Hedge funds — there are too many of them and most of them are lousy

Fictional hedge fund manager Bobby Axelrod (Image: Showtime, IMDB) · Yahoo Finance

The uproar against the hedge fund industry has become almost deafening in recent weeks.

There’s going to be a “washout in hedge funds.”

There’s a “lack of talent.”

And those fees that they charge are “unbelievable”!

All of these statements are fair for the most part.

That said, it’s really not fair to paint entire industry with the same brush. Not all hedge funds are bad.

'Too Many Players'

Perhaps the real issue here is that there are just too many hedge funds, with most unable to deliver the performance they advertise.

There are more than 10,000 hedge funds. By some estimates, there are as many as 15,000 hedge funds.

Speaking at the Milken Global Institute Conference, Steve Cohen, who runs $11 billion family office Point72 Asset Management (formerly SAC Capital), said there are “too many players.”

“Well that’s something actually I was worried about last year. I actually had a meeting with my management team and I was talking about how one of my biggest worries is that there’s so many players out there trying to do similar strategies and if one of these highly levered players had a rough run and took down risk would we be collateral damage?” Cohen said.

He later added: “And in February we drew down 8%, which, for us, is a lot. And my worst fears were realized. So yeah, I think the business has gotten crowded. The strategies aren’t that much differentiated. People seem to think they can just go hire talent and magically they’re going to earn returns…and they’re trying to grow…It’s very hard to maximize returns and maximize assets too."

Steven Cohen. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
Steven Cohen. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

Cohen added that “talent is very thin” and that he’s “blown away by the lack of talent.”

While Cohen is referring to recruiting—which is facing challenges such as shrinking investment banking classes and more young workers heading to Silicon Valley—it does resonate with the hedge fund industry as a whole.

Not everyone is cut out for this business. Indeed, only a small percentage are superior at generating alpha.

And the funds that aren't delivering alpha aren't just underperforming. Many are getting smoked.

'Catastrophic' Performance

In late April, Daniel Loeb, the founder of Third Point LLC, sent a letter to his fund’s investors calling the first quarter “one of the most catastrophic periods of hedge fund performance” he’s witnessed in his twenty years running his hedge fund. Third Point, which has produced annualized returns of 15.8% since inception, fell 2.3% in the first quarter.

Loeb wrote: “There is no doubt that we are in the first innings of a washout in hedge funds and certain strategies.”