Hedge funds learn to profit from higher volatility
By Laurence Fletcher - Analysis
MONACO (Reuters) - Hedge fund returns look set to pick up this year after a poor start, as managers learn the painful lessons of recent months and feel well positioned to profit from opportunities arising in credit and equity markets.
Having cut back the leverage that caught out some funds last year and rebuilt computer-driven models hit by a vicious circle of selling last summer, funds now see opportunities amid high market volatility and a greater chance of corporate default.
Speaking at this week's GAIM International 2008 hedge fund conference, high-profile manager John Paulson said he sees a $10 trillion opportunity appearing in distressed debt and good value in higher quality mortgage debt.
Others hope to profit from forced selling of equities or better conditions for convertible arbitrage.
"If everything has been written down on the credit side, it's a great opportunity ... It's all about a lot of dumb people and a few smart ones," said Bill Browder, chief executive of Hermitage Capital Management.
During the first quarter, in which a sharp market reversal after the Fed's bailout of Bear Stearns Cos Inc caught out many funds, the Credit Suisse/Tremont index of hedge fund returns was down 2.01 percent.
While outperforming the MSCI World's .MSCIWO 9.5 percent fall, this was well below what investors might expect from an absolute return-focused asset class.
However, recent data suggests funds are starting to get used to post-credit crisis market conditions. Continued...





