Archive for November 2011


New Evidence for Humanity’s Irrelevance: Revenge of the Algos

Nov 30th, 2011 | By cfaille | Filed under: Algorithmic and high-frequency trading, Timely Research, Today's Post

Could it be that truth is finally stranger than science fiction? The next battle of the quantitative trading strategies may offer some algorithmic features that look downright qualitative.


Mean Reversion and Momentum Both Unreliable in Asia

Nov 29th, 2011 | By cfaille | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, Commodities, Hedge Fund Industry Trends, Hedge Fund Strategies, Institutional Investing, Today's Post

Amongst equity long-short funds, which constitute about half of the Asian hedge fund universe, the returns of hedge funds “were sometimes mean reverting but at other times displayed persistence in positive/negative momentum.” That is to say that sometimes a coin that has come up heads three times will come up tails the fourth time, but at other times it will persist in coming up heads the fourth time.


The Trouble with Liquidity

Nov 28th, 2011 | By bswarup | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, Hedge Fund Industry Trends, Hedge Fund Strategies, Institutional Investing, Today's Post

The true opportunities now lie in taking illiquidity. The panic – for there is no other word to describe this behaviour – today presents those who can afford to have a longer-term investment horizon with a unique time arbitrage.


Introducing the New 2-and-20 Index Funds

Nov 27th, 2011 | By dfriedenberg | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, Hedge Fund Industry Trends, Hedge Fund Strategies, Today's Post

Equity hedge fund performance has resembled the results of the S&P Index lately. We speculate that regression to the mean is because humans are involved, and find reasons to be cheerful for the group's future.


‘Turtles—Turtles—Turtles All the Way Down’

Nov 25th, 2011 | By Guest | Filed under: Guest Posts, Today's Post

By John Brynjolfsson, CIO Armored Wolf As markets reel in the wake of the failed German Bund auction that occurred earlier this week, our beliefs regarding financial security are rightly shaken down to their very foundation, and below! After all, 10-Year government bonds, at least as introduced to students in business schools over the past 70 years, [...]


MF Global Liquidation Presents Unprecedented Test of U.S. Bankruptcy Regime for Dually Registered Brokers

Nov 23rd, 2011 | By kfox | Filed under: Guest Posts

The collapse of MF Global is proving significant for reasons other than its being one of the ten largest bankruptcies in U.S. history, according to attorneys at Teigland-Hunt LLP.   Liquidation of MF Global will require the unprecedented application of two vastly different bankruptcy and customer asset protection regimes that lack [...]


Hedge Funds with Asian Strategies Now Managed From … Asian Cities

Nov 22nd, 2011 | By cfaille | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, Hedge Fund Industry Trends, Institutional Investing, Today's Post

The hedge fund industry that invests in Asia is increasingly run from within the region, especially from the two hub cities of Hong Kong and Singapore, according to an August 2011 report by Singapore based consult In the early days of the Asian hedge fund industry, Asian strategies were quite generally run from outside of Asia [...]


Asian Fund Distribution: Beyond UCITS

Nov 21st, 2011 | By cfaille | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, Hedge Fund Industry Trends, Hedge Fund Strategies, Institutional Investing, Today's Post

The world is a fairly small pond in which ripples anywhere soon shake the surface everywhere. Such an observation, like the word “globalization,” has become a cliché, but the truth behind them both becomes quite obvious in the course of a new “Viewpoint” paper by Ernst & Young that examines fund distribution strategies in the [...]


CAIA Corner: Walk Like an Endowment

Nov 21st, 2011 | By Guest | Filed under: Featured Post

The sixty largest US college endowments (those with over $1 billion in assets) once again have chart-topping performance. After suffering drawdowns and liquidity issues in 2008 and2009, these large endowments earned average returns of 12.2% in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2010, the latest period available, which beat the returns of smaller college endowments [...]


Idiosyncratic Risk Puzzle Solved: Not All Investors Are The Same

Nov 20th, 2011 | By cfaille | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, CAPM / Alpha Theory, Performance, Analytics & Metrics, Today's Post

Intuition (codified by many models) suggests that investors have to be bribed to accept risk, so that there ought to be a positive link for any given class of security between the amount of risk, and thus the measurement of volatility, on the one hand, and expected return on the other. A puzzle arises, then, from empirical research indicating that “idiosyncratic” volatility, that is, the volatility due to the characteristics of a specific security, is negatively correlated with return once one passes the mid-point of the range of volatility.


Occupy Wall Street (OWS), Social Networking, and the 1%: Systemic Risk to Alpha Generators?

Nov 17th, 2011 | By dfriedenberg | Filed under: Alpha Strategies, Featured Post, Today's Post

We visit a Town Hall meeting to discuss the Occupy Wall Street group's use of social media. While there, we are reminded of the potential power of social media and its use to affect public opinion without spending gobs of money. We also learn reasons why the investment community should, at minimum, pay some attention.


How to Save the Futures Industry

Nov 16th, 2011 | By Guest | Filed under: Today's Post

To say the MF Global situation is a mess may be the understatement of the century. How do we make sure that a futures investor regains confidence in the industry, and chooses to go ahead with that investment? The hollow emails by FCM presidents and owners to their clients saying they care is simply not enough; actual solutions and fixes to the problems which allowed the MF Global mess to happen need to be enacted.


Someone Has To Cross The Spread

Nov 15th, 2011 | By cfaille | Filed under: Algorithmic and high-frequency trading, Alpha Strategies, Today's Post

Spread capture is a percentage of the bid-ask spread, so that if an algorithm always accepts the outstanding offer when buying – if it is always the one to cross -- it will capture 0 percent of the spread. If a deal is concluded on its own bid determined through limit orders, on the other hand, it captures 100 percent of the spread. The spread capture metric is popular, the Pragma paper says, because it “reflects a widespread assumption that the higher the number the better the performance of the algorithm.”


Angel Investors Return to the Very Beginning

Nov 14th, 2011 | By kfox | Filed under: Angel investing, Private Equity, Real Estate, Today's Post, Venture capital

Angel investors are returning to provide seed-stage capital and job growth. slowly recovering after the financial crises of 2008 and 2009.


Two Views on the Banks

Nov 13th, 2011 | By Guest | Filed under: Timely Research, Today's Post

In keeping with our mission to provide a marketplace of ideas, today's post presents two views of a paper that deals with the banking rules, which directly affect the core of the financial services industry and its future stability.