INVESTMENTS 投资学 (博迪BODIE, KANE, MARCUS)Chap026 Hedge Funds

上传人:ra****d 文档编号:243362350 上传时间:2024-09-21 格式:PPT 页数:33 大小:1.25MB
返回 下载 相关 举报
INVESTMENTS 投资学 (博迪BODIE, KANE, MARCUS)Chap026 Hedge Funds_第1页
第1页 / 共33页
INVESTMENTS 投资学 (博迪BODIE, KANE, MARCUS)Chap026 Hedge Funds_第2页
第2页 / 共33页
INVESTMENTS 投资学 (博迪BODIE, KANE, MARCUS)Chap026 Hedge Funds_第3页
第3页 / 共33页
点击查看更多>>
资源描述
,Click to edit Master title style,Click to edit Master text styles,Second level,Third level,Fourth level,Fifth level,INVESTMENTS,|,BODIE, KANE, MARCUS,26-,*,CHAPTER 26,Hedge Funds,Hedge Funds vs. Mutual Funds,Hedge Fund,Transparency: Limited Liability Partnerships that provide only minimal disclosure of strategy and portfolio composition,No more than 100 “sophisticated”, wealthy investors,Mutual Fund,Transparency: Regulations require public disclosure of strategy and portfolio composition,Number of investors is not limited,2,Hedge Funds vs. Mutual Funds,Hedge Fund,Investment strategy: Very flexible, funds can act opportunistically and make a wide range of investments,Often use shorting, leverage, options,Liquidity: Often have lock-up periods, require advance redemption notices,Mutual Fund,Investment strategy: Predictable, stable strategies, stated in prospectus,Limited use of shorting, leverage, options,Liquidity: Can often move more easily into and out of a mutual fund,3,Hedge Funds vs. Mutual Funds,Hedge Fund,Compensation structure: Typically charge a management fee of 1-2% of assets and an incentive fee of 20% of profits,Mutual Fund,Compensation structure: Fees are usually a fixed percentage of assets, typically 0.5% to 1.5%,4,Hedge Fund Strategies,Directional,Bets that one sector or another will outperform other sectors,Non-directional,Exploit temporary misalignments in relative valuation across sectors,Buy one type of security and sell another,Strives to be market neutral,5,Table 26.1 Hedge Fund Styles,6,Statistical Arbitrage,Uses quantitative systems that seek out many temporary and modest misalignments in prices,Involves trading in hundreds of securities a day with short holding periods,Pairs trading: Pair up similar companies whose returns are highly correlated but where one is priced more aggressively,Data mining to uncover systematic pricing patterns,7,Portable Alpha,Invest wherever you can find alpha.,Hedge the systematic risk of the investment to isolate its alpha.,Establish exposure to desired market sectors by using passive products such as indexed mutual funds or,ETFs,.,T,ransfer alpha from the sector where you find it to the asset class in which you ultimately establish exposure.,8,Pure Play Example,You manage a $1.2 million portfolio.,You believe alpha is 0 and that the market is about to fall.,So you establish a pure play on the mispricing.,The return on your portfolio is:,9,Pure Play Example,Suppose beta is 1.2, alpha is 2%, the risk-free rate is 1%, and the S&P 500 (S,0,) = 1,152.,You want to capture the 2% alpha per month, but you dont want the positive beta of the stock because of an expected market decline.,Hedge your exposure by selling S&P 500 futures contracts. (S&P multiplier = $250),10,Pure Play Example,After 1 month, the value of your portfolio will be:,11,Pure Play Example,The dollar proceeds from your futures position will be:,Hedged proceeds = $1,236,000 + $1,200,000 x,e,Beta is zero and your monthly return is 3%.,12,Figure 26.1 A Pure Play, Unhedged Position; Hedged Position,13,Style Analysis: Factor Exposure,Many hedge funds have directional strategies in which the fund makes an outright bet.,A directional fund will have significant betas on the factors on which it bets.,14,Style Analysis: Factor Exposure,Market-neutral funds,have insignificant betas.,Dedicated short bias funds,exhibit substantial negative betas on the S&P index.,Distressed firm funds,have significant exposure to credit conditions.,Global macro funds,show negative exposure to a stronger U.S. dollar.,15,Liquidity and Hedge Fund Performance,Hedge funds tend to hold more illiquid assets than other institutional investors.,Aragon: Typical alpha may actually be an equilibrium liquidity premium rather than a sign of stock-picking ability.,Hasanhodzic and Lo: Hedge fund returns have serial correlation, a sign of liquidity problems. This biases the Sharpe ratios upward.,16,Figure 26.2 Hedge Funds with Higher Serial Correlation in Returns,17,Liquidity and Hedge Fund Performance,Sadka: Unexpected declines in market liquidity are an important determinant of average hedge fund returns.,Santa effect,: Hedge funds report average returns in December that are substantially greater than their average returns in other months.,The December spike in returns is stronger for lower-liquidity funds, suggesting that illiquid assets are more generously valued in December.,18,Figure 26.3 Average Hedge Fund Returns as a Function of Liquidity Risk,19,Hedge Fund Performance and Survivorship Bias,Backfill bias:,Hedge funds report returns only if they choose to and they may do so only when their prior performance is good.,Survivorship bias:,Failed funds drop out of the database,Hedge fund attrition rates are more than double those for mutual funds.,20,Hedge Fund Performance and Changing Factor Loadings,Hedge funds are designed to be opportunistic and may frequently change their risk profiles.,If risk is not constant, alphas will be biased if a standard, linear index model is used.,21,Figure 26.4 Characteristic Line of a Perfect Market Timer,22,Figure 26.4 Characteristic Lines of Stock Portfolio with Written Options,23,Conclusions,The ability to perfectly time the market give the fund a nonlinear characteristic line, similar to holding a call option. The fund has greater sensitivity to the market when it is rising.,Funds that write options have greater sensitivity to the market when it is falling than when it is rising.,Nonlinear characteristic lines suggest many hedge funds are implicit option writers.,24,Figure 26.6 Monthly return on hedge fund indexes versus return on the S&P 500,25,Black Swans and Hedge Fund Performance,Nassim Taleb:,Many hedge funds rack up fame through strategies that make money most of the time, but expose investors to rare but extreme losses,Examples:,The October 1987 crash,Long Term Capital Management,26,Fee Structure in Hedge Funds,2% of assets plus an incentive fee equal to 20% of investment profits:,Incentive fees are effectively call options on the portfolio with:,X =(portfolio value)* (1 + benchmark return),The manager gets the fee if the portfolio value rises sufficiently, but loses nothing if it falls.,27,Figure 26.7 Incentive Fees as a Call Option,28,Fee Structure in Hedge Funds,High water mark:,The fee structure can give incentives to shut down a poorly performing fund.,If a fund experiences losses, it may not be able to charge an incentive unless it recovers to its previous higher value.,With deep losses, this may be too difficult so the fund closes.,29,Funds of Funds,Funds that invest in one or more other hedge funds. Also called “feeder funds”.,A way to diversify across many hedge funds.,Supposed to provide due diligence in screening funds for investment worthiness.,Madoff scandal showed that these advantages are not always realized in practice.,30,Funds of Funds,Optionality can have a big impact on expected fees.,Fund of funds pays an incentive fee to each underlying fund that outperforms its benchmark even if the aggregate performance is poor.,Diversification can actually hurt the investor in this case.,31,Funds of Funds,Spread risk across several different funds,Investors need to be aware that these funds of funds operate with considerable leverage.,If the various hedge funds in which these funds of funds invest have similar investment styles, diversification may illusory.,32,Example 26.6 Incentive Fees in Funds of Funds,A fund of funds has $1 million invested in three hedge funds,Hurdle rate for the incentive fee is a zero return,Each fund charges an incentive fee of 20%,The aggregate portfolio of the fund of funds is -5%,Still pays incentive fees of $.12 for every $3 invested,Fund 1,Fund 2,Fund 3,Fund of Funds,Start of year (millions),$1.00,$1.00,$1.00,$3.00,End of year (millions),$1.20,$1.40,$0.25,$2.85,Gross rate of return,20%,40%,-75%,-5%,Incentive fee (millions),$0.04,$0.08,$0.00,$0.12,End of year, net of fee,$1.16,$1.32,$.25,$2.73,Net rate of return,16%,32%,-75%,-9%,33,
展开阅读全文
相关资源
正为您匹配相似的精品文档
相关搜索

最新文档


当前位置:首页 > 商业管理 > 商业计划


copyright@ 2023-2025  zhuangpeitu.com 装配图网版权所有   联系电话:18123376007

备案号:ICP2024067431-1 川公网安备51140202000466号


本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。装配图网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知装配图网,我们立即给予删除!