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Originally published by www.focuspointpress.com on
August 10, 2007.
CTA
ConfidentialSM
"An ongoing series of qualitative investigations
into managed futures trading programs"
CASE NO. 0309450
Conquest Capital Group LLC
Marc H. Malek, Principal
Managed Futures Select Fund
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT NECESSARILY INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS.
INVESTING IN FUTURES AND OPTIONS INVOLVES RISK AND MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR
ALL INVESTORS. THE HIGH DEGREE OF LEVERAGE THAT IS OFTEN OBTAINABLE IN COMMODITY
TRADING CAN WORK AGAINST YOU AS WELL AS FOR YOU. THE USE OF LEVERAGE CAN LEAD
TO LARGE LOSSES AS WELL AS GAINS. THEREFORE, INVESTORS SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER
THESE RISKS AND DETERMINE WHETHER THEY ARE SUITABLE FOR INVESTING IN LIGHT
OF THEIR FINANCIAL CONDITION AND INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES.
Conquest Capital Group LLC is the parent company of the Investment Manager
and Managing Member of Conquest Managed Futures Select Fund, a Rule 4.7 exempt
commodity pool. The fund, which has been registered since May 2001, was founded
by Marc H. Malek and Richard J. Silver. Earlier this year Mr. Silver sold
his membership interests and Proctor Investment Managers, a private equity
buyer of alternative and traditional asset managers, purchased an equity
stake. Mr. Malek continues to head up the operations and is the asset manager's
main intellect. Mr. Malek's career began at Salomon Brothers in 1992. From
there, he was hired in 1993 by KB Currency Advisors, a $400 million hedge
fund and financial advisory firm. In 1995, Mr. Malek joined UBS where he
held various senior level positions within the foreign exchange department
in New York, London and Tokyo. In the course of writing an article on Proctor
Investment Managers, Managed Account Research was afforded the opportunity
to interview Mr. Malek.
When Proctor Investment Managers, an $8 billion strategic private equity investor,
acquired a stake in Conquest Capital Group earlier this year, institutional
investors took notice. Conquest offers five investment vehicles specializing
in the trading of futures and FX markets globally, and is headed up by Marc
H. Malek who is backed by a strong quantitative team. But the key driver in
Proctor's investment decision had to do with Conquest's proprietary research
in the area of managed futures and beta replication strategies.
Hedge funds are in the business of selling 'alpha.' Increasingly, however,
sophisticated investors have been questioning the portion of hedge fund returns
attributable to alpha. Taking that line of thinking, the next logical question
is how to identify alpha if you don't have an appropriate beta against which
to measure certain types of alternative trading strategies?
"That's really the heart of the problem; the 500 lbs gorilla in the room," says
Malek, who started his career at Salomon Brothers and later joined UBS to become
worldwide head of its Exotic FX Derivatives Group as well as Executive Director
in charge of FX Proprietary Trading in Europe. "The whole notion of alpha is
kind of funny. My checking account has alpha to my hedge fund, and vice versa...
with positive expectancy, hopefully."
It started with Conquest being frequently asked by many of the fund-of-funds
what their alpha is. "I ran a derivatives trading desk at banks; no one ever
asked me about my alpha. So when I looked up the definition of alpha, it became
very evident that you cannot intelligently talk about alpha if you don't have
the right beta," says Malek.
With a mathematics degree from Reed College, an engineering and applied science
degree from Caltech and a background in neural networks, Malek and team set
about figuring out something that described their beta -- in an effort to determine
their alpha. When they applied it to the rest of the managed futures world,
they were surprised to see that it actually explained the returns of "virtually
every single trend following CTA [commodity trading advisor] with the exception
of a few," says Malek.
That research caught the attention of a major endowment at an Ivy League University,
which was trying to get a foothold in the CTA space. They asked Conquest to
build for them a beta program focused on managed futures trend following strategies. "There
are various sides of CTAs," explained Malek, "the space is overwhelmingly made
up of the trend followers, and then on the periphery you have a few people
that do different things."
The idea of hedge fund replication is a hotly debated one in both academic
and hedge fund circles, but the real action is in the rush to package these
so-called 'exotic beta' strategies. In the past year investment banks such
as Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Merrill Lynch have also introduced programs
designed to "replicate" hedge funds.
There are two questions provoking this new industry phenomenon. First, are
supposedly skill-based returns actually just a function of a particular investment
approach? Second, why should investors pay 2% management and 20% incentive
fees for a trading strategy that is replicable?
"There is a process that every fund within a sector is going through that
drives the correlations," explained Malek. "High correlation of all the hedge
funds in one sector means something. It means that they are all doing something
in common." Yet, while Malek believes that hedge fund replication is feasible,
he also thinks efforts such as factor modeling or pay-off distribution, which
some of these new hedge fund replication products are derived from, are doomed
to fail.
The factor modeling method uses a regression procedure to weight the component
factors and construct an algorithm with the goal of replicating a hedge fund
index. The approach was originally developed and documented in a series of
academic papers by William Fung, principal at Paradigm Financial Products,
and David Hsieh, Professor of Finance at Duke University.[1]
Harry Kat, professor of risk management at London's Cass Business School,
developed the method called 'pay-off distribution.' His approach "aims to provide
returns with predefined statistical properties." Unlike factor modeling which "attempts
to generate the same month-to-month returns" as a given fund or index, Professor
Kat is looking to produce "returns with the same statistical properties as
a given fund or index."[2]
Barclay Capital also recently launched its first hedge fund replication index
based on the idea of integrating what they considered the best of both approaches
above.[3]
However, Malek argues that these approaches are nothing more than back-fitting,
especially when done on a high number of variables. "You cannot take the crème
of returns, and have no idea how it was generated, plug it into a matrix, that
has the price of oil, stocks, currencies, and come out with some sort of multi-variable
equation that give you the weight of the factors historically which would have
generated these returns," he explains.
Conquest's approach, on the other hand, is based on what Malek says is a transparent
set of "extremely simple trading rules" purportedly suited to replicate, in
the case of its exotic beta product, a generic managed futures trend following
strategy. "You don't duplicate a strategy being an outsider," says Malek, "you
do it the same way that traders in that strategy are doing it... by knowing
as much about that strategy as the people who are doing it."
Not surprisingly, each of the proponents of these approaches -- factor modeling,
pay-off distribution and mechanical trading -- claim to best capture or replicate
the hedge fund strategy they compare themselves to. Conquest states that its
mechanical trading replication approach has resulted in it being approximately
90% correlated to the S&P managed futures index. Whereas, in the case of
factor modeling or pay-off distribution, back-fitting raises the specter of
optimization and makes these methods "very controversial" as far as Malek is
concerned. Interestingly, Conquest is not the first with a mechanical trading
index product; the concept actually dates back to 1988 with the MLM Index™,
a passive moving average futures index developed by Mount Lucas Management.[4]
Conquest's mechanical trading index/product, on the other hand, has only three
years of walk forward actual performance. This leaves open many questions,
including the veracity of making comparisons against composite hedge fund indices
(such as the S&P managed futures index), the validity of the trading methods
and the robustness of the parameters used to supposedly define the beta of
managed futures, as well as conflicts of interest that result when making claims
of having alpha in its other products using a beta index of their own creation.
In response, Malek states that with respect to the development of Conquest's
mechanical managed futures trend following system, "you cannot get any simpler
than what we have created. It doesn't have any other hard coded parameters.
It basically says that trend following happens anywhere between 5 to 200 days," he
explains. "We could spend two more hours talking about what makes a good back
test and what doesn't. What I can tell you is that this is not a theory anymore,
this is something that we have been running for over three years."
This answer is akin to relying on the statistical argument which points to
a thirty year track record of managed futures, and then claiming that returns
have been large enough for long enough that one cannot argue there is no source
of return. Yet, statistical corroboration does not necessarily indicate the
presence of something. Further, the standard argument against managed futures
is based on a simple premise -- if there were excess returns to speculative
capital in futures trading, then since the barriers to entry in this industry
are so low, so much capital would flow to this industry that returns would
be driven to zero over time -- that is, there is no beta to capture.
All said and done, by only charging a one percent management fee and no incentive
fee, it is obvious that Conquest's strategic objective is to become an exotic
beta juggernaut by producing exotic beta products for managed futures as well
as other alternative investment strategies. "What is interesting about it,
now we can allow people, to go long or short a trend following CTA," proposes
Malek launching into another cutting edge idea.
The industry has come a long way. "Unlike ten years ago when the hedge fund
space was somebody with a bright idea, and dealing with investors that put
their own money with you if they like what you said," Malek recalls, "over
the last ten years a lot of the risk that use to be taken at prop desks and
banks has been outsourced to hedge funds. Institutions like institutions. They
don't like two guys and a bright idea."
This is the basis for Conquest's involvement with Proctor Investment Managers. "I'm
not a marketer," says Malek, "I have a very quantitative background. They have
a very large distribution team that they plan on growing. Meanwhile, I can
bounce things off of their legal department; I can rely on them for seed money
for some new ideas. It gives us an association with a much larger institution.
That I think makes us more stable. It gives us more credibility."
With respect to their managed futures beta product, "if you look at it on
a gross basis, some of those trend following CTAs do actually provide some
alpha, but no one does after the two and twenty charge," explains Malek, adding
that he thinks "trend following by itself is a negative alpha proposition after
fees, the same way most mutual funds are negative alpha after fees." That's
why Conquest priced their Managed Futures Select Fund product at 1% management
fee for the first $250 million. Once that class is filled, however, they plan
to open the next class at 2%.
[Readers are reminded that the Conquest Managed Futures Select Fund is a commodity
pool and not a managed account product. Accordingly, prospective investors
should first carefully review Conquest's Private Placement Memorandum which
contains additional discussion of certain risk factors not described in this
article. In addition, the minimum initial capital contribution for a Series
1X Interest in this fund product is $250,000, subject to the discretion of
the Managing Member to establish different minimums in the future.]
"The market is very simple -- you have risk and return," says Malek. "Only
way one gets compensated is by assuming risk. Now every once in a blue moon,
you get somebody who knocks the cover off the ball and is a true star. But
ninety-nine percent of the time, you basically make the money the market is
willing to give you for assuming risk premium."
This article was written by Michael "Mack" Frankfurter and first
published by Focus Point Press, Inc. (Emerging
Manager Focus) under the title "What the Smart Money's Doing: Conquest Capital
Group." It is republished here by permission.
[1] The
following is a sample list of papers by William Fung and David Hsieh: Fung
and Hsieh (1997), "Empirical characteristics of dynamic trading strategies:
the case of hedge funds," Review of Financial Studies; Fung and Hsieh
(2004a) "Extracting portable alphas from equity long-short hedge funds," Journal
of Investment Management; Fung and Hsieh (2007) "Will hedge fund regress
to index-like products?," Journal of Investment Management; Fung and
Hsieh (2007) "Hedge fund replication strategies: implications for investors
and regulators," Financial Stability Review.
[2] "Professor
Harry Kat: Hedge Fund 'Replication' a Misnomer" Article by Christopher Holt.
Posted on All About Alpha http://allaboutalpha.com on
January 19, 2007 and Seeking Alpha www.seekingalpha.com on
January 23, 2007.
[3] "Barclays
to Debut Hedge Fund Clone" Article by Emma Trincal, Senior Financial Correspondent.
Published by Lipper HedgeWorld http://www.hedgeworld.com on
June 22, 2007.
[4] Information
on the MLM Index™ can be found at https://www.mtlucas.com/about.aspx.
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