Werbung
Deutsche Märkte schließen in 45 Minuten
  • DAX

    17.738,00
    -99,40 (-0,56%)
     
  • Euro Stoxx 50

    4.924,07
    -12,50 (-0,25%)
     
  • Dow Jones 30

    37.975,66
    +200,28 (+0,53%)
     
  • Gold

    2.401,70
    +3,70 (+0,15%)
     
  • EUR/USD

    1,0676
    +0,0030 (+0,28%)
     
  • Bitcoin EUR

    60.451,17
    +650,47 (+1,09%)
     
  • CMC Crypto 200

    1.365,38
    +52,76 (+4,19%)
     
  • Öl (Brent)

    83,21
    +0,48 (+0,58%)
     
  • MDAX

    25.997,04
    -192,40 (-0,73%)
     
  • TecDAX

    3.186,54
    -24,30 (-0,76%)
     
  • SDAX

    13.930,79
    -101,58 (-0,72%)
     
  • Nikkei 225

    37.068,35
    -1.011,35 (-2,66%)
     
  • FTSE 100

    7.878,61
    +1,56 (+0,02%)
     
  • CAC 40

    8.027,99
    +4,73 (+0,06%)
     
  • Nasdaq Compositive

    15.465,91
    -135,59 (-0,87%)
     

The hedge fund industry has a 'real problem,' but it's not the one you think

Screen Shot 2016 07 26 at 11.57.59 AM
Screen Shot 2016 07 26 at 11.57.59 AM

(Rory Hills.RealVisionTV)

The hedge fund industry is struggling.

Poor performance, insider trading investigations, and the winding down of some marquee funds have marred the industry as of late and dominated headlines.

There is another problem, too, and it's one fewer people are talking about: all the money is going to a handful of funds, it is harder than ever to set up a new fund, and there is less diversity in the industry as a result.

Rory Hills, founder and partner of Hilltop Fund Management, touched on this in an interview with Raoul Pal of Real Vision TV.

Here's the relevant passage from the transcript:

WERBUNG

Pal: "One of the things I notice ... is that new managers, people who have a specific expertise, they can't raise any money, and so they die off not because they aren't very good at what they do — it is because they have to last five or six years to build a track record running $10 million, and they can't pay their bills. It is almost impossible to survive unless you come from pedigree or you knock the ball out of the park immediately and maybe do it two years in a row."

Hills: "It is a real problem, a real problem for the industry. What we need is more platforms, the old-school kind that existed before the crisis but don't exist so much anymore. Cheyne is still going. That type of platform I think we need more of. More people who have the apparatus, particularly in this increasingly regulated world — it is so expensive for people to set up a new fund. I think there is a real role for new platforms, who have all the regulatory stuff, all the compliance, all the infrastructure, all of that set up so people can come in and switch on a Bloomberg. That has to be combined with a decent seeding level."

There are a couple of reasons why this is happening. Investors tend to be more comfortable investing in vanilla funds that have already reached a certain size. Hills said this was partly a result of funds of funds, which invest in a variety of hedge funds, putting manager selection in the hands of junior analysts.

Raoul Pal
Raoul Pal

(Raoul Pal.Real Vision Television )

"I really believe that's the center of the problem," he said. "Junior analysts gravitate toward plain-vanilla-type strategies, relatively easy to understand, easy therefore to explain to investment committees. Sometimes these smaller, more niche managers are more complicated and not as easy to understand."

Hills has a reason to make this argument. He runs a fund of funds that avoids the big names and looks to put money in the other 90% of funds that don't get as much attention.

Still, the shift he is describing has long-term implications for the industry. Pal and Hills share the fear that the industry will "die" as people continue to allocate to the big managers and new managers with specific expertise can't survive.

"One household name over here," Hills said, "is of the view it will just go back to the way it was 30 years ago — 100 hedge funds with mostly high-net-worth-type individuals as investors."

NOW WATCH: 7 amazing maps that show how important Canada is



More From Business Insider