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Read previewIn what has been billed to be the year of macro, hedge funds are taking diverging paths on the sector. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Related storiesTwo people familiar with the changes told Business Insider that Jaime Villa, Schonfeld's head of macro research, is no longer with the asset manager. And despite the popularity the strategy might have with allocators at the moment, funds are still quick to cut underperformers. Brevan Howard, one of the biggest macro players in the world, cut dozens of investors earlier this month after its biggest loss on record in February.
Persons: , Chris Rokos, Jaime Villa, Schonfeld's, Villa, Colin Lancaster, Mitesh, Jerome Sargoussi, Eisler, Raj Sethi, Brevan Howard, Steve Cohen's Point72, Mo Grimeh, Bloomberg —, Grimeh, Brett Gardocki — Organizations: Service, Federal, Business, Pimco, KKR, SPX, Walleye, Bloomberg, Millennium, Pan, Former Walleye Locations: Schonfeld's London, New York, Minnesota, Stamford, Houston, Hong Kong
When it was raising fresh money from investors in 2020, one slide on the pitch deck for the hedge fund Schonfeld Strategic Advisors got to the heart of the issue: "Why Schonfeld?" A hedge fund recruiterAmid the weakness, the fund has begun to prune costs. Steve Schonfeld (class of 1977) and Brad Tolkin (class of 1976) attended Roslyn High School in Roslyn Heights, New York. Tolkin told Insider in 2019 that the firm's goal was no less than becoming "the premier equities hedge fund globally." While Steven Schonfeld's 20% annual-return goals would've been ambitious for any sizable hedge fund, returns have also lagged behind peers.
Persons: Israel Englander, Ryan Tolkin, Steve Schonfeld, hasn't, It's, Schonfeld, Quita Ramirez, Trina Geatz, who've, Tolkin, Goldman Sachs, Andrew Fishman, Goldman Sachs —, Steven Schonfeld's, Ryan Tolkin's, Brad Tolkin, Brad, Jeff, Alex Morrell Steve, CJ, Sean, Ryan, Brad Tolkin's, Steven Schonfeld, Ryan —, who's, Steve, Michael Gelband, Michael Englander, Izzy Englander's, Steven, Sharpe, Fishman, Michael Nagle, Colin Lancaster, would've, Brevan Howard, ExodusPoint Organizations: Citadel, Duke, Goldman, Long, Newsday, Schonfeld Securities, Roslyn High School, American Express, Cleveland Cavaliers, Jewish, , Bloomberg, Strategic Partners, Equity, Schonfeld, Nasdaq, Management Locations: Israel, Miami, Stamford , Connecticut, Manhattan, Delta, Duke, Long Island, Roslyn Heights , New York
Money is pouring into the hedge fund business, adding to a war for talent. Maybe a bunch of NBA or NFL players end up on a trading floor for charity. The war for talent is partly a reflection of hedge-fund performance. My colleague Alex Morrell wrote recently:After years of relative quiet, macro strategies at hedge funds surged back to life in 2022 amid rising interest rates, inflation, and geopolitical convulsions. Writing for Insider recently, hedge-fund recruiter John Pierson said that "the competition for investment talent is escalating, and finding top portfolio managers is no longer a contact sport — it's an all-out war."
Persons: Bloomberg's Nishant Kumar, Maureen Farrell, Rob Copeland, Tom Brady, Steph Curry, Lamar Jackson's, Alex Morrell, Brevan Howard, Rokos, John Pierson Organizations: Millennium, Citadel, Morning, NBA, New York Times, Times, Golden State Warriors, ESPN, NFL, Baltimore Ravens, Premier League
ORLANDO, Florida, April 10 (Reuters) - Hedge funds started the second quarter positioning for a steeper U.S. yield curve by offloading 10-year U.S. Treasuries futures at one of the fastest rates on record. In one way, betting on a steeper 2s/10s yield curve indicates funds are hoping the trend of recent weeks continues - the curve steepened around 33 basis points in March, the biggest monthly steepening in a decade. The difference is, that was driven by a massive "bull-steepening," buying two-year futures when the banking shock forced funds to cover their near-record short position. In the week through April 4 funds increased their 10-year Treasuries futures net short position by almost 150,000 contracts. A short position is essentially a wager that an asset's price will fall, and a long position is a bet it will rise.
Firms that concentrate on stocks, however, rode a late month market rally to small gains, according to investors and industry data. Many hedge funds are still compiling March and first quarter numbers, but preliminary reports from research firm Hedge Fund Research showed the average hedge fund was off 1% last month and ended the quarter flat. The macro hedge fund is down nearly 9.5% year-to-date through March, the source added. The Balyasny Atlas Enhanced fund gained 0.8% in March and is up 1% for the year. A Goldman Sachs report, based on returns posted by the bank's prime brokerage's clients, showed fundamental long/short funds gained 1.04% in March.
Multi-strategy hedge funds had a mixed March after the Silicon Valley Bank collapse put markets on edge. The Citadel Wellington fund ended the month up 1.38%, while Steve Cohen's Point72 was up 1.33%. Equities was up 2.16% in March, bringing year-to-date performance to 4.56%. Its global fixed income fund returned 0.12% in March, bringing year-to-date performance to 1.77%. Hedge fund performance figures are still trickling out, but data and reports suggest that trend-following and macro funds were caught out after the banking crisis rocked markets.
Macro and trend-following hedge funds dropped 3.2% this month through March 29, while algorithmic commodity trading advisor funds (CTAs) dove 6.8%. Hedge fund strategies based around macroeconomic ideas like those run by Rokos, DG Parters and EDL Capital fund posted negative performances in March, sources and bank data said. Trend-following hedge funds, which trade on systematically programmed ideas, also posted big losses. The bank decided not to change clients' borrowing limits, but it has increased diligence oversight on the hedge fund exposure, including new clients, the broker said. Trend-following funds tend to bail quickly on trades that stop working, said a pension fund director who invests in hedge funds.
Hedge fund Rokos cuts risk after losses
  + stars: | 2023-03-25 | by ( Carolina Mandl | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
NEW YORK, March 25 (Reuters) - London-based hedge fund Rokos Capital Management told investors in a letter on Saturday that it has decided to de-risk, following double-digit losses this month. "We have de-risked following this month's market price action," the hedge fund said in the letter which was seen by Reuters. Rokos lost 15.3% this month through March 17 and has lost 9.8% so far this year. On Friday, the Financial Times reported that SEC Chair Gary Gensler brought up Rokos in calls with UK regulators, following its losses. The hedge fund told investors it continues to have normal interactions with regulators and that they have not expressed any concern specific to the firm.
Demand for macro portfolio managers remains white hot after a bounceback year in 2022. Millennium recently hired John Curtice from rival ExodusPoint, while Ben Melkman has been in talks to join another, Insider has learned. Millennium Management recently added another star to its stable, lifting a 32-year-old macro PM out of rival ExodusPoint, according to people familiar with the matter. Macro focused funds including BlueCrest, Brevan Howard, and Rokos produced stellar returns as most of the hedge fund industry — especially stock pickers — faltered. But even in late 2022 firms were scrambling to lift out macro PMs, recruiters working in the strategy told Insider.
Rokos Capital, run by Chris Rokos and one of a handful of so-called global macro firms, gained 51% last year. Many macro managers sidestepped tumbling equity markets rocked by fast-paced interest rate hikes and geopolitical turmoil including the war in Ukraine to rank among the hedge fund industry's best performers, data from Hedge Fund Research show. The firm's macro index gained 14.2% while the overall hedge fund index dropped 4.25%, its first loss since 2018. Equity hedge funds, where the bulk of the industry's roughly $3.7 trillion in assets are invested, however fared worse with a 10.4% loss, according to HFR data. Tiger Global Management lost 56% while Whale Rock Capital Management ended the year with a 43% loss and Maverick Capital lost 23%.
Hedge funds had a dismal year in 2022, but some firms still produced exceptional returns. Ken Griffin's Citadel had record revenues of $28 billion, as well as a 38.1% return from its main fund. Cliff Asness' AQR had a 43.5% return in its oldest fund and record results in 12 other funds, too. 2022 was a dismal year for the hedge fund industry. A few industry stalwarts — AQR, Citadel, and Rokos Capital— had record years.
The economy has been trending downward for months, but it seems the shoe we've all been waiting to drop — layoffs — is starting to come down. Over on the tech side, Insider is covering the mass layoffs at Twitter, which started last night. Bloomberg reports that Twitter has been hit with a class action lawsuit, alleging staffers were not given enough notice before the cuts. Click here to see all the companies across industries that have already conducted layoffs. Keep updated with the latest business news throughout your day by checking out The Refresh from Insider, a dynamic audio news brief.
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