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Hedge Fund Facts and Figures

   Estimated to be a $1.1 trillion industry and growing every year, with approximately 9000 active hedge funds.
  Includes a variety of investment strategies, some of which use leverage and derivatives while others are more conservative and employ little or no leverage. Many hedge fund strategies seek to reduce market risk specifically by shorting equities or derivatives.
Most hedge funds are highly specialized, relying on the specific expertise of the manager or management team.
Performance of many hedge fund strategies, particularly relative value strategies, is not dependent on the direction of the bond or equity markets -- unlike conventional equity or mutual funds (unit trusts), which are generally 100% exposed to market risk.
  Many hedge fund strategies, particularly arbitrage strategies, are limited as to how much capital they can successfully employ before returns diminish. As a result, many successful hedge fund managers limit the amount of capital they will accept.
Hedge fund managers are generally highly professional, disciplined and diligent.
Their returns over a sustained period of time have outperformed standard equity and bond indexes with less volatility and less risk of loss than equities.

 

  Over the past ten years, the typical individual hedge fund has produced risk adjusted
returns that are quite similar to the typical mutual fund manager. However, individual
hedge funds have realized a much wider range of performance compared with mutual funds.
• Indexes of hedge funds tend to display risk-adjusted performance superior to traditional
active managers and passive benchmarks.
 Volatility of hedge fund indexes is typically much lower than that of mutual fund
indexes and equity benchmarks. This is because of the low correlation among individual
hedge funds.
• The performance of hedge fund indexes can be closely approximated with a portfolio of as
few as 20 hedge funds, suggesting a pooled fund-of-funds approach as a viable alternative
investment strategy.
• Hedge fund portfolios also exhibit a low correlation with traditional asset classes, suggesting
that hedge funds should play an important role in strategic asset allocation.
 We illustrate the efficacy of hedge funds for typical pension and endowment funds using
MSDW’s asset-liability modeling framework.
• Evidence points to continued success for hedge fund managers.
– Historical performance of hedge funds appears to be based on the exploitation of market
inefficiencies. Due to the expected growth in the supply of these inefficiencies, the advantages
of hedge fund investments are not likely to diminish soon. Risk: Investors should be well-informed of the actual risks of any prospective investment, and also consider how the addition of this risk will affect their portfolio as a whole. Interestingly enough, the addition of various types of risk that are uncorrelated with, or dissimilar to, other kinds of risk in the portfolio, may well have the effect of reducing overall risk. This is one of the central objectives of diversifying into hedge funds.

   Fees and expenses: Investors should determine the actual costs of the investment. Generally, a hedge fund charges a management fee and an “incentive fee,â€