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2 New Multialternative Funds Hit The Market

In the week that saw February transition into March, two new multialternative mutual funds were launched: the Preserver Alternative Opportunities Fund (MUTF: PAOIX ), which first traded on February 29; and the PineBridge Dynamic Asset Allocation Fund (MUTF: PDAIX ), which debuted on March 2. Preserver Alternative Opportunities The Preserver Alternative Opportunities Fund’s investment objective is to provide current income and capital appreciation with low volatility compared to traditional stock and bond markets. In pursuit of this end, the fund employs three distinct alternative strategies: Event driven Structured credit Tactical trading Although Semper Capital Management is listed in the fund’s prospectus as a sub-advisor, Preserver Partners CIO Floyd Taylor will initially manage all or most of the fund’s assets. As the fund’s assets under management (“AUM”) increase, Mr. Taylor may allocate a portion of those assets to be managed by the sub-advisor, and the fund may add other sub-advisors, as well. As of March 7, the fund’s AUM stood at just $8.8 million. The Preserver Alternative Opportunities Fund’s institutional class shares have a minimum initial investment of $100,000 and a net-expense ratio of 2.18%. The retail class (MUTF: PAORX ) shares have a minimum initial investment of $2,000 and a net-expense ratio of 2.43%. PineBridge Dynamic Asset Allocation The PineBridge Dynamic Asset Allocation Fund was launched with $50 million in seed capital. It pursues its investment objective of providing absolute return by allocating across a broad range of asset classes, taking both long and short positions in stocks, bonds, ETFs, REITs, and more. According to the prospectus , the fund’s secondary objective is generating alpha, with investment selections based on the advisor’s macroeconomic views, fundamental analyses, and risk-management considerations. PineBridge was also the sub-advisor to the Redmont Resolute Fund I, which was liquidated in December 2015, and the firm still is the sub-advisor Redmont Resolute Fund II (MUTF: RMRGX ). Version “I” of the fund was liquidated despite 2015 performance in the top 15% of its peers, while Version “II” had annualized three-year gains of 1.50% through February 29, ranking in the top 34%. The PineBridge portfolio management team thus has a solid track record of outperformance. Shares of the PineBridge Dynamic Asset Allocation Fund are available in institutional and investor-servicing (MUTF: PDAVX ) classes. The institutional shares have a minimum initial investment of $1 million and a net-expense ratio of 0.65%. The investor-servicing shares have a minimum initial investment of $100,000 and a net-expense ratio of 0.80%. Past performance does not necessarily predict future results. Jason Seagraves contributed to this article.

Rate Cut Puts New Zealand ETF In Focus

Taking cues from global growth worries, the Central Bank of New Zealand surprisingly cut interest rates to a new record low on March 9 and hinted at additional easing, if need be. The move followed the bandwagon of global policy easing, especially in the developed world to boost economic growth and inflation. The central bank of New Zealand slashed its official cash rate by 25 bps to 2.25% to counter threats emanating from soft global growth mainly around China and the Eurozone. Also, uncertain global financial markets, the commodity market rout, a struggling dairy sector – one of the key contributors to the country’s GDP – and troubles in the housing market led the bank to ease its policy unexpectedly, per tradingeconomics . Prior to this, the bank had lowered its key interest rate by 25 bps in December 2015. Consumer prices in New Zealand nudged up 0.1% year over year in the fourth quarter of 2015, missing market expectations and marking the lowest level since the third quarter of 1999. This raised concerns among policy makers. Super accommodative monetary policies from Japan to the Eurozone made the New Zealand dollar stronger and kept consumer prices below the target range of 1-3%, per Bloomberg . So, a rate cut is essential to attain the 2% inflation goal by early 2018. Investors should note that New Zealand became the first nation in the developed world to raise its benchmark interest rate in March 2014. This was followed by three more hikes to 3.5% till July 2014. However, the trend reversed from June 2015 when the central bank resorted to a 25 bp rate cut to 3.25%. Market Impact The New Zealand dollar soon lost strength against the greenback following the announcement, though by 0.2% in one day (as of March 9, 2016). While a rate cut is normally viewed as a step forward in expediting growth and boosting the stock market, we are uncertain about how much return can be reaped by the strategy that New Zealand has adopted. It is true that many other developed economies are presently practicing way more accommodative policies. But they haven’t been able to make a jumpstart in their growth goals. Still, the move was probably necessary to give export a boost. The coming few days should go in favor of the New Zealand stock market. All these possibilities definitely turn our attention to the only pure-play ETF on this nation – the iShares MSCI New Zealand Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: ENZL ) . ENZL in Focus This ETF tracks the MSCI New Zealand Investable Market Index, giving investors exposure to 29 stocks. The product is not immensely popular with an asset base of $69.1 million and trading volume of about 35,000 shares per day. It charges investors 47 bps in annual fees. The fund is not widely spread across individual securities. It puts nearly 65% of the assets in the top 10 holdings with Auckland International ( OTCPK:AUKNY ), Spark New Zealand Ltd (NXTCY) and Fletcher Building ( OTCPK:FCREY ), taking the top three positions. The trio makes up for a combined 30% share. From a sector perspective, utilities, healthcare, industrials, telecom, consumer discretionary and materials receive a double-digit allocation each. In terms of performance, ENZL is up about 1.5% so far this year (as of March 8, 2016). In the last one year (as of March 8, 2016), the fund lost just 2.2%. The ETF currently yields 4.18% in dividend per annum making it a useful destination for income-seeking investors, especially at this low-yield environment. The fund has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook. Original Post

Are Hedge Funds Really That Evil? Challenging The Common Hedge Fund Myths

Click to enlarge I will not surprise anyone by concluding that the coverage of hedge funds in the media and the general public opinion about them is negative, including some regulators and representatives of the Academia. This is counter intuitive, because, as I explained before , properly selected hedge funds demonstrate great results and have the potential to improve any investment portfolio. But what we see in the headlines most of the time is “average performance”, “high fees”, “flashy” lifestyles of hedge fund managers or fraud related “scandals”. Indeed such topics generate more buzz than news about good performance, but part of the reason is that hedge funds are slightly mysterious and not fully understood, especially by individual investors, “grey area” in the investment field thus surrounded by many rooted myths. In this article I summarize, discuss and try to bust some of the most prevalent hedge fund myths and misconceptions. MYTH NO. 1: Hedge funds are only accessible to institutional investors and (ultra) high net worth individuals – they are not available to retail investors like me and you. REALITY: Due to structural innovations, e.g. liquid alternatives, UCITS funds, etc., hedge funds are lately as accessible to retail investors as ever since their minimum investment amount may be as low as USD10k or even USD1k. Moreover, some hedge funds are traded on exchanges (e.g. London Stock Exchange Hedge fund list or Eurekahedge UCITS database), while funds of hedge funds may pool private investors’ money together and invest into hedge funds otherwise harder to access. Finally, there is a wave of fin-tech startups engaging in various ways to replicate hedge fund strategies or pool investors’ capital that are entering the scene (e.g. Sliced). On the other hand, hedge funds are complex structures requiring knowledge and experience to comprehend, thus it is naive to expect and strive to have every mom and dad be able to invest with them. Besides, hedge funds are dedicated for long term investment and create the most value over long investment horizons, thus higher minimum investment amount makes sure to filter those who can afford themselves quarterly or even annual liquidity, i.e. are less likely to experience sudden liquidity needs. MYTH NO. 2: Hedge funds are very risky. REALITY: All investment tools, vehicles and strategies bare both general and their own unique risks. Most of hedge funds’ structure and operational risks are addressed via proper due diligence process, while if we define riskiness by the standard deviation of performance, hedge funds as a group are less volatile than such traditional assets as stocks. Click to enlarge So it means that owning stocks has significantly more downside risk than owning hedge funds, because the latter are more flexible, active and have a wider toolkit of strategies at hand, including shorting. Moreover, since hedge funds exhibit low correlation to most traditional asset classes (see below), once added to an investment portfolio, they are able to reduce the volatility of the overall investment portfolio. Click to enlarge Source: Natixis MYTH NO. 3: Investing with hedge funds, investors have to give up liquidity and access to their capital. REALITY: Liquidity profiles of hedge funds can range from daily liquidity (e.g. liquid alternatives), to very common monthly liquidity, to quarterly or annual, so if liquidity is the main criteria of an investor, (s)he definitely has a range of options. However, firstly, liquidity profile determines and affects directly the opportunity set the manager is able to tackle, so it is difficult to expect a daily liquidity fund post the same results as annual liquidity vehicle, and secondly, if your main criteria is liquidity, hedge funds might not be the place for you at all. To conclude, yes you can access highly liquid options in hedge fund space, but then you might need to give up some of the less liquid (but naturally higher potential) opportunities that hedge funds are only able to tackle due to their structure in the first place. MYTH NO. 4: Hedge funds are too expensive. REALITY: It depends very much who you are comparing to. Yes, hedge fund fees are higher in absolute terms than e.g. mutual fund fees. However, this is the price not only for the access to different, complex, unique, niche tools and strategies hedge funds provide, but also the risk management infrastructure in place to handle difficult situations in the markets better than yourself or a long only mutual fund manager would. Moreover, hedge fund fee structure serves in aligning the interests of investors and managers which are both interested in better results, while you can’t really call mutual fund fees “motivating”. Finally, hedge funds’ results we see are already after-fee results and they obviously satisfy investors and justify the fees since industry assets are at all-time highs and large part of the hedge fund inflows come from very sophisticated institutional investors. MYTH NO. 5: Hedge funds don’t help in a market crash. REALITY: As demonstrated earlier, hedge funds exhibit lower correlation to traditional asset classes, providing the real diversification (and downside protection) exactly when it is needed the most – during crises and market crashes. As seen in the picture below, hedge funds proved to fare better than stocks during each of the recent market downturns. Click to enlarge Hedge funds: HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index. World stocks: MSCI World Net Total Return hedged to USD Source: Bloomberg, MSCI, Man Group MYTH NO. 6: The most important thing in hedge fund selection is a large house and a respected name. REALITY: While many investors see these attributes as an assurance of quality and investor trust, they are no way a substitute for proper due diligence on a fund. The same way as large and well-known banks appear to engage in rate fixing scandals, there are plenty examples of “large houses” and “respected names” among hedge funds that have conducted fraud, abused investor rights and/or blew up, the classic ones being the Galleon Group, SAC Capital, Madoff Investment Securities. It is true that large investment houses provide an exceptionally high level operational infrastructure, but these days even a 100-million fund is able to access most of those solutions. Moreover, due to being nimble, innovative and diligent, smaller and newer funds reportedly outperform many of the large renowned peers. To conclude, large house and a respected name should not be a hedge fund selection criteria: neither it protects from fraud, nor guarantees superior performance. However, hedge fund due diligence and selection requires specific expertise and experience-based judgment so it is advisable to consult specialists anyway. MYTH NO. 7: Hedge fund managers are dishonest, unscrupulous fraudsters. REALITY: This is exactly the public opinion formed by the media which tends to catch and escalate the juicy stories of exuberant lifestyles and securities fraud. However, those stories are relatively few compared to almost 15 thousand hedge funds existing out there so there are as many cheaters in the hedge fund industry as there are in oil and gas, pharmaceuticals, politics and anywhere else. The majority of the hedge fund managers are very talented investment professionals with a unique idea or skillset trying to exploit it and make a living by earning investors return and their capital. It is investors’ concern to ascertain who are they trusting their money with. MYTH NO. 8: Hedge funds are unregulated “blackboxes”. REALITY: In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis, hedge funds became as regulated as ever with such impactful regulations as AIFMD, UCITS, MIFID, Dodd-Frank etc. introduced in order to maintain the perceived stability of financial sector. It depends on certain jurisdictions, but generally the times of two dudes with a laptop at a garage are gone – it takes time, money and expertise to get and maintain all the operational, compliance, reputation checks from the regulators while investor expectations and standards, especially if you target institutional investors, has also brought operational and governance practices to a new level. When it comes to transparency, the industry standard has gone further away from opaque reporting and the current best practice is monthly distribution including, depending on a strategy, a certain level of portfolio transparency allowing for a picture of strategy implementation. On the other hand, a complete or regulated transparency would take away hedge funds’ competitive advantage that allows them to generate returns in the first place. MYTH NO. 9: Hedge funds are evil and does bad to the society REALITY: Besides helping people and institutions achieve their financial goals, hedge funds serve to the financial industry and society in general. They are sometimes the last resort buyers of assets no one else wants to buy providing liquidity to the markets. They often provide capital to innovative projects as well as small and medium size businesses that face difficulties raising capital from more traditional sources. Hedge funds employ very talented and professional people for highly paid roles, who in turn pay large amount of taxes. Hedge funds not only donate significant amounts to non-profits and charities, but also when included in investment portfolios of foundations and endowments help earn money to support communities, improve education, health, economic areas, foster cultural development. Included in investment portfolios of endowments, hedge funds help them fund scholarships while included in investment portfolios of pension plans hedge funds allow them provide retirement security to millions of people. In fact, most of the money recently flowing into the hedge fund industry is exactly the institutional money. Due to some or all of the mentioned myths rooted around hedge funds, some investors miss the opportunity to access unique ideas, niche strategies and innovative tools and achieve the portfolio enhancement hedge funds provide. While the negative views on hedge funds and the whole financial industry may continue attracting the media attention, what is important for an investor is to evaluate critically, realistically and objectively the information, avoid generalization and trust their own or their advisors’ competence in finding the best solutions. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Additional disclosure: MC Investments is a hedge fund due diligence and manager selection advisory.