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The new Roadmap to Hedge Funds, published jointly by AIMA and Deutsche Bank, outlines how the volatile external environment has driven an ever greater need for active risk management. In re-affirming the case for investing in hedge funds, the Roadmap highlights how the industry responded swiftly to the losses of 2008. The average hedge fund recovered from its 2008 losses by October 2010, in contrast with global equities which are not expected to recover their financial crisis losses until at least 2015.
Other highlights from the Roadmap to Hedge Funds include:
The original edition of the Roadmap to Hedge Funds was published in 2008, and was the world’s first collaborative educational guide for institutional investors in hedge funds. It de-mystified the industry by tackling misconceptions. It offered guidance on creating and managing a hedge fund portfolio and gave an in-depth view of hedge fund strategies, valuation, leverage, liquidity and risk management.
The updated Roadmap to Hedge Funds was also authored by Alexander Ineichen, founder of Ineichen Research and Management (IR&M).
Andrew Baker, AIMA’s CEO, said: “AIMA has always worked closely with the investor community to promote greater understanding of hedge funds. We are not pretending that the last four years have been easy for the industry, but if anything in difficult times like this the case for assets to be actively managed by specialised managers with a variety of tools at their disposal is even more compelling.”
Anita Nemes, Global Head of Capital Introduction at Deutsche Bank, said: “Not only has the hedge fund industry undergone a rapid transformation over the past four years, but attitudes to hedge fund investing have changed just as much. An increasingly institutional investor base brings with it a new set of client demands, including greater transparency and improved reporting and risk management. The Roadmap to Hedge Funds provides the analysis and voice behind these fundamental changes to the industry.”
Alexander Ineichen, founder of IR&M, said: “The main differentiation between hedge funds and traditional asset management is risk management. Over the past four years, an active risk management stance has resulted in a reduction of risk. The reason for more conservative risk taking is mainly a rise in uncertainty related to artificially enhanced asset prices and other forms of intervention. The modest returns of hedge funds over the past four years are a direct result of taking less risk. In essence, hedge funds have done what they are designed to do, which is take risk off the table when uncertainty rises.”