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In general, hedge funds are not good investments. Combine the steep fees with
the fact that the overwhelming majority of fund managers underperform the market,
and the odds are stacked against the investor right from the start. Unless
you think you've found the next Warren Buffett, you would most likely be better
off investing on your own through index or exchange traded funds.
Fund managers know they need to post superior returns in order to justify
their fees as The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal have
spilled plenty of ink recently detailing the high fees resulting in several
freshly minted hedge fund billionaires over the last year. A recent Times article
quoted an investment advisor saying that he didn't mind paying the high fees
as long as the performance was there. That seems fair enough, but it reminds
us of an environment where baseball players were encouraged to use steroids
and other drugs in order to break home run records. Evidence has come out that
owners, coaches, players and reporters knew what was going on, but mouths were
kept shut for the good of the game in terms of television ratings. On Wall
Street, the steroid known as leverage is 100% legal and its use is encouraged
by investment banks and institutional investors all over the world.
Let's consider a hedge fund that is invested in a handful of widely-held large
cap stocks. Many components of the Standard & Poor's 500 are levered several
times their annual operating earnings, so let's say a fund manager's stocks
have an average of 3x leverage at the corporate level. Then let's assume that
the manager applies 3x leverage at the portfolio level. This actually seems
conservative given that we have read about several large funds using double-digit
leverage ratios in recent years. Next, let's assume that a handful of large
funds-of-funds (levered at 2x) comprise the investor base of the fund. Since
funds-of-funds often charge their own layer of fees, they are encouraged to
lever as well. Finally, the individual people that invest in funds-of-funds
often lever up themselves. We will assume an individual levers at 2x.

So when you do the multiplication math above, the leverage ratio of investor
capital to assets from top to bottom is an astonishing 36-to-1. This means
all you need is a 3% average drop in portfolio earnings and corresponding drop
in portfolio value and some select end investors could be wiped out in the
daisy chain of leverage as seen below.

To be fair, most hedge funds short a significant amount of stock, and these
positions would benefit from a market-wide decline in earnings. However, given
the strong stock market of recent years and days (the Dow is now up 23 of the
last 25 trading days), we think the temptation has clearly been to lessen money-losing
shorts to chase after ever-increasing longs. When the tide goes out, we may
find out that a lot of fund managers were swimming naked. In such a scenario,
it wouldn't take a tremendous downdraft to wreak a lot of havoc given the record
breaking amounts of leverage in the system.
The question may arise as to why we didn't see stories in the newspaper of
funds or notable individuals having problems when the Dow got hit for just
under 4% in a single day in February. The answer is that the short term drops
of several percent can largely be papered over in the short run by extensions
of further credit at brokerage houses and banks. Heck, we would argue that
many brokers and banks that have lent money have no clue as to the true value
of the collateral that is posted throughout the chain. Given that a wide range
of synthetic instruments, derivatives, and less liquid asset classes are often "marked
to model", it may take a number of months for the head-in-the-sand lenders
to realize their collateral is worth a lot less than a hedge fund's model.
We venture to guess that a sustained 10-15% drop in corporate
profits along with a corresponding drop in most stocks could set off a leverage
liquidation chain.
It's one thing to be willing to pay hefty hedge fund fees for outstanding
stock/asset picking performance. It's another thing to pay hedge fund fees
for mediocre performance juiced by leverage. We think a perfect storm is brewing
that may put a downward pressure on the vast majority of asset classes simultaneously.
Just as all asset classes have been going up together, they seem destined to
go down together as hefty valuations and disappearing liquidity prove a toxic
mix.
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