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Hedge Fund Performance In Q-1 Worst Since 2008

Hedge funds are under performing as per Bloomberg report below. 

Hedge funds posted their worst first-quarter results since 2008, according to financial data service Preqin, whose “All Hedge Fund Strategies” index shows a gain of 1.2 percent since the start of the year. That compares with a 1.8 percent total return for the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index through March 31. Hedge funds have badly trailed plain-vanilla equities over the past 12 months, gaining 8.53 percent vs. 19.32 percent for the S&P. In 2013, the gap between hedge funds and stocks was the widest since 2005.

Well, not this one. We were able to beat the pants off the market by 8.9% in Q-1 by implementing a very simple and risk averse strategy. From my vantage point it is too soon to judge the overall performance of hedge funds. The market must go through a down cycle before true hedge fund performance is revealed. The next 3 years will give us the opportunity to experience just that (The bear market of 2014-2017). If you are considering investing in a hedge fund, concentrate on the money manager first and the strategy/performance second. It will pay off in the long run. 

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Hedge Fund Performance In Q-1 Worst Since 2008 Google

Bloomberg: Hedge Funds Post Worst First-Quarter Results Since 2008

It’s time again for another installment of “Hedge Funds Are a Ripoff,” our longrunning series chronicling the asset class’s habit of underperforming far less exotic investments while charging more and limiting clients’ access to their own money.

Hedge funds posted their worst first-quarter results since 2008, according to financial data service Preqin, whose “All Hedge Fund Strategies” index shows a gain of 1.2 percent since the start of the year. That compares with a 1.8 percent total return for the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index through March 31. Hedge funds have badly trailed plain-vanilla equities over the past 12 months, gaining 8.53 percent vs. 19.32 percent for the S&P. In 2013, the gap between hedge funds and stocks was the widest since 2005.

Defenders of hedge funds often get exasperated when the asset class gets compared with stocks: The investments are not supposed to outperform equities when the market is on a tear, this argument goes—they operate complicated strategies thathedge against lots of contingencies, so that they do well in all types of weather. Well, nobody would call 2014 a bull market, and hedge funds aren’t exactly shining now, either

This chart shows first-quarter returns for the S&P, the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index, and the Global X Guru Index ETF, an exchange-traded fund that tries to recreate the performance of select hedge fund managers:

Long/short hedge funds, which bet on some stocks to rise and others to fall, may have missed a chance to create some separation during the market’s April slide. As technology stocks led the selloff, short sellers were nowhere to be found, Bloomberg reported April 14. Short interest in Facebook (FB), Netflix (NFLX), and other companies has plummeted to 1 percent or less, missing out on profiting from price declines approaching 20 percent. “Most people told me they’re scared to death to short,” John Thompson, the chief investment officer at hedge fund Vilas Capital Management, told Bloomberg. “They’re acting on fear instead of logic.” This kind of perfectly mistimed trading is supposed to be the hallmark of ordinary investors, not the hedge fund managers who command extravagant compensation for their supposed expertise