In 1998's first quarter, most hedge funds lagged far behind the U.S. stock market, which gained 14% as measured by the S? 500 index. Global funds with bearish positions on Asian markets posted the highest returns. Short-sellers had another tough quarter, losing an average of 11.5%.
Strategy | 1998 First Quarter Performance |
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Relative Value | 3.0% | |||
Long/Short Equity | ||||
Long undervalued equities/short overvalued equities | 2.4 | |||
Convertible Hedging | ||||
Long convertible bonds or preferred/short underlying common | 3.6 | |||
Bond Hedging | ||||
Yield curve arbitrage or long/short debt positions | 2.2 | |||
Rotational/Multi-Strategy | ||||
Multiple relative value strategies, including those listed above | 3.9 | |||
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Event-Driven | 13.8 | |||
Deal Arbitrage | ||||
Long and short equity securities of companies involved in corporate transactions | 3.7 | |||
Bankruptcy/Distressed | ||||
Long undervalued securities of companies usually in financial distress | 6.4 | |||
Multi-Event | ||||
Long and short based on deals, bankruptcies and other events | 6.5 | |||
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Equity Hedge Funds | 18.2 | |||
Domestic Long Equity | ||||
Long undervalued U.S. equities/short selling used sparingly | 6.2 | |||
Domestic Opportunistic Equity | ||||
Long and short U.S. equities, with ability to be net short overall | 3.8 | |||
Global/International Equity | ||||
Primarily long undervalued equities, with some ability to sell short | 10.4 | |||
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Global Asset Allocators | 16.8 | |||
Discretionary | ||||
Long or short markets based on qualitative/fundamental analysis | 5.9 | |||
Systematic | ||||
Long or short markets based on trend-following or other quantitative techniques | 3.1 | |||
Short Selling | ||||
Short sale of U.S. equities with expectation of price decline | -11.5 | |||
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Evaluation Associates' 100 Index | 4.1 | |||
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S&P 500 | 14.0 | |||
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