Matière à réflexion pour ceux qui sont investis à 100% (moi)

par PBourdon @, Levallois, jeudi 15 septembre 2005, 10:52 (il y a 6992 jours)

Economic View: Is a Hedge Fund Shakeout Coming Soon> This Insider Thinks So
The New York Times

OF all the sectors of the financial universe, the hedge fund world is probably the most secretive and almost certainly the most alluring. Open only to institutions and the wealthy, hedge funds offer sophisticated models of risk, access to the best financial minds and the chance for outsized returns. According to Van Hedge Advisors, hedge fund assets have topped a trillion dollars.

The downside, unfortunately, is that occasionally the industry may be subject to catastrophic and unexpected losses. In 1998, many top hedge fund managers lost their shirts. Long Term Capital Management came close to collapse. Just last month, investors were reminded of exactly this kind of possibility with the apparent failure of a $400 million Connecticut hedge fund managed by the Bayou Group.

Andrew W. Lo, a finance professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has been studying hedge fund failures and risks, and he says that another hedge fund industry shakeout is likely in the near future. Mr. Lo runs a company, AlphaSimplex, that manages a $400 million hedge fund - so he is not looking for a reason to say hedge funds are in trouble. But that is exactly what he's saying, backing it up with powerful data and a couple of unexpected theories.

Mr. Lo has been working on the economics of hedge funds since the mid-1990's, but he started thinking seriously about how to measure risk across the industry in 1999, when he was first approached by backers to start his own hedge fund; it opened in 2003. He knew that sophisticated investors would want lots of data about his fund's returns and about the risk level he would assume, so he started looking carefully at the return data provided by other funds.

Traditionally, economists have thought that big up-and-down fluctuations in returns indicated risky investments, so many hedge fund investors have hoped to see a pattern of smooth and even returns. But Mr. Lo quickly saw that lots of hedge funds were posting returns that were just too smooth to be realistic. Digging deeper, he found that funds with hard-to-appraise, illiquid investments - like real estate or esoteric interest rate swaps - showed returns that were particularly even. In those cases, he concluded, managers had no way to measure their fluctuations, and simply assumed that their value was going up steadily. The problem, unfortunately, is that those are exactly the kinds of investments that can be subject to big losses in a crisis. In 1998, investors retreated en masse from such investments.

Now, in a paper to be published by the University of Chicago, Mr. Lo, working with his graduate students, has come to a disturbing conclusion: that smooth returns, far from proving that hedge funds are safe, may be a warning sign for the industry. (The paper is at http://web.mit.edu/alo/www/Papers/systemic2.pdf.)

That doesn't necessarily hold true for every individual fund, but as Mr. Lo shows in his paper, measuring the smoothness of returns gives economists a good way to estimate the level of relatively illiquid investments in the hedge fund world. The approach lets economists measure industrywide liquidity risks without knowing the details of the investments - information that hedge funds just don't give out.

By Mr. Lo's measures, hedge fund investments are less liquid now than they have been in 20 years. His work shows that the same pattern of investing preceded the 1998 global hedge fund meltdown and the 1987 stock market crash.

But that's not the only reason for worry. He says that crises like that of 1998 may be more predictable than was previously thought - and that another crisis is likely.

The 1998 panic is generally thought to have been set off by the Russian government's default on its debt. But Mr. Lo points out that only a minuscule proportion of the world's hedge fund investments were in Russian government bonds.

In his paper, he shows that the catastrophic losses of 1998 were preceded by a noticeable series of months of mediocre performance. Mr. Lo argues that while a hedge fund crisis appears to be sudden and to be caused by unforeseen events, the breakdown is only the late stage of the problem. As more hedge funds compete for the same slice of the pie, he says, their managers feel that they have no choice but to "leverage up," juicing their returns by borrowing more money to make bigger investments.

Suite

par PBourdon @, Levallois, jeudi 15 septembre 2005, 10:53 (il y a 6992 jours) @ PBourdon

That, in turn, makes the investments more prone to a sudden credit crisis. Hedge funds that are highly leveraged are vulnerable to having their lenders - banks and big brokerage firms - cut off credit when they think that their money may be at risk. And Mr. Lo thinks that lenders would do exactly that in an industrywide downturn. That would force hedge funds to close out their positions at the worst possible time - the kind of cycle that brought down Long Term Capital Management.

Here again, his data suggests that the current situation is serious. His research indicates that the industry may have already entered a period of lower returns that signal a prelude to crisis. He points to a downturn in April that hit virtually every category of hedge fund pursuing every kind of strategy.

"The concern that I and others have is that we're approaching the perfect financial storm where all the arrows line up in one direction," Mr. Lo said. The more money that is invested in hedge funds, he said, "the bigger the storm will be."

What might set off a crash is a matter of guesswork. Mr. Lo thinks that an oil-price increase to $100 a barrel, a level predicted by one Goldman Sachs analyst, could do it. Or , he said, a tightening of lending rules at Fannie Mae, the mortgage giant, could set off a "humongous unwinding" in credit markets. But Mr. Lo, who refers to some of his research as "measuring how strong the camel's back is and how much straw is already on it," thinks that the spark could be something much smaller.

ALREADY, his work has prompted hedge fund managers and investors to pay more attention to the hidden risks of funds that seem to be performing quite well. Clifford S. Asness, managing principal at AQR Capital Management, a large and successful hedge fund based in Greenwich, Conn., says Mr. Lo's work forces fund managers in general to confront the risks: "He demonstrates simple models that generally show a winning payoff but occasionally really die."

So what should be done> Mr. Lo sees no way to eliminate the cyclical nature of hedge fund investing, but he says we can learn from the mistakes of funds that fail. He advocates the creation of a financial equivalent of the teams at the National Transportation Safety Board that swoop in to investigate airplane crashes.

The nightmare script for Mr. Lo would be a series of collapses of highly leveraged hedge funds that bring down the major banks or brokerage firms that lend to them. That's a possibility that the entire hedge fund industry - secretive and fractious though it is - has a huge interest in avoiding.

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Bon courage pour la lecture du document cité dans l'article; je ne suis pas très à l'aise pour lire des documents en anglais, alors j'ai laissé tombé. L'article est daté du 4 septembre 2005; ne vous méprenez pas, je ne lis pas le NYT tous les jours, j'ai trouvé l'article sur un forum bourse !
Pierre

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Bof bof

par jmp ⌂ @, Boulogne/Mer, jeudi 15 septembre 2005, 14:44 (il y a 6992 jours) @ PBourdon

Je crois tout à fait possible qu'un (ou des) hedge fund(s) se casse(nt) la gueule. C'est déjà arrivé, cela peut se reproduire... Je ne vois pas bien quelle influence cela pourrait avoir sur le cours de Belvédère, de Setforge ou de Net2S pour ce qui me concerne directement! C'est un peu la même chose que l'immobilier qui, je le crois, va baisser (même beaucoup) sans que ça provoque une catastrophe économique. C'est déjà arrivé en 1990 et la bourse a survécu...
Au pire, on pourrait perdre 30%, soit le gain des 8 derniers mois :-D

--
jean-marie

Bof bof

par Bull, jeudi 15 septembre 2005, 15:22 (il y a 6992 jours) @ jmp

» Je crois tout à fait possible qu'un (ou des) hedge fund(s) se casse(nt) la
» gueule. C'est déjà arrivé, cela peut se reproduire... Je ne vois pas bien
» quelle influence cela pourrait avoir sur le cours de Belvédère, de
» Setforge ou de Net2S pour ce qui me concerne directement! C'est un peu la
» même chose que l'immobilier qui, je le crois, va baisser (même beaucoup)
» sans que ça provoque une catastrophe économique. C'est déjà arrivé en 1990
» et la bourse a survécu...
» Au pire, on pourrait perdre 30%, soit le gain des 8 derniers mois :-D

Vu, OK avec toi.

Je trouve les politiques et les économistes d'un cynisme sans nom lorsqu'ils s'insurgent sur la hausse des prix de la grande distribution, et restent silencieux (en fait complaisant) avec la hausse ahurissante des actifs immobiliers...

Le prix du mètre carré à Paris à augmenté en juin de 13% d'une année sur l'autre : pas un mot des politiques, tout semble normal.

-2% des prix sur la grande distribution en un an, et les politiques se targuent d'aider les français "contre la vie chère"...

Pourquoi cette distorsion >

La réponse est simple. Se battre sur les prix de grande consommation c'est se battre pour maintenir une inflation basse DONC des salaires bas, car traidtionnellement, lorsque l'inflation dérape (vers le haut) les employeurs sotn priés de suivre à la hausse.

Vous l'aurez compris, l'Etat n'a pas les moyens d'augmenter les salaires des fonctionnaires : il fait donc tout pour afficher une inflation contenue, même si c'est parfaitement artificiel. Pour les entreprises, c'est le même problème. Maintenir les salaires le plus bas possible permet d'aligner progressivement les niveaux à ceux de l'Europe de l'Est.

Mais l'inflation est ailleurs : 12% par an sur l'immobilier en moyenne depuis 8 ans. Or, l'immobilier (loyer ou crédit) c'est 30% des dépenses du foyer, la cosommation (produits de consommation courants) c'est moins de 10%.

Mais bien évidemment les méchants profiteurs sont les grandes surfaces...

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