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Quantitative Analysis
Related Scholarly Compositions
See also:
Quantitative
Analysis Related News,
Quantitative
Analysis Related Books,
or
Quantitative Analysis Home Page.
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Hedge Funds Investing: A
Quantitative Look Inside the Black Box
by François-Serge Lhabitant
August 2001
Abstract
There is an increasing amount of evidence that shows
the benefits of considering hedge funds as an asset class at the
strategic asset allocation level. The investors’ greatest
challenge remains the identification of desirable investment
vehicles, since very little formal quantitative analysis of
hedge funds has been done in the past. In this paper, we suggest
an innovative approach to hedge fund investing, which is valid
at the individual fund level as well as at the aggregate
portfolio level (e.g. portfolio of hedge funds)...
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Quantitative Analysis of Hedge
Fund and Managed Futures Return and Risk Characteristics
by Thomas
Schneeweis & Richard Spurgin
University of Massachusetts & Clark University
Abstract
Recent research has shown that, for stock and bond mutual fund
investors, multi-factor models often provide improved
explanatory power regarding the return structure of these
investment vehicles. While the sources of return to actively
managed assets in the mutual fund industry have been extensively
studied, little research exists on the factors explaining the
performance of managed futures investment or hedge funds. Hedge
funds and commodity trading advisors have different trading
styles and trading opportunities than traditional stock and bond
mutual fund managers...
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A Quantitative Analysis of Hedge
Fund Style and Performance
by Claus
Bang, Christiansen Peter, Brink Madsen, & Michael Christensen
Aarhus School of Business
Abstract
In this analysis we identify dynamic hedge fund strategies
quantitatively pursuing a Principal Component Analysis following
Fung & Hsieh (1997). We extract five
dominant hedge fund strategies each representing similar
investment styles and analyse the performance of each strategy
by employing a multi-factor model comprising both market indices
and passive option strategies along the lines of Agerwal & Naik
(2000). We find that that such passive option strategies play an
important role in explaining hedge fund returns...
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Quantitative Selection of
Long-Short Hedge Funds
by Kaifeng Chen & Alexander Passow
University of Lausanne, GOTTEX, and FAME
July, 2003
Abstract
We
develop a quantitative model to select hedge funds in the
long-short equity sector. The selection strategy is verified on
a survivorship-bias-free hedge fund database, from January 1990
to September 2002. We focus on the hedge funds acting
exclusively in the U.S. market. We identify Fama-French factors
and GSCI as the risk factors. Based on the evidence that many
hedge funds do not exhibit persistent performance, we believe
that persistent alpha is not generated based on publicly
available information and opportunistic changes of exposure with
respect to the risk factors. Instead we expect moderate exposure
funds to be those who establish investment decisions based on
special information or proprietary research. A hedge fund
selection strategy is introduced and checked with out-of-sample
data. A simulation of hedge funds from 1927 to 2002 is
conducted. The funds selected according to our strategy
demonstrate superior performance persistently.
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Back to Scholarly Compositions
See also:
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Analysis Related News,
Quantitative
Analysis Related Books,
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Quantitative Analysis Home Page.
| HEDGE FUND RISK AND OTHER
DISCLOSURES |
Hedge funds, including fund of funds (“Hedge
Funds”), are unregistered private investment partnerships, funds or
pools that may invest and trade in many different markets,
strategies and instruments (including securities, non-securities and
derivatives) and are NOT subject to the same regulatory requirements
as mutual funds, including mutual fund requirements to provide
certain periodic and standardized pricing and valuation information
to investors. There are substantial risks in investing in Hedge
Funds. Persons interested in investing in Hedge Funds should
carefully note the following:
- Hedge Funds represent speculative investments and involve a
high degree of risk. An investor could lose all or a substantial
portion of his/her investment. Investors must have the financial
ability, sophistication/experience and willingness to bear the
risks of an investment in a Hedge Fund.
- An investment in a Hedge Fund should be discretionary capital
set aside strictly for speculative purposes.
- An investment in a Hedge Fund is not suitable or desirable for
all investors. Only qualified eligible investors may invest in
Hedge Funds.
- Hedge Fund offering documents are not reviewed or approved by
federal or state regulators
- Hedge Funds may be leveraged (including highly leveraged) and
a Hedge Fund’s performance may be volatile
- An investment in a Hedge Fund may be illiquid and there may be
significant restrictions on transferring interests in a Hedge
Fund. There is no secondary market for an investor’s investment in
a Hedge Fund and none is expected to develop.
- A Hedge Fund may have little or no operating history or
performance and may use hypothetical or pro forma performance
which may not reflect actual trading done by the manager or
advisor and should be reviewed carefully. Investors should not
place undue reliance on hypothetical or pro forma performance.
- A Hedge Fund’s manager or advisor has total trading authority
over the Hedge Fund.
- A Hedge Fund may use a single advisor or employ a single
strategy, which could mean a lack of diversification and higher
risk.
- A Hedge Fund (for example, a fund of funds) and its managers
or advisors may rely on the trading expertise and experience of
third-party managers or advisors, the identity of which may not be
disclosed to investors
- A Hedge Fund may involve a complex tax structure, which should
be reviewed carefully.
- A Hedge Fund may involve structures or strategies that may
cause delays in important tax information being sent to investors.
- A Hedge Fund may provide no transparency regarding its
underlying investments (including sub-funds in a fund of funds
structure) to investors. If this is the case, there will be no way
for an investor to monitor the specific investments made by the
Hedge Fund or, in a fund of funds structure, to know whether the
sub-fund investments are consistent with the Hedge Fund’s
investment strategy or risk levels.
- A Hedge Fund may execute a substantial portion of trades on
foreign exchanges or over-the-counter markets, which could mean
higher risk.
- A Hedge Fund’s fees and expenses-which may be substantial
regardless of any positive return- will offset the Hedge Fund’s
trading profits. In a fund of funds or similar structure, fees are
generally charged at the fund as well as the sub-fund levels;
therefore fees charged investors will be higher that those charged
if the investor invested directly in the sub-fund(s).
- Hedge Funds are not required to provide periodic pricing or
valuation information to investors.
- Hedge Funds and their managers/advisors may be subject to
various conflicts of interest.
The above general
summary is not a complete list of the risks and other important
disclosures involved in investing in Hedge Funds and, with respect
to any particular Hedge Fund, is subject to the more complete and
specific disclosures contained in such Hedge Fund’s respective
offering documents. Before making any investment, an investor should
thoroughly review a Hedge Fund’s offering documents with the
investor’s financial, legal and tax advisor to determine whether an
investment in the Hedge Fund is suitable for the investor in light
of the investor’s investment objectives, financial circumstances and
tax situation.
All performance information is believed
to be net of applicable fees unless otherwise specifically noted. No
representation is made that any fund will or is likely to achieve
its objectives or that any investor will or is likely to achieve
results comparable to those shown or will make any profit at all or
will be able to avoid incurring substantial losses. Past performance
is not necessarily indicative, and is no guarantee, of future
results.
The information on the Site is intended for
informational, educational and research purposes only. Nothing on
this Site is intended to be, nor should it be construed or used as,
financial, legal, tax or investment advice, be an opinion of the
appropriateness or suitability of an investment, or intended to be
an offer, or the solicitation of any offer, to buy or sell any
security or an endorsement or inducement to invest with any fund or
fund manager. No such offer or solicitation may be made prior to the
delivery of appropriate offering documents to qualified investors.
Before making any investment, you should thoroughly review the
particular fund’s confidential offering documents with your
financial, legal and tax advisor and conduct such due diligence as
you (and they) deem appropriate. We do not provide investment advice
and no information or material on the Site is to be relied upon for
the purpose of making investment or other decisions. Accordingly, we
assume no responsibility or liability for a ny investment decisions
or advice, treatment, or services rendered by any investor or any
person or entity mentioned, featured on or linked to the Site.
The information on this Site is as of the date(s) indicated,
is not a complete description of any fund, and is subject to the
more complete disclosures and terms and conditions contained in a
particular fund's offering documents, which may be obtained directly
from the fund. Certain of the information, including investment
returns, valuations, fund targets and strategies, has been supplied
by the funds or their agents, and other third parties, and although
believed to be reliable, has not been independently verified and its
completeness and accuracy cannot be guaranteed. No warranty, express
or implied, representation or guarantee is made as to the accuracy,
validity, timeliness, completeness or suitability of this
information.
Any indices and other financial benchmarks
shown are provided for illustrative purposes only, are unmanaged,
reflect reinvestment of income and dividends and do not reflect the
impact of advisory fees. Investors cannot invest directly in an
index. Comparisons to indexes have limitations because indexes have
volatility and other material characteristics that may differ from a
particular hedge fund. For example, a hedge fund may typically hold
substantially fewer securities than are contained in an index.
Indices also may contain securities or types of securities that are
not comparable to those traded by a hedge fund. Therefore, a hedge
fund’s performance may differ substantially from the performance of
an index. Because of these differences, indexes should not be relied
upon as an accurate measure of comparison.
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