Investors of all stripes, burned by severe losses in even the most diversified investment portfolios, have been craving downside protection as they wade back into the markets. Sensing a business opportunity, money management firms have been all too happy to oblige. The net result: Twenty-four new hedge fundlike mutual funds have been launched over the past 18 months.
Many of the new offerings come from traditional mutual fund players like Putnam Investments, Rydex|SGI and Eaton Vance Corp. But a surprising number have also been launched by firms better known for their institutional and hedge fund businesses. In January, for example, AQR Capital Management, which runs $22.5 billion primarily for institutions, introduced a no-load mutual fund called AQR Diversified Arbitrage Fund. In April, Permal Group, a large fund-of-hedge-funds firm and an affiliate of Legg Mason, launched the Legg Mason Partners Permal Tactical Allocation fund. And in June hedge fund manager Bull Path Capital Management converted one of its long-short funds into a mutual fund.
The launches may be a response to new demand, but they also speak volumes about the state of the hedge fund industry, says Nadia Papagiannis, a hedge fund analyst at Morningstar in Chicago. With the HFRI composite index down 19.03 percent in 2008 and this years gain of 13.95 percent through August not enough to overcome those losses, many firms are no longer earning their 20 percent incentive fees. Last year, according to Morningstar, hedge funds lost $136.1 billion because of market action and outflows. That leaves many hedge fund managers with much smaller asset bases from which to generate their typical 2 percent management fees. At this point, running a hedge fund may be less profitable than a mutual fund, says Papagiannis, who points out that the new hedged mutual fund products command a high average expense ratio of 2.1 percent, although they do not feature an incentive fee. ....