This week the latest hedge
fund performance results were released.
The New York Times blogged about this year’s performance numbers under
the header “For
Hedge Funds, Best First Half in 10 Years”.
Indeed, according to Hedge Fund Research, hedge funds returned an
average of 9.73 percent in returns year to date through June 24.
Not bad, but we thought it
would be instructive to compare those results against our own Hedge Fund Index
fund group. If you recall, this fund
group combines every hedge fund that AlphaClone tracks. We also have an Institutional
Investor Index group (combines institutional investors we track) and an AlphaClone Index
group (combines all funds we track). We created our index groups to be able to tap
the collective intelligence across entire “populations” of funds – hence the
term “index”.
We select the Top
Holding/50% Hedged clone for the Hedge Fund Index group as being fairly
representative of the group’s collective intelligence at least with respect to
long US
OK, enough set up – how does the clone perform? Year to date the clone is up nearly 14% to June 30. That’s 50% better than the numbers released by Hedge Fund Research! Since 2000, the clone has beat the S&P500 Total Return Index by 8.3 percentage points annualized (5.3% return for the clone vs. negative 3.0% for the index). We include the hedged clones’ annual performance numbers since 2000 below. Judge for yourself but we would suggest that “it’s good to be the smart money”.
HEDGE
FUND INDEX GROUP
TOP
HOLDING CLONE/50% HEDGED
As
of June 30, 2009
|
|
Top Holding |
S&P 500TR |
|
2000 |
4.30% |
-8.20% |
|
2001 |
1.50% |
-11.90% |
|
2002 |
-9.30% |
-22.10% |
|
2003 |
29.80% |
28.70% |
|
2004 |
16.90% |
10.90% |
|
2005 |
9.80% |
4.90% |
|
2006 |
16.40% |
15.80% |
|
2007 |
6.70% |
5.50% |
|
2008 |
-26.30% |
-37.00% |
|
2009 |
13.90% |
3.60% |