Smart Money Turns Dumb With Wrong Bets, Bad Timing By Frank Byrt
Hedge funds saw
inflows of $3.6 billion in November, a turnaround from prior months.
BOSTON (TheStreet) -- Hedge funds, the purported "smart money" of investing, got clobbered in 2011, underperforming the benchmark S&P 500 Index after being whipsawed by virtually all assets classes most of the year.
The funds, which manage money on behalf of wealthy investors and institutions such as pension funds,
rose 2% through mid-year, besting the benchmark. But most turned conservative during a tumultuous third quarter due to uncertainties over Europe's debt crisis, the downgrade of the U.S.'s credit rating and political turmoil in some of the biggest oil-producing countries.
That resulted in those funds ending the period
down an average of 7.8%. Their conservative bent may have contributed to
many missing out on the rally in stocks in October that continued for most of the fourth quarter, when the S&P 500 gained 11.8%.
With many hedge funds still to report their December results, hedge fund tracker eVestment/HFN reports that an early, extrapolated estimate puts its HFN Aggregate Index, which tracks the results of more than 4,000 such funds, at a
flat performance for December for all types of hedge funds, resulting in a
loss of 5% for 2011, while hedge funds that focused strictly on stocks did even worse, losing 7.2%.
In contrast, the S&P 500 closed out the year little changed.
According to eVestment/HFN data, hedge fund industry
assets peaked at $2.04 trillion at the end of the second quarter, before tumbling in the third quarter amid market losses, but it ended the year at about $2 trillion. That statistic is influenced by investor fund flows as well as investment performance.
Despite their dismal performance in 2011, the latest TrimTabs/BarclayHedge Survey of Hedge Fund Managers found that by late December, "a growing numbers of fund managers were
becoming more bullish and less bearish on U.S. equities." Bullish sentiment toward the S&P 500, which was 31% in November, increased to 42% in December, the second-highest level this year, while "bearish sentiment dropped to 30%, the lowest reading since July 2011, from 36% in November, the survey showed.
That same firm reported that hedge funds saw an inflow of an estimated $3.6 billion in November, after
redemptions of $9 billion in October and
$2.6 billion in September.
http://www.thestreet.com/story/11363517 ... iming.html
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"