over 80 per cent of the respondents reported a focus on funds’ valuation methodologies.

Investors also continue to exert influence on fee structures, as nearly one in five respondents reported negotiating fee arrangements different than the standard two and 20 for single-manager funds and one and ten for funds of hedge funds over the last year.

"Investors remain committed to hedge funds but that commitment comes with increased expectations," says Phil Masterson, managing director for SEI’s investment manager services division. "The balance of power has clearly shifted and managers must meet the growing demand for transparency and increase their focus on operational effectiveness if they want to be successful in this ‘era of the investor.’"

With respect to manager selection, institutional investors are even more focused on a manager’s ability to identify and clearly explain the alpha source from which the performance is derived.

Another critical factor in manager selection was compliance infrastructure, with nearly 50 per cent of respondents citing it as "very important."

Independent administration and a separation of investment management and operations management roles were also identified as high-ranking factors in manager selection.

For hedge fund managers, the survey points to the need to focus on the fundamentals as they face greater scrutiny and demands from investors. The survey reveals that investors are concerned with issues such as liquidity risk, valuation methodology, and whether performance characteristics are in line with stated strategies.

It also points to institutional investors’ willingness to look beyond short-term performance and focus on other traditional indicators of quality, such as a firm’s management team, investment process, and operations and compliance infrastructure.

For fund managers to remain competitive, the survey emphasises the need for firms to proactively enhance their transparency and investor communications and reporting.

Fund managers also have an opportunity to add value by helping educate the investment committees and boards of institutional investors, given that investors cited that as their second greatest challenge, it says.

Click here to request the full report

Like this article? Sign up to our free newsletter

Most Popular

Further Reading

Featured