Death of the star stockpicker: Investors pull $230b from hedge funds
Clients are tiring of managers’ poor returns in bull and bear markets.
One of the oldest and best-known hedge fund strategies has suffered nearly $US150 billion ($230 billion) in client withdrawals over the past five years, as investors tire of their inability to capitalise on bull markets or protect them during downturns.
So-called equity long-short funds, which try to buy stocks likely to do well and bet against names set to perform poorly, have underperformed the US sharemarket in nine out of the past 10 years, according to Nasdaq eVestment, after failing to adapt to markets largely dominated by central banks.
Financial Times
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