Thursday, December 22, 2011

Regulated Hedge Funds: UCITS and Mutual Funds

SEI published a white paper on the growth of alternative investments called Regulated Alternative Funds: The New Conventional.  Because of the credit crisis of 2008 and the current Eurozone crisis, more and more investors have clamoring to be able to invest in alternative investments to lower downside volatility and offer returns uncorrelated with long-only mutual funds. In the first 8 months of 2011, $61 billion flowed into these investments. $22 billion (39% of all investment capital) were invested UCITS funds. There are now more than 1,500 UCITS funds managing $254 billion. $39 billion were invested through US mutual funds and ETFs. They now compose 4.4% of mutual fund assets and are growing at a 17% rate since 2007 when they were 2.2% of mutual fund assets. There are approximately 730 of them with 118 launched in 2011. Mutual fund families such as Ategris, BlackRock, PIMCO, Nuveen and First Eagle have funds that invest in traditional hedge fund strategies such as managed futures, long/short, credit, commodities, arbitrage and absolute return fixed income.

Internationally, they are constructed in an evolving vehicle known as Undertaking for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities (UCITS). Success has brought on investors. There are established funds with good returns, transparent investment and risk management strategies, and strong brands. The largest fund is the Standard Life Investments Global Absolute Return Strategies with $13.6 billion in assets under management. Other large funds include Julius Baer BF Absolute Return, Newton Real Return, JP Morgan Income Opportunity and PIMCO GIS Unconstrained Bond.

Within the US, they are launched within mutual fund families and ETFs. The largest are, in order of size, the SPR Gold Shares ETF, PIMCO Commodity Real Return Strategy, Ivy Asset Strategy, and iShares Silver and Gold Trusts. For investors, both structures offer more transparent risk management, liquidity, counter party diversification and limits on leverage. Investors are seeking better returns, lower volatility and to protect capital. Mutual fund families are aggressively marketing to and educating investors and registered investment advisors through white papers, instructional videos, fact sheets, regulatory filings and road shows.

Mutual funds are seeking to increase their fee structure. Alternative asset managers are seeking to have a more varied investor base.

When new products are launched, rules are reviewed. They are on the third iteration for UCITS. In the US, the SEC has stopped approving new funds and ETFs to review the effects of derivatives on portfolios. Within Europe, Luxembourg and Ireland are expecting to conform with UCITS regulations with the bonus of having additional flexibility. This may make them preferable to certain investment strategies and investors.

Demand is growing from sovereign wealth and national pension funds in Asia, Latin America and the Middle East and US institutional, high net worth and retail investors.

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