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Published byCatherine Pope Modified over 8 years ago
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Hedge Funds
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The Name Act as hedging mechanism Investing can hedge against something else Typically do well in bull or bear market
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Mutual Fund Group of investment vehicles Professionally managed Each shareholder gains or loses proportionally
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Sector Allocation
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Holdings
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Fees and Expenses
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Depletion of Returns
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Similarities and Differences
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Sources of Hedging Direct Hedge Cross Hedge Dynamic Hedge Static Hedge
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Direct Hedge Hedge one asset Use another asset that trades in a similar fashion Example: Call option hedge for equity position
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Optimal Hedge Ratio What you need: Portfolio Volatility Futures Volatility Correlation Coefficient Portfolio Value Contract Size Price
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Volatility and Correlation Portfolio and Futures Volatility Simply a measure of returns variance Correlation measures strength of relationship between returns of futures and equities
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Contract Size and Price Contract size simply number of shares futures contract represents Standard is 100 shares per futures contract Price is simply the cost per futures contract
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Optimal Ratio and Hedge The optimal ratio is simply the combination that minimizes volatility Found using the cross volatility and correlation (Denoted h*) The number of futures for optimal hedge is found using h* and the respective values of the contracts and the portfolio
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Optimal Hedge Ratio
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Cross Hedge Hedging instrument with unlike instrument Long preferred stocks Treasury futures as hedge (Tend to follow each other) Trace happens approximately 85% of the time
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Dynamic Hedge Similar to aforementioned hedges Constantly adjusted Can think of this as ongoing insurance for portfolio Regularly employed by hedge funds Adding or subtracting from existing hedge depending on market environment
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Static Hedge Simply call or put options Keep until maturity No future adjustment needed i.e. Hedging for the period until maturity
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Fund Strategies Market Neutral Convertible Arbitrage Fixed Income Arbitrage Distressed Securities Merger Arbitrage Hedged Equities Global Macro Emerging Markets Fund of Funds
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Market Neutral Attempt to identify over and undervalued securities Benchmark typically risk-free rate Neutralizes the portfolio’s exposure to market risk Combination of long and short position Usually have beta of zero Benchmark typically risk-free rate, due to beta
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Convertible Arbitrage Attempt to exploit mispricing in convertible securities Convertible bonds, convertible preferred stock, etc. Buy or sell these securities and then fully or partially hedge risk Make money Coupon on convertible bond Expected volatility of underlying asset increases Price of underlying asset increases
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Fixed Income Arbitrage Identify overvalued and undervalued fixed income In anticipation of changes in term structure of credit quality Generally neutralized against market risk due to long and short positions Duration is equal to zero
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Duration How long it takes, in years, for the price of a bond to be repaid by its internal cash flows Represents price sensitivity to IR changes Zero Coupon Bond – Duration equal to TTM Vanilla Bond – Duration < TTM
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Duration of Zero Coupon Bought at discount, full price paid out at end, no coupons Fulcrum represents where the price paid for the bond and the cash flows are equal
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Duration of Vanilla Bond Annual coupons, say 5 year maturity Last payment includes face value of bond
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Duration Formula
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Continuously Compounded
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Let’s Try an Example
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Bond Prices New bond prices can be easily assessed with duration Using the change in interest rate, duration, and present value
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Why is this important? Hedge funds constantly asses risk in fixed income arbitrage Duration risk is an important factor Higher duration means more duration risk Zero coupons have highest duration risk
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Distressed Securities Debt and Equity of companies near bankruptcy Legal risk is transferred from HNWI to hedge fund Many HNWI are prevented from investing in these types of companies Most funds long due to lack of liquidity
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Merger Arbitrage Captures price spread before and after transaction Acquisition, Merger, JV, Spin-Off Usual strategy Buying stock of target company Shorting stock of acquiring company
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Hedged Equity Attempt to identify overvalued and undervalued equity securities Not market neutral, many times very concentrated Usually have net long exposure to equity markets
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Global Macro Take advantage of systematic moves in global markets Concentrate on major market trends Managers many times use derivatives, options and futures
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Emerging Markets Focus on emerging and less mature markets Short selling is not permitted Most funds are long
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Fund of Funds Invests in a number of underlying hedge funds Typically more accessible to individual investors Greater liquidity Two layers of fees for investors Typically invest in 10-30 hedge funds Some are even more diversified
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AUM Growth
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Industry Trends 14-15
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Industry Breakdown
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Performance by Fund Type
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Leverage Ratios by Fund Type
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