Mail & Guardian

Financial consumers back hedge funds for better

The SA hedge funds industry is gaining popularity among a broader range of consumers due to increased regulatory oversight

- By Gareth Stokes

Hedge funds, once the preserve of high net worth (HNW) individual and institutio­nal investors are gaining favour across a broader cross section of the consumer market thanks, in part, to greater regulatory oversight. Local consumers are pouring billions of rand into the asset class for its dual-benefit of downside protection from financial market contagion and consistent longterm returns.

Figures from the Associatio­n for Savings and Investment South Africa (ASISA) illustrate the popularity of the asset class, with total assets under management (AUM) in the hedge fund sector topping R137.9 billion by the end of December 2023. The sector attracted a record R6.24 billion in investment inflows in 2023 (2022 R4.54 billion) as the domestic hedge fund universe grew to 213 funds, managed by 11 licensed fund managers.

“The latest 12-month cash flows indicate hedge funds are being accepted as an important investment tool in mitigating financial market volatility,” says Hayden Reinders, convenor of the ASISA Hedge Funds Standing Committee. He welcomes the stronger uptake of hedge funds, especially among retail investors.

South Africa’s financial consumers may be familiar with unit trust funds, today called Collective Investment Schemes (CIS) portfolios – which appeared on the local investment scene in June 1965 – and have since grown to R3.498 trillion in AUM across 1 832 local portfolios. Hedge funds have some way to go to catch up.

“A hedge fund is similar to a unit trust fund but has broader discretion in terms of the types of investment­s the fund manager can pursue, and the set of tools that can be employed by the manager to generate returns and manage risk,” says Alan Yates, Head of Distributi­on at Peregrine Capital. He notes that hedge fund managers can invest in the same asset classes available to traditiona­l unit trust managers, but unlike in unit trusts, they can extract positive performanc­e in both upward- and downward-trending markets.

Hedge funds struggled to gain acceptance locally between their introducti­on in the midto-late

1990s and 2015 when the asset class finally caught the financial conduct regulator’s attention. “In 2015, new regulation­s allowed for hedge funds to fall under the country’s Collective Investment­s Schemes Control Act (CISCA) and be formally registered as CIS portfolios with the Financial Services Conduct Authority (FSCA),” says Kim Zietsman, Head: of Business Developmen­t at Laurium Capital.

South Africa was among the first countries to implement comprehens­ive regulation­s for hedge fund products, creating a strong ‘pull’ for investors’ capital. Amendments to regulation 28 of the Pension Funds Act, effective from January 2023, have helped too. These amendments differenti­ated between hedge funds and private equity investment­s, allowing retirement funds to allocate up to 10% of members’ capital to the former asset class.

The 2015 regulation­s also opened the market to individual (or retail) consumers by creating two regulated hedge fund structures. The first, suitable for HNW individual­s and institutio­nal investors is referred to as a Qualified Investor (QI) fund, which has a regulatory minimum investment size of R1 million per investor, and has a wider allowable range for measures like gross exposure, position concentrat­ion and leverage.

The second called the Retail Investor (RI) fund, has no regulatory minimum investment size and is therefore more widely available to the lay investor. “Retail funds have stricter limitation­s on maximum levels of gross exposure and position concentrat­ion, among other features, to give retail investors more comfort around the risk management framework of the investment,” says Yates.

His observatio­ns are seconded by Emma Pretorius, Investor Relations at Amplify Investment Partners. “Retail hedge funds are more strictly regulated by the FSCA in order to protect investors; the regulator has put in place limits on the amount of leverage that these managers can use, resulting in strategies that are generally less risky than their qualified counterpar­ts,” she says.

So, how do hedge funds work? ASISA reports on the local hedge fund industry under four fund types including SA Long Short Equity; SA Fixed Income; SA Multi-strategy and SA Other. Around a third of the sector’s assets are held in RI funds which have become more accessible to retail investors due to the aforementi­oned regulatory actions and the fact that more investment platforms now offer them.

Long Short Equity funds are portfolios that predominan­tly generate their returns by pairing long positions on equities with short selling to benefit from both rises and drops in market prices. Although Long Short Equity dominates the rankings by AUM, the SA Multi-strategy funds have proved popular among both retail and qualified investors measured by net fund flows in 2023.

“Multi-strategy hedge funds are portfolios that do not rely on a single asset class to generate investment opportunit­ies, but instead blend various strategies and asset classes, with no single asset class dominating over time,” Reinders says. Regardless of the overarchin­g hedge fund strategy, the challenge facing fund managers is to leverage the unique tools at their disposal to maximise the risk-return balance to investors.

The ability to engage in short selling – whereby one profits from a decline in share prices – is arguably the most popular tool. “Most unit trusts strive to outperform a benchmark, whereas hedge funds can focus on generating absolute returns, delivering positive returns to clients irrespecti­ve of how the broader market performs,” Yates says. The ability to ‘short’ a share opens the door to a range of investment strategies.

“Hedge funds receive cash in return for the shares they sell short, and can deploy this cash to buy stocks that they expect to rise in value, a mechanism called leverage; traditiona­l unit trust managers cannot do this,” says Busi Ngqondoyi, Old Mutual Multi-manager’s head of hedge funds. She notes that hedge fund managers

can also use derivative­s such as futures and options contracts, though this is for the purpose of efficient portfolio management rather than to enhance returns.

Fund managers use words and phrases like diversific­ation, low correlatio­n, return drivers and volatility reduction to explain the benefits in hedge funds. “These funds have the ability to generate uncorrelat­ed returns for investors,” Yates says. The flexible investment strategies that hedge funds employ – including derivative­s, leverage and long-short positions – mean they are not overly-dependent on a rising market to generate returns.

Commenting on volatility reduction, Yates notes that hedge funds “can protect investor capital by not participat­ing fully in market drawdowns”. Put differentl­y, these funds allow investors, guided by their financial advisers, to implement protection against falling markets; reduce market or sector exposure; and offer another point of return generation.

“Hedge funds should technicall­y be able to outperform all types of markets, but they usually excel when there is a spike in volatility,” says Henko Haasbroek, Client Director at Ninety One. In his view, common benefits of hedge funds include better risk-adjusted returns; downside protection; and lower volatility. These funds also offer bi-directiona­l returns in that they can make money whether the market goes up or down.

Pretorius offers a slightly different benefits explainer, noting that hedge funds generally employ either return-enhancing or risk-mitigating strategies. “Return enhancers generally are more correlated to markets and have greater exposure to the market; while these funds should give you returns in excess of the market, they will not materially reduce the risk in your portfolio,” she says.

A hedge fund is similar to a unit trust fund but has broader discretion in terms of the types of investment­s the fund manager can pursue

In contrast, risk mitigating strategies are generally uncorrelat­ed to market indices and consequent­ly offer reduced portfolio volatility, drawdowns and (in some cases) increased compounded returns. “There is a place for both strategies in investor portfolios, but it is important that investors have a clear idea of what they are aiming to achieve when selecting hedge fund strategies to invest in,” Pretorius says.

The caveat is for retail investors to seek assistance from their financial advisers before simply piling into a broad cross section of hedge fund strategies and types.

“Investment tools like derivative­s, leveraging and short selling allow hedge fund managers to extract positive performanc­e in upward trending markets and protect investors’ capital during downward trending markets,” says Zietsman, adding that low correlatio­ns to traditiona­l CIS funds make hedge funds a good portfolio diversifie­r.

Zietsman also offers two reasons why hedge fund managers enjoy a high degree of flexibilit­y in managing investors’ capital: first, thanks to

the strategies and tools they employ, and second due to the relatively smaller size of hedge funds. “Smaller funds have the ability to be nimble, react faster to informatio­n and take more meaningful positions in mid-and small-cap stocks,” she says.

There are some drawbacks to hedge funds that investors should keep in mind. “While hedge funds offer compelling benefits on a net of fees basis, the fees charged can be a bit high for many investors,” Ngqondoyi says. “This is particular­ly so following periods where hedge funds have delivered strong performanc­e relative to other asset classes and therefore charge performanc­e fees.”

 ?? ?? Alan Yates, Head of Distributi­on at Peregrine Capital
Alan Yates, Head of Distributi­on at Peregrine Capital
 ?? ?? Kim Zietsman, Head of Business Developmen­t at Laurium Capital
Kim Zietsman, Head of Business Developmen­t at Laurium Capital
 ?? ?? Emma Pretorius, Investor Relations at Amplify Investment Partners
Emma Pretorius, Investor Relations at Amplify Investment Partners

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